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Rabies is an ancient, unpredictable and potentially fatal disease − two rabies researchers explain how to protect yourself

  • Written by Rodney E. Rohde, Regents' Professor & Chair, Medical Laboratory Science, Texas State University
imageRabies virus (red) has an incubation period that can last from days to months.NIAID/Flickr, CC BY

A feral kitten in Omaha, Nebraska, tested positive for rabies in November 2023. It died of the raccoon variant of the virus, which is typically found only in the Appalachian Mountains. Detecting this variant hundreds of miles away in the Midwest raised...

Read more: Rabies is an ancient, unpredictable and potentially fatal disease − two rabies researchers explain...

Trump’s arguments for immunity not as hopeless as some claim

  • Written by Ofer Raban, Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Oregon
imageDonald Trump has claimed that presidents are immune from prosecution for official acts.AP Photo/Toby Brusseau

Former President Donald Trump’s claims of immunity from criminal prosecution will be argued before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Jan. 9, 2024 – on an interlocutory appeal from his trial for...

Read more: Trump’s arguments for immunity not as hopeless as some claim

What happens to the ocean if we take out all the fish? A marine ecologist explains the complex roles fish play in their ecosystem

  • Written by Kory Evans, Assistant Professor of BioSciences, Rice University
imageFish swim in a reef at Pearl and Hermes Atoll in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands.AP Photo/Jacob Asher image

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


What would happen to the ocean if we took out all the fish? – Reny, age 12


The...

Read more: What happens to the ocean if we take out all the fish? A marine ecologist explains the complex...

From South Asia to Mexico, from slave to spiritual icon, this woman's life is a snapshot of Spain's colonization – and the Pacific slave trade history that books often leave out

  • Written by Diego Javier Luis, Assistant Professor of History, Tufts University
imageCatarina was revered in Puebla, Mexico – but devotion to her attracted Catholic authorities' disapproval after her death.Image from the collections of the Biblioteca Nacional de España

Jan. 5, 2024, marked 336 years since the passing of an extraordinary woman you have probably never heard of: Catarina de San Juan.

Her life reads like an...

Read more: From South Asia to Mexico, from slave to spiritual icon, this woman's life is a snapshot of...

South Korea's gender imbalance is bad news for men − outnumbering women, many face bleak marriage prospects

  • Written by Dudley L. Poston Jr., Professor of Sociology, Texas A&M University
imageIn South Korea, there are nor enough young Korean women for young Korean men to marry. RUNSTUDIO/Getty Images

South Korea’s bachelor time bomb is about to really go off. Following a historic 30-year-long imbalance in the male-to-female sex ratio at birth, young men far outnumber young women in the country. As a result, some 700,000 to...

Read more: South Korea's gender imbalance is bad news for men − outnumbering women, many face bleak marriage...

An overlooked and undercounted group of Arab American and Muslim voters may have outsized impact on 2024 presidential election

  • Written by Youssef Chouhoud, Assistant Professor, Christopher Newport University
imagePeople demonstrate in support of Palestinians on Oct. 14, 2023, in Dearborn, Mich.Jeff Kowalsky/AFP via Getty Images

Though domestic issues tend to motivate most U.S. voters, the war in the Middle East may be the dominant issue in mind for an increasingly important voting block: Middle Eastern and Muslim Americans.

Since the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas...

Read more: An overlooked and undercounted group of Arab American and Muslim voters may have outsized impact...

Emergency medicine residencies more likely to go unfilled at for-profit and newly accredited programs

  • Written by Cameron Gettel, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, Yale University

The number of unfilled positions in emergency medicine residency programs surged in 2022 and 2023, with the trend most pronounced at programs that were recently accredited or under for-profit ownership. That’s the key finding of my team’s recent study of the past two match cycles.

A match cycle is when medical students choose a...

Read more: Emergency medicine residencies more likely to go unfilled at for-profit and newly accredited...

College applications rose in states that legalized recreational marijuana

  • Written by Christopher D. Blake, Assistant Professor of Economics, Emory University
imageEffects of legalization on college application rates are short term. wildpixel via iStock/Getty Images Plus

Colleges in states where recreational marijuana became legal over the past decade saw a significant but short-term boost in applications from top-notch students. They also got more applications overall. Those were the key findings of a new...

Read more: College applications rose in states that legalized recreational marijuana

US Supreme Court decision on Trump-Colorado ballot case 'monumental' for democracy itself, not just 2024 presidential election

  • Written by Derek T. Muller, Professor of Law, University of Notre Dame
imageThe U.S. Supreme Court.Stefani Reynolds/Getty Images

Momentous questions for the U.S. Supreme Court and momentous consequences for the country are likely now that the court has announced it will decide whether former president and current presidential candidate Donald Trump is eligible to appear on the Colorado ballot.

The court’s decision to...

Read more: US Supreme Court decision on Trump-Colorado ballot case 'monumental' for democracy itself, not...

