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¿Reactivará la economía argentina un rescate internacional de 50.000 millones de dólares?

  • Written by Robert H. Scott III, Professor of Economics & Finance, Monmouth University
Los argentinos protestan las condiciones de austeridad que forman parte del rescate del FMI. AP Photo/Natacha Pisarenko

Una economía en recesión. Fuga de pesos. La peor sequía en décadas. Los tipos de interés más altos del mundo. El mayor rescate de la historia del Fondo Monetario Internacional.

¿Suen...

Read more: ¿Reactivará la economía argentina un rescate internacional de 50.000 millones de dólares?

The mosques that survived Palu's tsunami and what that means

  • Written by Jennifer Nourse, Associate Professor of Anthropology, University of Richmond
The Floating Mosque of Palu that survived after the earthquake. AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana

In the devastation that followed the earthquake and resulting tsunami in the Indonesian city of Palu in Central Sulawesi, many Muslim religious sites were destroyed.

Two mosques, however, survived, with little to no damage to their structure.

In a province...

Read more: The mosques that survived Palu's tsunami and what that means

Is exercise still important to weight loss? Absolutely, a doctor says

  • Written by David Prologo, Associate Professor, Department of Radiology and Imaging Sciences, Emory University
Exercise is a key component of weight loss, many studies suggest. MinDof/Shutterstock.com

“Exercise isn’t really important for weight loss” has become a popular sentiment in the weight loss community. “It’s all about diet,” many say. “Don’t worry about exercise so much.”

This idea crept out amid...

Read more: Is exercise still important to weight loss? Absolutely, a doctor says

When the line between machine and artist becomes blurred

  • Written by Ahmed Elgammal, Professor of Computer Vision, Rutgers University
Mario Klingemann's 'Neural Glitch Portrait 153552770' was created using a generative adversarial network.Mario Klingemann, Author provided

With AI becoming incorporated into more aspects of our daily lives, from writing to driving, it’s only natural that artists would also start to experiment with artificial intelligence.

In fact,...

Read more: When the line between machine and artist becomes blurred

How scientists are fighting infection-causing biofilms

  • Written by Nicholas Fitzkee, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Mississippi State University
An artist depiction of a biofilm harboring antibiotic-resistant rod-shaped and spherical bacteria. Kateryna Kon/Shutterstock.com

The surfaces people interact with every day may seem rather mundane, but at the molecular scale, there is more activity than meets the eye.

Every surface we touch has its own unique chemical properties. It’s...

Read more: How scientists are fighting infection-causing biofilms

Evolution is at work in computers as well as life sciences

  • Written by Arend Hintze, Assistant Professor of Integrative Biology & Computer Science and Engineering, Michigan State University
Evolution is not just for living beings.mmatee/Shutterstock.com

Artificial intelligence research has a lot to learn from nature. My work links biology with computation every day, but recently the rest of the world was reminded of the connection: The 2018 Nobel Prize in Chemistry went to Frances Arnold together with George Smith and Gregory Winter...

Read more: Evolution is at work in computers as well as life sciences

Arms and influence in the Khashoggi affair

  • Written by Russell E. Lucas, Director of Global Studies in the Arts and Humanities; Associate Professor of International Relations, Michigan State University
President Donald Trump shows a chart highlighting arms sales to Saudi Arabia.AP Photo/Evan Vucci

President Donald Trump’s reaction to the disappearance and death of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul reveals important details about the declining influence of U.S. in the Middle East.

As a scholar who follows the links between...

Read more: Arms and influence in the Khashoggi affair

How the polls could have caught 'surprise' victories like Trump's

  • Written by Fred Wright, Director of the Bioinformatics Research Center, North Carolina State University
Many pollsters have been asked to explain why they didn't better predict the 2016 election. 3dfoto/shutterstock.com

The election of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency surprised almost everyone, including apparently Trump himself.

On the morning after the 2016 election, my teenage son made snarky comments about the state of polling and statistical...

Read more: How the polls could have caught 'surprise' victories like Trump's

Masacres, desapariciones y 1968: los mexicanos recuerdan a las víctimas de la ‘dictadura perfecta’

  • Written by Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong
El 2 de octubre de 1968, en un evento que se conoce como la masacre de Tlatelolco, miembros de las fuerzas armadas mexicanas mataron cerca de 300 manifestantes y arrestaron aproximadamente 1.000 más.AP Photo/Reed Saxon

Diez días antes de la ceremonia de apertura de los Juegos Olímpicos de 1968 en la Ciudad de México, sold...

