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Brazilian candidate still crushing his rivals from jail

  • Written by João Feres Júnior, Professor of political science, Rio de Janeiro State University
With over a dozen candidates and an incarcerated front-runner, Brazil's 2018 presidential election has political analysts shrugging their shoulders.AP Photo/Leo Correa

It would be hard to overstate the prominence of former president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva in Brazil. The founder of the left-wing Workers’ Party, this former union...

Read more: Brazilian candidate still crushing his rivals from jail

The orgasm gap: Picking up where the sexual revolution left off

  • Written by Laurie Mintz, Professor of Psychology, University of Florida
Women's sexual pleasure has not been stressed as much as men's.Lucky Business/Shutterstock.com

At the core of the 1960s sexual revolution was “female sexual empowerment.” It fell short of this goal. Specifically, while the revolution made women having intercourse before marriage acceptable, it didn’t lead women to have equally...

Read more: The orgasm gap: Picking up where the sexual revolution left off

Supreme Court delivers a home run for sports bettors – and now states need to scramble

  • Written by Jennifer Roberts, Adjunct Professor of Law, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
People line up to place bets in the sports book at the South Point hotel-casino in Las Vegas, Nev.AP Photo/John Locher

On May 14, the United States Supreme Court invalidated the Professional and Amateur Sports Protection Act, a federal law that prohibited states, aside from a few exemptions like Nevada, from allowing sports betting operations.

In a...

Read more: Supreme Court delivers a home run for sports bettors – and now states need to scramble

Should I kill spiders in my home? An entomologist explains why not to

  • Written by Matt Bertone, Extension Associate in Entomology, North Carolina State University
He comes in peace.Matt Bertone, CC BY-ND

I know it may be hard to convince you, but let me try: Don’t kill the next spider you see in your home.

Why? Because spiders are an important part of nature and our indoor ecosystem – as well as being fellow organisms in their own right.

People like to think of their dwellings as safely insulated...

Read more: Should I kill spiders in my home? An entomologist explains why not to

What is doxxing, and why is it so scary?

  • Written by Jasmine McNealy, Assistant Professor of Telecommunication, University of Florida
It's worrying, and potentially dangerous, when someone peels back the curtain of another's identity.The Conversation, from Brian A. Jackson/Shutterstock.com and Kansas Department of Transportation via AP, CC BY-ND

It’s almost a given that you have personal information available online. Beyond social media and online discussion boards, there...

Read more: What is doxxing, and why is it so scary?

War on fake news could be won with the help of behavioral science

  • Written by Gleb Tsipursky, Assistant Professor of History of Behavioral Science, The Ohio State University
It's not clear if Malaysia's anti-fake news campaign is backed by behavioral science too. AP Photo/Vincent Thian

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg recently acknowledged his company’s responsibility in helping create the enormous amount of fake news that plagued the 2016 election – after earlier denials. Yet he offered no concrete details on...

Read more: War on fake news could be won with the help of behavioral science

What are halal foods?

  • Written by Myriam Renaud, PhD Candidate in Religious Thought and Ethics, University of Chicago
A Muslim family breaks fast during the month of Ramadan.AP Photo/Chris Carlson

During the month of Ramadan, for 30 days, Muslims who choose to fast will neither eat nor drink during daylight hours. At night, when they break their fast, many will only choose foods that are considered permissible under Islamic law. The Arabic word for such food is...

Read more: What are halal foods?

US and Europe face an 'increasingly loveless marriage' after Trump's Iran deal withdrawal

  • Written by Garret Martin, Professorial Lecturer, American University School of International Service

Beyond its potentially dramatic consequences for Middle East stability, Trump’s May 8 decision to withdraw from the Iran nuclear deal has also damaged the United States’ relations with its European allies.

France, Germany and the United Kingdom worked with the Obama administration to barter the United Nations-approved Iran agreement in...

