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How vulnerable to hacking is the US election cyber infrastructure?

  • Written by Richard Forno, Senior Lecturer, Cybersecurity & Internet Researcher, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

Following the hack of Democratic National Committee emails and reports of a new cyberattack against the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, worries abound that foreign nations may be clandestinely involved in the 2016 American presidential campaign. Allegations swirl that Russia, under the direction of President Vladimir Putin, is...

Read more: How vulnerable to hacking is the US election cyber infrastructure?

Traveling to Mars with immortal plasma rockets

  • Written by Gary Li, Ph.D. Candidate in Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, Los Angeles
imageMars mission with plasma rockets concept.NASA

Nearly 50 years after landing on the moon, mankind has now set its sights on sending the first humans to Mars. The moon trip took three days; a Mars trip will likely take most of a year. The difference is in more than just time.

We’ll need many more supplies for the trip itself, and when we get to...

Read more: Traveling to Mars with immortal plasma rockets

Help your children play out a story and watch them become more creative

  • Written by Sandra Russ, Distinguished University Professor and Louis D. Beaumont University Professor, Case Western Reserve University
imageChildren express creativity through 'pretend play.'Children image via www.shutterstock.com

Just about every institution these days is looking for creative individuals. Adults who can innovate in high-quality ways and contribute to the progress of science, engineering and the arts.

Creative expressions start from an early age. Children express...

Read more: Help your children play out a story and watch them become more creative

Can your Facebook friends influence your decision to buy a house?

  • Written by Theresa Kuchler, Assistant Professor of Finance, New York University

People interact with their family, friends and coworkers on a daily basis, both through online social networks and in real life. The effects of such social interactions on economic and financial decision making, however, are not well-understood.

Do such interactions influence people’s assessment of the attractiveness of investments such as...

Read more: Can your Facebook friends influence your decision to buy a house?

German responses to terror range from cautious to conspiratorial

  • Written by Johanna Schuster-Craig, Assistant Professor of German and Global Studies, Michigan State University

Until this month, Germany had been spared from terrorist attacks with momentous losses of life.

Since July 18, four attacks have occurred: one by a teenage refugee on a train in Würzburg; a mass shooting and suicide by a German schoolboy in Munich; a murder and attack by a refugee in Reutlingen; and a suicide bombing by a refugee in Ansbach.

A...

Read more: German responses to terror range from cautious to conspiratorial

A third term for the Clintons?

  • Written by David Stebenne, Professor of History and Law Faculty, The Ohio State University

The Democratic Party’s nomination of Hillary Clinton this past week has revived an old controversy in a new way: presidential third terms.

It is a controversy as old as the nation itself.

The father of the nation sets a precedent

The third term issue first surfaced during George Washington’s second presidential term, which ran from March...

Read more: A third term for the Clintons?

More than scenery: National parks preserve our history and culture

  • Written by Antoinette Jackson, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of South Florida
imageAncestral Pueblo carving at Petroglyph National Monument, New MexicoSteven C. Price/Wikipedia, CC BY-SA

On August 25, 2016, the National Park Service (NPS) will celebrate its 100th birthday. But what’s a party without people? In fact, while many Americans think of national parks as places to experience nature, they also preserve unique...

Read more: More than scenery: National parks preserve our history and culture

Clinton vs. Trump: Whose acceptance speech hit the right note?

  • Written by David E. Clementson, PhD Candidate in the School of Communication, The Ohio State University

Tonight at the Democratic National Convention, Hillary Clinton formally accepted the nomination of the Democratic Party.

Last week, Republican nominee Donald Trump did the same at the Republican National Convention.

Which candidate did a better job of delivering a speech that hit just the right emotional notes to win over voters? The study of languag...

Read more: Clinton vs. Trump: Whose acceptance speech hit the right note?

Will the historic nature of Clinton's nomination give her a bump in the polls?

  • Written by Leslie Caughell, Professor of American Politics & Gender and Women's Studies, Virginia Wesleyan College

Hillary Clinton made history this week as the first female presidential candidate ever nominated by a major political party in the United States.

Not surprisingly, Clinton and her campaign surrogates have emphasized the groundbreaking nature of her candidacy.

In a poignant moment during the Democratic convention on Tuesday, Clinton appeared via...

Read more: Will the historic nature of Clinton's nomination give her a bump in the polls?

More Articles ...

  1. Does practice make an Olympian? Not by itself
  2. What's really behind our obsession with 'clean' athletes?
  3. Candidates control their own social media. What message are they sending?
  4. How black grassroots politics led to the 14th Amendment and black citizenship
  5. GMOs lead the fight against Zika, Ebola and the next unknown pandemic
  6. How will Turkey's failed coup and massive purge affect its economic future?
  7. Going public: Could Clinton's health care proposals work?
  8. Why Turkey wants to silence its academics
  9. What is a party platform, and why do candidates often ignore them?
  10. The science behind Hillary Clinton's problems with trust
  11. Why fear of childbirth must be studied in the US
  12. Even presidential candidates need sleep
  13. What Peru's new president can learn from Brazil's fight against corruption
  14. Gambling on limited information: our visual system and probabilistic inference
  15. The tragedy of Turkish democracy in five acts
  16. Can nature advocates save threatened Boundary Waters wilderness – again?
  17. Clinton's new college compact plan explained
  18. In Rio's bulldozed _favelas,_ echoes of America's shantytowns
  19. Dreams from their mothers: Hillary and Obama bending history again
  20. Technology changes how authors write, but the big impact isn't on their style
  21. What causes asthma? Clues from London's Great Smog with implications for air pollution today
  22. The Olympics won't spread Zika around the world
  23. Why 'woman' isn't Hillary Clinton's trump card
  24. The global impact of air conditioning: big and getting bigger
  25. Hooking up on campus: Sexual double standards may leave students feeling disempowered
  26. Zero tolerance laws increase suspension rates for black students
  27. Here’s a problem with the TPP that Hillary Clinton ignores at her peril
  28. Kaine was the logical choice as Hillary Clinton's Vice President
  29. It'll take more than tech for Elon Musk to pull off audacious new Tesla master plan
  30. The one Roger Ailes hire that changed American politics forever
  31. Drunk driving laws don't match the research
  32. Africa's growing and neglected cancer problem: We will all suffer
  33. Are gifted kids more sensitive to screen violence?
  34. Why calls for 'unity' are not enough: Look at the 1930s and 1940s
  35. In acceptance speech, Trump embraces role as hero of the forgotten
  36. Is the Constitution at stake in this year's election?
  37. More CO2 won't help northern forests or stave off climate change
  38. Does 'Black Lives Matter' still matter?
  39. It's time for us to admit we're afraid of terrorism
  40. The search for answers to hormonal contraception's role in HIV infection
  41. Donald Trump Jr.'s call for school choice in context
  42. Trump's health care plan: not truly on point
  43. Living in a chaotic world: how to keep anxiety at bay
  44. What factors influence income inequality?
  45. Is your nervous system a democracy or a dictatorship when controlling your behavior?
  46. Can America's deep political divide be traced back to 1832?
  47. Spain's Civil War and the Americans who fought in it: a convoluted legacy
  48. What anti-Trump activists can learn from Chicago '68
  49. Despite national efforts to fight addiction, states can tailor – and trim – programs
  50. Protecting our children after the wounds of racism divide us even more