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The Conversation

Sure, cancer mutates, but it has other ways to resist treatment

  • Written by Fabian V. Filipp, Assistant Professor of Systems Biology and Cancer Metabolism, University of California, Merced
Professor Fabian V. Filipp with his team working on precision targeting of malignant melanoma.Systems Biology and Cancer Metabolism Laboratory, CC BY-SA

Because of advances in drug design and precision medicine, researchers have been able to target certain molecules within a cell at the root of a particular disease and to develop specific therapies...

Read more: Sure, cancer mutates, but it has other ways to resist treatment

Driverless cars are already here but the roads aren't ready for them

  • Written by Mark Wilson, Professor and Program Director, Urban & Regional Planning, School of Planning, Design and Construction, Michigan State University
Jason Eichenholz, co-founder and chief technology officer of driverless vehicle industry startup Luminar TechnologiesAP Photo/Ben Margot

The recent deaths of a woman struck by a car Uber was testing in driverless mode and of a man whose Tesla Model X crashed when his hands were off the steering wheel because he was letting the car do some of the...

Read more: Driverless cars are already here but the roads aren't ready for them

Today's youth reject capitalism, but what do they want to replace it?

  • Written by Joseph Blasi, J. Robert Beyster Distinguished Professor and Director of the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing, School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University
Today's youth are increasingly rejecting capitalism. AP Photo/Phil Sears

Today’s youth are increasingly unhappy with the way their elders are running the world.

Their ire was most recently expressed when thousands of teenagers and others across the country marched on March 24 demanding more gun control, a little over a month after more than a...

Read more: Today's youth reject capitalism, but what do they want to replace it?

I’m suing Scott Pruitt’s broken EPA - here’s how to fix it

  • Written by Joe Arvai, Max McGraw Professor of Sustainable Enterprise, and Director of the Erb Institute for Global Sustainable Enterprise, University of Michigan
One of EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt's signature moves has been to put the brakes on stringent fuel economy rules. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

In 2017, just a few days after Donald Trump was sworn in as president, a freshman GOP lawmaker with only a few days on the job of his own, proposed House Resolution 861. Its language was ominous: “The...

Read more: I’m suing Scott Pruitt’s broken EPA - here’s how to fix it

Why are Sinclair's scripted news segments such a big deal?

  • Written by Amanda Lotz, Fellow, Peabody Media Center; Professor of Media Studies, University of Michigan
Sinclair Broadcast Group is under fire, following the spread of a video showing anchors at its stations reading a script criticizing 'fake' news stories.Steve Ruark/AP Photo

On March 31, Deadspin produced a video showing a chorus of local news anchors delivering the exact same scripted speech to viewers.

The message – denouncing media bias...

Read more: Why are Sinclair's scripted news segments such a big deal?

What meeting your spouse online has in common with arranged marriage

  • Written by Amitrajeet A. Batabyal, Arthur J. Gosnell Professor of Economics, Rochester Institute of Technology
David and Elizabeth Weinlick, a Minnesota couple who began their life together through an arranged marriage AP Photo/Kyle Potter

Most Americans who get married today believe they are choosing their own partners after falling in love with them. Arranged marriages, which remain common in some parts of the world, are a rarity here.

But while doing...

Read more: What meeting your spouse online has in common with arranged marriage

Resisting technology, Appalachian style

  • Written by Sherry Hamby, Research Professor of Psychology; Director of the Life Paths Appalachian Research Center, Sewanee: The University of the South
Each has its own merits, even in a technology-centric world.The Conversation from Shutterstock images by heinsbergsphotos, jannoon028, Troy Kellogg, CC BY-SA

When people hear “Appalachia,” stereotypes and even slurs often immediately jump to mind, words like “backwards,” “ignorant,” “hillbilly” or...

Read more: Resisting technology, Appalachian style

Half of Earth's satellites restrict use of climate data

  • Written by Mariel Borowitz, Assistant Professor of International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
Dust storms in the Gulf of Alaska, captured by NASA’s Aqua satellite.NASA

Scientists and policymakers need satellite data to understand and address climate change. Yet data from more than half of unclassified Earth-observing satellites is restricted in some way, rather than shared openly.

