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China’s electric vehicle influence expands nearly everywhere – except the US and Canada

  • Written by Jack Barkenbus, Visiting Scholar, Vanderbilt University
imageBYD electric cars wait at a Chinese port to be loaded onto the automobile carrier BYD Shenzhen, which was slated to sail to Brazil.STR/AFP via Getty Images

In 2025, 1 in 4 new automotive vehicle sales globally are expected to be an electric vehicle – either fully electric or a plug-in hybrid.

That is a significant rise from just five years...

Read more: China’s electric vehicle influence expands nearly everywhere – except the US and Canada

AI is transforming weather forecasting − and that could be a game changer for farmers around the world

  • Written by Paul Winters, Professor of Sustainable Development, University of Notre Dame
imageWeather forecasts help farmers figure out when to plant, where to use fertilizer and much more.Maitreya Shah/Studio India

For farmers, every planting decision carries risks, and many of those risks are increasing with climate change. One of the most consequential is weather, which can damage crop yields and livelihoods. A delayed monsoon, for...

Read more: AI is transforming weather forecasting − and that could be a game changer for farmers around the...

5 forecasts early climate models got right – the evidence is all around you

  • Written by Nadir Jeevanjee, Research Physical Scientist, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
imageThe island nation of Tuvalu is losing land to sea-level rise, and its farms and water supplies are under threat from salt water.Mario Tama/Getty Images

Climate models are complex, just like the world they mirror. They simultaneously simulate the interacting, chaotic flow of Earth’s atmosphere and oceans, and they run on the world’s...

Read more: 5 forecasts early climate models got right – the evidence is all around you

Green gruel? Pea soup? What Westerners thought of matcha when they tried it for the first time

  • Written by Rebecca Corbett, Japanese Studies Librarian and Senior Lecturer in History, University of Southern California
imageMatcha lattes are prepared at a cafe in the Los Feliz neighborhood of Los Angeles in May 2025.Frederic J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images

Matcha mania” shows no signs of slowing, with global demand pushing “supply chains to the brink,” as Australia’s ABC News reported in July 2025.

The powdered drink retains a massive...

Read more: Green gruel? Pea soup? What Westerners thought of matcha when they tried it for the first time

AI’s ballooning energy consumption puts spotlight on data center efficiency

  • Written by Divya Mahajan, Assistant Professor of Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageThese 'chillers' on the roof of a data center in Germany, seen from above, work to cool the equipment inside the building.AP Photo/Michael Probst

Artificial intelligence is growing fast, and so are the number of computers that power it. Behind the scenes, this rapid growth is putting a huge strain on the data centers that run AI models. These...

Read more: AI’s ballooning energy consumption puts spotlight on data center efficiency

No credit history? No problem − new research suggests shopping data works as a proxy for creditworthiness

  • Written by Joonhyuk Yang, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Mendoza College of Business, University of Notre Dame
imageNo credit history? That need not be a problem for first-time borrowing.AP Photo/Mark Humphrey

If you didn’t know much about someone, would you lend them a whole lot of money? Probably not – and banks are the same way. That’s why people with no credit history often have trouble getting loans. Banks and credit bureaus look at...

Read more: No credit history? No problem − new research suggests shopping data works as a proxy for...

From intention to impact: 3 ways men in leadership can build equitable workplaces that work for everyone

  • Written by Lisa Kaplowitz, Associate Professor & Executive Director, Center for Women in Business, Rutgers University

Many top-performing companies say they are committed to supporting women in the workplace, and there’s reason to believe most men want to be better allies to women as well. They just don’t know how.

We arebusinessprofessors who recently surveyed more than 400 managers about gender equity. We found that while men and women agree on what...

Read more: From intention to impact: 3 ways men in leadership can build equitable workplaces that work for...

65,000 Pennsylvania kids have a parent in prison or jail − here’s what research says about the value of in-person visits

  • Written by Julie Poehlmann, Professor of Human Development & Family Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageStudies show that in-person visits between children and a parent in jail or prison can strengthen family bonds and reduce recidivism.Joe Amon/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Across Pennsylvania, an estimated 65,459 children have a parent in jail or prison. That’s according to a recent email inquiry to the Pennsylvania Department of...

Read more: 65,000 Pennsylvania kids have a parent in prison or jail − here’s what research says about the...

China’s WWII anniversary parade rekindles cross-strait battle over war narrative − and fears in Taiwan of future conflict

  • Written by Meredith Oyen, Associate Professor of History and Asian Studies, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

World War II casts a very long shadow in East Asia. Eighty years after ending with Japan’s surrender to Allied forces on Sept. 2, 1945, the conflict continues to stir debate over the past, in the context of today’s geopolitical tensions.

China’s high-profile military parade commemorating the conclusion of what Beijing calls the...

Read more: China’s WWII anniversary parade rekindles cross-strait battle over war narrative − and fears in...

