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Anorexia more stubborn to treat than previously believed, analysis shows

  • Written by Stuart Murray, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco
People with anorexia nervosa often see themselves as overweight when in fact they are not. This image depicts a young, thin woman who sees herself as larger than she is.Tatyana Dzemileva/Shutterstock.com

Anorexia nervosa is a psychiatric illness that primarily effects young people during their adolescence. While anorexia is relatively uncommon,...

Read more: Anorexia more stubborn to treat than previously believed, analysis shows

Should we scoff at the idea of love at first sight?

  • Written by James Kuzner, Associate Professor of English, Brown University
Jules Salles-Wagner's 1898 painting 'Romeo and Juliet.'Wikimedia Commons

For a lecture course I teach at Brown University called “Love Stories,” we begin at the beginning, with love at first sight.

To its detractors, love at first sight must be an illusion – the wrong term for what is simply infatuation, or a way to sugarcoat...

Read more: Should we scoff at the idea of love at first sight?

What teenagers need to know about cybersecurity

  • Written by Sanjay Goel, Professor of Information Technology Management, University at Albany, State University of New York
Everyone's using technology – but they're not all as safe as they could be.Akhenaton Images/Shutterstock.com

Now that school is back in session, many high schoolers have new phones, new computers and new privileges for using their devices – and new responsibilities too. High schoolers today are more technology-savvy than average adults....

Read more: What teenagers need to know about cybersecurity

US prisoners' strike is reminder how commonplace inmate labor is – and that it may run afoul of the law

  • Written by Ruben J. Garcia, Professor of Law, Co-Director of UNLV Workplace Law Program, University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Prisoners in 17 U.S. states went on strike on Aug. 21 by refusing to eat or work to call attention to a number of troubling issues, including dilapidated facilities, harsh sentences and other aspects of mass incarceration in America.

As we approach Labor Day, the strike places a spotlight on the questionable practice of putting prisoners to work...

Read more: US prisoners' strike is reminder how commonplace inmate labor is – and that it may run afoul of...

This 19th-century argument over federal support for Christianity still resonates

  • Written by David Mislin, Assistant Professor of Intellectual Heritage, Temple University
President Donald Trump with pastor Paula White during a dinner for evangelical leaders in the White House, on Aug. 27, 2018.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Since taking office, President Trump and his administration have strongly championed religious liberty, but only of a particular kind. At this week’s White House dinner for evangelical leaders,...

Read more: This 19th-century argument over federal support for Christianity still resonates

Cafeteros en Colombia luchan por adaptarse a un clima cambiante

  • Written by Jessica Eise, Ross Fellow in the Brian Lamb School of Communication Doctoral Program, Purdue University
El fértil y montañoso terreno del eje cafetero de Colombia sufre el tremendo impacto de los cambios climáticos, como implacables tormentas y más altas temperaturas.Eddy Milfort/flickr, CC BY-SA, CC BY , CC BY

En la región cafetera de Risaralda, Colombia, pequeños arbustos se alinean a lo largo de la...

Read more: Cafeteros en Colombia luchan por adaptarse a un clima cambiante

Teaching the public more science likely won't boost support for funding, but sparking their curiosity might

  • Written by Matthew Motta, Postdoctoral Fellow in the Science of Science Communication, University of Pennsylvania
Kindling interest might be better than filling people with facts.Chris Nguyen/Unsplash, CC BY

After 19 months without a director, the Trump administration recently tapped meteorologist Kelvin Droegemeier to lead the the White House’s Office of Science and Technology Policy. Perhaps surprisingly, given the administration’s previous...

Read more: Teaching the public more science likely won't boost support for funding, but sparking their...

Los Angeles wants to use the Hoover Dam as a giant battery. The hurdles could be more historical than technical

  • Written by Anthony F. Arrigo, Associate Professor, Writing Rhetoric and Communication, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
The shrinking supply of Colorado River water is evident at the Hoover Dam on the border of Arizona and Nevada.AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

Los Angeles is looking into whether it should spend an estimated US$3 billion on a massive, 20-mile underground pumped hydropower storage system that would be connected to the iconic Hoover Dam on the Colorado...