Jan. 6 was an example of networked incitement − a media and disinformation expert explains the danger of political violence orchestrated over social media

  • Written by Joan Donovan, Assistant Professor of Journalism and Emerging Media Studies, Boston University
imageSocial media and cellphones connected President Trump to the Jan. 6 insurrectionists.Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

The shocking events of Jan. 6, 2021, signaled a major break from the nonviolent rallies that categorized most major protests over the past few decades.

What set Jan. 6 apart was the president of the United States using...

Read more: Jan. 6 was an example of networked incitement − a media and disinformation expert explains the...

More Articles ...

  1. 70 years after Brown vs. Board of Education, public schools still deeply segregated
  2. The US invented shopping malls, but China is writing their next chapter
  3. What is resilience? A psychologist explains the main ingredients that help people manage stress
  4. Literature inspired my medical career: Why the humanities are needed in health care
  5. Why does Claudine Gay still work at Harvard after being forced to resign as its president? She's got tenure
  6. 'Designated contrarians' could improve nonprofit boards by disrupting the kind of consensus and groupthink that contributed to the NRA's woes
  7. With higher fees and more ads, streaming services like Netflix, Disney+ and Hulu are cashing in by using the old tactics of cable TV
  8. Trump's Iowa political organizing this year is nothing like his scattershot 2016 campaign
  9. 2 colonists had similar identities – but one felt compelled to remain loyal, the other to rebel
  10. How the Iowa caucuses became the first major challenge of US presidential campaigns
  11. The chickadee in the snowbank: A 'canary in the coal mine' for climate change in the Sierra Nevada mountains
  12. Pundits: Central to democracy, or partisan spewers of opinion who destroy trust
  13. School board members could soon be blocked from blocking people − and deleting their comments − on social media
  14. Seeing the human in every patient − from biblical texts to 21st century relational medicine
  15. Drugs of the future will be easier and faster to make, thanks to mRNA – after researchers work out a few remaining kinks
  16. Focus on right now, not the distant future, to stay motivated and on track to your long-term health goals
  17. Stories about war, violence and hate crime can cause anxiety, anger and depression in kids -- here's how to discuss bad news with your children
  18. We used AI and satellite imagery to map ocean activities that take place out of sight, including fishing, shipping and energy development
  19. Workers in their teens and early 20s are more likely to get hurt than older employees
  20. Radiation therapy takes advantage of cancer's poor DNA repair abilities – an oncologist and physicist explain how
  21. AI is here – and everywhere: 3 AI researchers look to the challenges ahead in 2024
  22. Coast redwood trees are enduring, adaptable marvels in a warming world
  23. The Lotus Sutra − an ancient Buddhist scripture from the 3rd century − continues to have relevance today
  24. How religion and politics will mix in 2024 – three trends to track
  25. Israel's highest court protects its power to curb government extremism − 3 essential reads
  26. Economic lookahead: As we ring in 2024, can the US economy continue to avoid a recession?
  27. Keeping a streak alive can be strong motivation to stick with a chosen activity
  28. From the Moon's south pole to an ice-covered ocean world, several exciting space missions are slated for launch in 2024
  29. Cardio or weights first? A kinesiologist explains how to optimize the order of your exercise routine
  30. The curious joy of being wrong – intellectual humility means being open to new information and willing to change your mind
  31. California banned sales of flavored e-cigarettes in 2022 − but a new study finds online stores are still selling them, even to kids
  32. AI could improve your life by removing bottlenecks between what you want and what you get
  33. New date, same traditions: Ukraine's wartime Christmas celebrations
  34. Social media drains our brains and impacts our decision making – podcast
  35. Trump barred from Colorado ballot – now what?
  36. What do universities owe their big donors? Less than you might think, explain 2 nonprofit law experts
  37. Why the COP28 climate summit mattered, and what to watch for in 2024
  38. Trump claims Constitution gives him immunity − here's why judges and the Supreme Court may not agree
  39. For many who are suffering with prolonged grief, the holidays can be a time to reflect and find meaning in loss
  40. 50 years later, 'The Exorcist' continues to possess Hollywood's imagination, reflecting our obsession with evil
  41. Do you eat with your eyes, your gut or your brain? A neuroscientist explains how to listen to your hunger during the holidays
  42. ChatGPT and its AI chatbot cousins ruled 2023: 4 essential reads that puncture the hype
  43. 2023's historic Hollywood and UAW strikes aren't labor's whole story – the total number of Americans walking off the job remained relatively low
  44. With 'White Christmas,' Irving Berlin and Bing Crosby helped make Christmas a holiday that all Americans could celebrate
  45. Why 14th Amendment bars Trump from office: A constitutional law scholar explains principle behind Colorado Supreme Court ruling
  46. Volcanic eruption lights up Iceland after weeks of earthquake warnings − a geologist explains what's happening
  47. Joel Roberts Poinsett: Namesake of the poinsettia, enslaver, secret agent and perpetrator of the 'Trail of Tears'
  48. Shipwrecks teem with underwater life, from microbes to sharks
  49. Guatemala's anti-corruption leader-to-be could be prevented from taking office, deepening migration concerns for US
  50. Why do some men commit domestic violence? Trauma and social isolation may play a role