‘What you feel is valid’: Social media is a lifeline for many abused and neglected young people

  • Written by Morgan E. PettyJohn, Assistant Professor of Social Work, University of Texas at Arlington
imageSeeking support online can help young people recognize abusive situations.MementoJpeg via Getty images

As a teen growing up in an abusive household, Morgan coped daily with physical and emotional harm from her mother. However, she felt safe and supported when she posted about her experiences on a fake Instagram account – widely referred to as...

Read more: ‘What you feel is valid’: Social media is a lifeline for many abused and neglected young people

More Articles ...

  1. What is AI slop? A technologist explains this new and largely unwelcome form of online content
  2. How Europe’s deforestation law could change the global coffee trade
  3. Personal power v. socialized power: What Machiavelli and St. Francis can tell us about modern CEOs
  4. Adding more green space to a campus is a simple, cheap and healthy way to help millions of stressed and depressed college students
  5. Turkey and the PKK have made historic moves toward peace – now begins the hard diplomatic work
  6. AI has a hidden water cost − here’s how to calculate yours
  7. How to poop outdoors in a way that won’t harm the environment and other hikers
  8. Balancing kratom’s potential benefits and risks − new legislation in Colorado seeks to minimize harm
  9. Are high school sports living up to their ideals?
  10. How does your body make poop?
  11. Pregnant women face tough choices about medication use due to lack of safety data − here’s why medical research cuts will make it worse
  12. We’ve been tracking the number of Americans who identify as transgender – soon, there will be no reliable way to measure them
  13. How the conservative Federalist Society will affect the Supreme Court for decades to come
  14. Earth-size stars and alien oceans – an astronomer explains the case for life around white dwarfs
  15. As National Park System visitor numbers hit record highs, here’s how visitors can adapt for a better experience
  16. American capitalism is being remade by state power
  17. FDA approves updated COVID-19 vaccines with new restrictions, potentially limiting access for healthy children
  18. Supporting religious diversity on campus is a surprising consensus among faculty across the red-blue divide
  19. When federal courts fail to punish lawyers for potential misconduct, states can step in
  20. Latin American literature contains warnings for American universities that yield to Trump
  21. Escaped slaves on St. Croix hid their settlements so well, they still haven’t been found – archaeologists using new mapping technology are on the hunt
  22. When the government can see everything: How one company – Palantir – is mapping the nation’s data
  23. Pregnancy brings unique challenges for people with autoimmune diseases – but with early planning, pregnancy outcomes can be greatly improved
  24. How stripping diversity, equity and inclusion from health care may make Americans sicker
  25. Why religious groups are pushing for psychedelics as sacrament
  26. Trump’s firing of Fed governor threatens central bank independence − and that isn’t good news for sound economic stewardship (or battling inflation)
  27. Trump’s push to fire Fed governor threatens central bank independence − and that isn’t good news for sound economic stewardship (or battling inflation)
  28. The US really is unlike other rich countries when it comes to job insecurity – and AI could make it even more ‘exceptional’
  29. Active Clubs are white supremacy’s new, dangerous frontier
  30. Squash has been played in Philly for 125 years − a sports psychologist explains why it’s one of the city’s best-kept secrets
  31. College students are bombarded by misinformation, so this professor taught them fact-checking 101 − here’s what happened
  32. Like Reagan, Trump is slashing US environment regulations, but his strategy may have a far deeper impact
  33. Like Reagan, Trump is slashing environment regulations, but his strategy may have a far deeper impact
  34. Israel’s killing of journalists follows a pattern of silencing Palestinian media that stretches back to 1967
  35. Hurricane Katrina: 3 painful lessons for emergency management are increasingly important 20 years later
  36. Orwell’s opposition to totalitarianism was rooted in his support for freeing workers from poverty and exploitation
  37. Why is the object of golf to play as little golf as possible?
  38. Rural women are at a higher risk of violence − and less likely to get help
  39. Forget the warm fuzzies of finding common ground – to beat polarization, try changing your expectations
  40. From public confession to private penance: How Catholic confession has evolved over centuries
  41. Monsoon flooding has killed hundreds in Pakistan – climate change is pushing the rainy season from blessing to looming catastrophe
  42. How federal officials talk about health is shifting in troubling ways – and that change makes me worried for my autistic child
  43. Netanyahu remains unmoved by Israel’s lurch toward pariah status − but at home and abroad, Israelis are suffering the consequences
  44. Misunderstood Malthus: The English thinker whose name is synonymous with doom and gloom has lessons for today
  45. The ‘security guarantee’ paradox: Too weak and it won’t protect Ukraine; too robust and Russia won’t accept it
  46. A straight face, with a wink – the subtle humor of deadpan photography
  47. The first stars may not have been as uniformly massive as astronomers thought
  48. Trump’s Epstein problem is real: New poll shows many in his base disapprove of his handling of the files, and some supporters are having second thoughts about electing him
  49. A Detroit street is named in honor of Vincent Chin – his death mobilized Asian American activists nationwide
  50. Tit-for-tat gerrymandering wars won’t end soon – what happens in Texas and California doesn’t stay there