Read more: Los Angeles wants to use the Hoover Dam as a giant battery. The hurdles could be more historical...

For the parents of gender-nonconforming kids, a new approach to care

  • Written by Tey Meadow, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Columbia University
Self-knowledge rarely comes packaged in a single coherent narrative. Yet this is the expectation we have of the children in our lives.Billion Photos

Ari had a difficult time talking about his gender.

He had always been feminine, insisting on wearing only androgynous clothing, flowing pants in bright colors, patterned shirts and scarves. His hair...

Read more: For the parents of gender-nonconforming kids, a new approach to care

More Articles ...

  1. Why synthetic marijuana is so risky
  2. Detecting 'deepfake' videos in the blink of an eye
  3. Will John McCain be the last Republican leader in the Senate to address climate change?
  4. ¿Qué está causando la crisis de algas en Florida? 5 preguntas con respuesta
  5. Tentative deal to replace NAFTA puts pressure on Canada in win for Trump
  6. Elon Musk was right to drop his bungled plan to take Tesla private
  7. Cracking the sugar code: Why the 'glycome' is the next big thing in health and medicine
  8. Teaching V.S. Naipaul in the Caribbean
  9. Why the Catholic Church is so slow to act in sex abuse cases: 4 essential reads
  10. Here's how forests rebounded from Yellowstone's epic 1988 fires – and why that could be harder in the future
  11. Why McCain and all POWs deserve our profound respect and gratitude
  12. Fear of a Non-Nuclear Family
  13. Red-state politics in and out of the college classroom
  14. Revolution Starts on Campus
  15. 1968 protests at Columbia University called attention to 'Gym Crow' and got worldwide attention
  16. Chronic pain after trauma may depend on what stress gene variation you carry
  17. Petróleo venezolano provoca el auge y caída del régimen de Ortega en Nicaragua
  18. El petróleo venezolano provoca el auge y caída del régimen de Ortega en Nicaragua
  19. Glioblastoma topples an American hero, but researchers will continue the fight
  20. Why you can smell rain
  21. Why it's so hard to hold priests accountable for sex abuse
  22. Turkish currency isn't the real problem for Erdoğan, it's democracy
  23. Qatar's $15 billion snub of Trump over Turkey puts another key US relationship in Middle East at risk
  24. The few humanities majors who dominate in the business world
  25. Far-sighted adaptation to rising seas is blocked by just fixing eroded beaches
  26. India has a sexual assault problem that only women can fix
  27. La devaluación 'desesperada' de la moneda de Venezuela no evitará un colapso económico
  28. Could the future edge in college sports be mental wellness?
  29. If you shelter in place during a disaster, be ready for challenges after the storm
  30. A Trump Administration casualty: Democracy and civil rights in the Middle East
  31. What the grieving mother orca tells us about how animals experience death
  32. Hurricane season not only brings destruction and death but rising inequality too
  33. Tearing down Confederate statues leaves structural racism intact
  34. Michael Cohen’s guilty plea? ‘Nothing to see here’
  35. Teens who feel down may benefit from picking others up
  36. Why the US has the campaign finance laws that Michael Cohen broke and what their history means for Trump
  37. There's a dark history to the campaign finance laws Michael Cohen broke — and that should worry Trump
  38. ¿Quiere ahorrar en sus viajes? Piense como un economista
  39. A year after Hurricane Harvey, some Texans are using outdated flood risk maps to rebuild
  40. Despite predictions of their demise, college textbooks aren't going away
  41. Child pornography may make a comeback after court ruling guts regulations protecting minors
  42. Trump's coal plan – neither clean nor affordable
  43. For some Catholics, it is demons that taunt priests with sexual desire
  44. Could college textbooks soon get cheaper?
  45. Would you eat 'meat' from a lab? Consumers aren't necessarily sold on 'cultured meat'
  46. Today’s GOP leaders have little in common with those who resisted Nixon
  47. ¿Qué tan decisivo será el 'voto latino' anti-Trump en las elecciones intermedias de EEUU?
  48. An alternative to propping up coal power plants: Retrain workers for solar
  49. What makes some species more likely to go extinct?
  50. Is China worsening the developing world's environmental crisis?