Read more: US and Europe face an 'increasingly loveless marriage' after Trump's Iran deal withdrawal

Some tropical frogs may be developing resistance to a deadly fungal disease – but now salamanders are at risk

  • Written by Louise Rollins-Smith, Associate Professor of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, Vanderbilt University
Panamanian golden frogs (_Atelopus zeteki_) are listed as critically endangered, and may be extinct in the wild.Jeff Kubina, CC BY-SA

My office is filled with colorful images of frogs, toads and salamanders from around the world, some of which I have collected over 40 years as an immunologist and microbiologist, studying amphibian immunity and...

Read more: Some tropical frogs may be developing resistance to a deadly fungal disease – but now salamanders...

Studying poop samples, scientists find clues on health and disease

  • Written by Daniel McDonald, Scientific Director, American Gut Project, University of California San Diego
Though examining poop samples scientists working on the American Gut Project are getting a new perspective on the microbes in our guts.By Christos Georghiou/Shutterstock.com

Have you ever wondered what’s going on in your poop? Perhaps not. But this is precisely what we think about every day at the American Gut Project, the world’s...

Read more: Studying poop samples, scientists find clues on health and disease

More Articles ...

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  2. US embassy in Jerusalem opens amid violence: 4 essential reads
  3. How understanding pain could curb opioid addiction
  4. Is bigger really better?
  5. Gender is personal – not computational
  6. Maria Agnesi, the greatest female mathematician you've never heard of
  7. Bangladeshi rappers wield rhymes as a weapon, with Tupac as their guide
  8. Trump proposal to weaken project reviews threatens the 'Magna Carta of environmental law'
  9. Why the offshore wind industry is about to take off
  10. What can we learn from the way graduates are decorating their caps?
  11. How weakened US fossil fuel regulations threaten environmental justice in Colorado
  12. Rethinking reporting on polls in time for midterm elections
  13. The next big discovery in astronomy? Scientists probably found it years ago – but they don't know it yet
  14. Recreational ancestry DNA testing may reveal more than consumers bargained for
  15. Why bullshit hurts democracy more than lies
  16. Women on the 2018 ballot are busting perceptions of motherhood and leadership
  17. Smart windows could combine solar panels and TVs too
  18. Americans are more anxious than before
  19. Science teachers sacrifice to provide lab materials for students
  20. The science of the plot twist: How writers exploit our brains
  21. Your shampoo, hair spray and skin lotion may be polluting the air
  22. Mad Magazine's clout may have faded, but its ethos matters more than ever before
  23. What torching Iran deal says about US commitment to nuclear security
  24. Paraguay elige un presidente que recuerda a viejos tiempos de dictadura
  25. Identifying with others who control themselves could strengthen your own self-control
  26. Supreme Court to rule on your First Amendment right to silence
  27. Trump's deregulatory record doesn't include much actual deregulation
  28. Why the betrayal of Bill Cosby, Eric Schneiderman and other influential men is deeper than you think
  29. Chemotherapy timing could influence how well the treatment works
  30. Paraguay's new president recalls an old dictatorship
  31. No, the war in Afghanistan isn't a hopeless stalemate
  32. 4 ways 'internet of things' toys endanger children
  33. Sugars in mother's milk help shape baby's microbiome and ward off infection
  34. A hangover pill? Tests on drunk mice show promise
  35. Avoid high student debt and dropping out by asking these 4 questions about any college
  36. How one early 20th-century performer defanged her fat-shamers
  37. Ohio voters make conservative choices in governor's primary – picking DeWine, Cordray
  38. Lava, ash flows, mudslides and nasty gases: Good reasons to respect volcanoes
  39. Studying chimpanzee calls for clues about the origins of human language
  40. Why graduation rates lag for low-income college students
  41. Presidents often reverse US foreign policy — how Trump handles setbacks is what matters most now
  42. What Mary Shelley's Frankenstein teaches us about the need for mothers
  43. The thinking error at the root of science denial
  44. Ending sexual assault in youth detention centers
  45. Reading and singing to preemies helps parents feel comfortable with their fragile babies
  46. Cryptojacking spreads across the web
  47. The EPA says burning wood to generate power is 'carbon-neutral.' Is that true?
  48. Americans are becoming more socially isolated, but they're not feeling lonelier
  49. History shows why school prayer is so divisive
  50. Don't expect professors to get fired when they say something you don't like