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The Conversation

Swinging between extremes in giving scientific credit where credit is due

  • Written by The Conversation
imageNobels go to only three scientists max, while some papers have as many authors as members of this audience.© Nobel Media AB, Alexander Mahmoud

imageChina Daily’s front page on the morning of Tu Youyou’s Nobel win.

The headline on the first page of China Daily on October 6 was striking: China wins first Nobel prize in medicine. Actually, D...

Read more: Swinging between extremes in giving scientific credit where credit is due

Should movie studios be worried about Netflix's first feature film?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageIdris Elba stars in Cary Fukunaga's Beasts of No Nation.Netflix

Summer is always important for the movie business, and this past one was the second-biggest ever for ticket sales.

Studios succeeded by doing what they do best: recombinant franchise films featuring superheroes and beasts. Jurassic World helped Universal dominate box office totals,...

Read more: Should movie studios be worried about Netflix's first feature film?

Craft chocolate shakes up industry as its sweet season begins

  • Written by The Conversation
imageChocolate beans are everywhere these days.Reuters

Earlier this month, thousands of eager lovers streamed through the doors of the Bell Harbor International Conference Center in Seattle, on the stunning waterfront of Puget Sound. Their love had one all-consuming object: chocolate.

The Northwest Chocolate Festival, the country’s leading consumer...

Read more: Craft chocolate shakes up industry as its sweet season begins

Scholars on the Democratic debate: Hillary wins, Bernie hits a nerve

  • Written by The Conversation
imageBernie and Hillary agree: enough with the emails already.Lucy Nicholson/Reuters

The Democrats' first debate took place in Las Vegas on Tuesday evening. Compared to the two GOP debates, this CNN-hosted debate was a more substantial and less impolite. Here’s an instant analysis from three political scholars.

A decisive victory for Clinton

Anthony...

Read more: Scholars on the Democratic debate: Hillary wins, Bernie hits a nerve

Is it time America finally took a chance on Syria's refugees?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageArriving in Lesbos, Greece from SyriaDimitris Michalakis/Reuters

Afghan, Syrian and Eritrean refugees keep arriving on Europe’s shores, reputedly at an increasing rate.

They attempt to traverse the Mediterranean by land and sea, presumably hastened by Putin’s bombing campaign. Now some even arrive by traveling across the Arctic.

So how...

Read more: Is it time America finally took a chance on Syria's refugees?

Building a case, over time, for adding sustainability to nutritional guidelines

  • Written by The Conversation
imageMore of these for personal and planetary health. i5design/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

The question of whether government-issued dietary guidance should address sustainability has been in the headlines. A report issued by the US Dietary Guidelines Advisory Committee (DGAC) earlier this year recommended that sustainability be a factor in determining the 2015...

Read more: Building a case, over time, for adding sustainability to nutritional guidelines

Men and women biased about studies of STEM gender bias – in opposite directions

  • Written by The Conversation
imageHow you assess the strength of gender bias research depends on your viewpoint.Glasses image via www.shutterstock.com

In 2012, an experiment on gender bias shook the scientific community by showing that science faculty favor male college graduates over equally qualified women applying for lab manager positions. Though the study was rigorous, many did...

Read more: Men and women biased about studies of STEM gender bias – in opposite directions

More Articles ...

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  2. Meet Doc Savage, the most famous superhero you've never heard of
  3. Hydraulic fracturing components in Marcellus groundwater likely from surface operations, not wells
  4. Brain activity is as unique – and identifying – as a fingerprint
  5. Are some kids really smarter just because they know more words?
  6. Pathogen-carrying invasive fish from China threatens US waterways
  7. Why some religious Americans see same-sex marriage as a threat
  8. Svetlana Alexievich captured the psyche – and trauma – of a Soviet people and nation
  9. TPP's new battle lines may pose threat to world's biggest trade deal
  10. Could the peace deal in Colombia be a model for other conflicts?
  11. Are assigned readings from women professors different?
  12. As Syrian refugee crisis spreads to Europe, lessons from Turkey
  13. Why only now – after 51 years – war is ending in Colombia
  14. What happens to men who stay abstinent until marriage?
  15. Denis Mukwege deserves the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in Congo
  16. Chemistry Nobel DNA research lays foundation for new ways to fight cancer
  17. The universe’s most miraculous molecule
  18. Japan may have tricky time passing TPP after making concessions on rice, beef
  19. Want a 'free lunch'? Invest in America's infrastructure
  20. A carbon tax in waiting: we're not adapting as fast as climate is changing
  21. Arne Duncan's legacy: growing influence of a network of private actors on public education
  22. They won a Nobel for what? Why good science communication counts
  23. Is the Kunduz hospital strike a war crime? Don't jump to conclusions
  24. Why wearing sagging pants on a college campus becomes a criminal offense
  25. The new battleground for same-sex couples is equal rights for their kids
  26. The psychological origins of procrastination – and how we can stop putting things off
  27. Australia’s war on feral cats: shaky science, missing ethics
  28. We may have cinched TPP, but is US trade a lost cause?
  29. How neutrinos, which barely exist, just ran off with another Nobel Prize
  30. The secret Maoist Chinese operation that conquered malaria – and won a Nobel
  31. Why women aren't getting long-acting contraception when they need it most
  32. With a shaky legal foundation, are daily fantasy sports a billion-dollar house of cards?
  33. How Snapchat is scooping 'The Boys on the Bus'
  34. Why new US ozone standards aren't enough to protect health and the environment
  35. Combating 'neglected' diseases using nature's apothecary
  36. Is the 2015 Nobel Prize a turning point for traditional Chinese medicine?
  37. Who you gonna trust: how power affects our faith in others
  38. A somber message on World Teachers' Day 2015: our teachers are at risk
  39. Do teachers in Finland have more autonomy?
  40. What fewer women in STEM means for their mental health
  41. Permafrost-eating bacteria: a new twist on thawing Arctic and global warming
  42. From Sophocles to Sherlock: economics, literature and the detective story
  43. The Umpqua, Oregon shootings: portrait of the killer as a young man
  44. What public health researchers want you to know about gun control
  45. The University of Texas faculty are watching Oregon uneasily
  46. How do libraries get away with banning books?
  47. Jobs market is stuck in neutral – it's time candidates talk about how to fix it
  48. Plain cigarette packaging: healthier citizens, sicker state finances?
  49. The Martian: a space epic that explores ordinary human decency
  50. Is 'The Slants' racist? Court ruling on band name could upend trademark law