Read more: Masacres, desapariciones y 1968: los mexicanos recuerdan a las víctimas de la ‘dictadura perfecta’

Fixing a broken process for nominating US Supreme Court justices

  • Written by E. Donald Elliott, Adjunct Professor of Law, Yale University

President Donald Trump has nominated two Supreme Court justices during only 19 months in office.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell stated after Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation that Trump might have the opportunity to make a third nomination during one term in office. By the end of a possible second Trump term, he could choose a majority...

Read more: Fixing a broken process for nominating US Supreme Court justices

More Articles ...

  1. Why is it so hard to get an accurate vote count?
  2. Migrant money could be keeping Nicaragua's uprising alive
  3. Taxing carbon may sound like a good idea but does it work?
  4. Eating royal poop improves parenting in naked mole-rats
  5. More college students expected to vote in 2018 midterms
  6. Dispatches from the morgue: Toxicology tests don't tell the whole story of the opioid epidemic
  7. Restocking wolves on Isle Royale raises questions about which species get rescued
  8. Americans spend $70 billion on pets, and that money could do more good
  9. Los jóvenes que viven en colonias de la frontera de Estados Unidos sufren pobreza y falta de atención médica
  10. Argentina bets 60 percent interest rates – and $50B international bailout – will revive its economy
  11. Hidden hunger affects nearly 2 billion worldwide – are solutions in plain sight?
  12. Why is it fun to be frightened?
  13. Why doesn't the U.S. bury its power lines?
  14. Out of Matthew Shepard's tragic murder, a commitment to punishing hate crimes emerged
  15. 'Fortnite' teaches the wrong lessons
  16. Why the US needs better crime reporting statistics
  17. Kavanaugh confirmation could spark a reckoning with system that often fails survivors of sexual abuse and assault
  18. Solving the mystery of the wimpy supernova
  19. There are many types of obesity – which one matters to your health
  20. ¿Cómo apoyar a un hijo con depresión? Enséñale a ayudar a otros
  21. Reduced sentencing for nonviolent criminals: What does the public think?
  22. From Caesar to Trump: Immunity is a hard thing to give up
  23. Giant mosquitoes flourish in floodwaters that hurricanes leave behind
  24. Women with heart disease in sub-Saharan Africa face challenges, but stigma may be worst of all
  25. Why a large church group had little impact when it opposed Kavanaugh's nomination
  26. Neil Armstrong and the America that could have been
  27. Protecting wetlands helps communities reduce damage from hurricanes and storms
  28. Don't be afraid to talk about the costs of dealing with climate change
  29. Physical therapy important for women treated for breast cancer
  30. Being born in the wrong ZIP code can shorten your life
  31. Organic farming with gene editing: An oxymoron or a tool for sustainable agriculture?
  32. Resistance is a long game
  33. Hurricane Michael could bring more inland flooding to southeast states
  34. Youth living in settlements at US border suffer poverty and lack of health care
  35. La relación entre el acoso escolar y el uso de teléfonos móviles en el colegio: 6 consejos para evitarlo
  36. La relación entre el acoso escolar y el uso de teléfonos móviles en el colegio: seis consejos para evitarlo
  37. It's naive to think college athletes have time for school
  38. Nobel award recognizes how economic forces can fight climate change
  39. An Indonesian city’s destruction reverberates across Sulawesi
  40. Why we can't reverse climate change with 'negative emissions' technologies
  41. Justice Kavanaugh is a threat to Roe v. Wade – but not the only one
  42. Meet the trillions of viruses that make up your virome
  43. Breast cancer survivors, who lose muscle mass, can benefit from strength training, studies suggest
  44. The Catholic Church's grim history of ignoring priestly pedophilia – and silencing would-be whistleblowers
  45. Statistics and data science degrees: Overhyped or the real deal?
  46. 'Disillusioned' Brazilians choose Bolsonaro, Haddad after a tense and violent campaign
  47. Could villains clone themselves to take over the world?
  48. Amazon and other 'superstar' companies could give all American workers a raise
  49. Why more women don't win science Nobels
  50. Warriors against sexual violence win Nobel Peace Prize: 4 essential reads