When governments restrict who can access data, or...

Read more: Half of Earth's satellites restrict use of climate data

Why a census question about citizenship should worry you, whether you're a citizen or not

  • Written by Michael Blake, Professor of Philosophy, Public Policy, and Governance, University of Washington
What could be the consequences of including a question on citizenship?U.S. Department of Agriculture , CC BY-ND

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross announced last week that the 2020 census will include a question about citizenship. Ross argued that such a question is required for a “complete and accurate” count of Americans. Others in the...

Read more: Why a census question about citizenship should worry you, whether you're a citizen or not

Genes and environment have equal influence in learning for rich and poor kids, study finds

  • Written by Jeffrey Roth, Professor of Pediatrics, University of Florida
Two youngsters in a kindergarten classroom. A new study suggests that class may not affect their learning as much as previously believed. mangpoor2004/Shutterstock.com

More than 40 years ago, psychologist Sandra Scarr put forth a provocative idea: that genetic influence on children’s cognitive abilities is linked to their family’s...

Read more: Genes and environment have equal influence in learning for rich and poor kids, study finds

More Articles ...

  1. 5 things to know about the teacher strike in Oklahoma
  2. Why bodycam footage might not clear things up
  3. A chicken in every backyard: Urban poultry needs more regulation to protect human and animal health
  4. It's not my fault, my brain implant made me do it
  5. Costa Rica looks a little less exceptional after its heated election
  6. Statesman, strongman, philosopher, autocrat: China's Xi is a man who contains multitudes
  7. Trump's military policy overlooks data on why transgender troops are fit to serve
  8. Why prime numbers still fascinate mathematicians, 2,300 years later
  9. Fabiano Caruana is poised to do what no American has done since Bobby Fischer. Here's the path he took to get there
  10. Colleges must confront sexual assault and sexual harassment head on
  11. FDR's forest army: How the New Deal helped seed the modern environmental movement 85 years ago
  12. MLK's vision matters today for the 43 million Americans living in poverty
  13. 'Oklahoma!' at 75: Has the musical withstood the test of time?
  14. Martin Luther King Jr. had a much more radical message than a dream of racial brotherhood
  15. How Cambridge Analytica’s Facebook targeting model really worked – according to the person who built it
  16. These are the VA's 3 main problems -- leadership isn't one of them
  17. Cuba's new president: What to expect
  18. Military mission in Puerto Rico after hurricane was better than critics say but suffered flaws
  19. Langston Hughes' hidden influence on MLK
  20. This 'Final Four' takes place over the board – with talent from around the world
  21. Much of what you think you know about Linda Brown – a central figure in Brown v. Board of Education – is wrong
  22. The invisible power of 'flutter' – from plane crashes to snoring to free energy
  23. How Texas is 'building back better' from Hurricane Harvey
  24. A VA hospital you may not know: the Final Salute, and how much we doctors care
  25. Is the growing Russia crisis another Cold War conflict? Nyet
  26. Why you stink at fact-checking
  27. Discovery of a surprise multitasking gene helps explain how new functions and features evolve
  28. Bobbleheads and other free swag star in baseball tax dispute
  29. Why are more people doing gig work? They like it
  30. 4 charts show why Trump's tariffs will hurt everyone – not just China
  31. Why EPA's U-turn on auto efficiency rules gives China the upper hand
  32. Federal spending bill deals blow to school safety research
  33. Improving the lives of those with dementia – by using memories of baseball
  34. Space weather threatens high-tech life
  35. Democracy is in danger when the census undercounts vulnerable populations
  36. How to stay honest this tax season
  37. Busting Russia's fake news the European Union way
  38. Baseball teams need to protect fans from foul balls -- and US courts need to lift MLB's special liability exemption
  39. Abusive relationships: Why it's so hard for women to 'just leave'
  40. Active shooter drills may reshape how a generation of students views school
  41. Hospitals hit back on drug pricing, but will they knock out the problem?
  42. Pakistan's activist Supreme Court endangers a fragile democracy
  43. Baby bust: 5 charts show how expensive it is to have kids in the US today
  44. Why it's so hard to #DeleteFacebook: Constant psychological boosts keep you hooked
  45. The tragic story of America's only native parrot, now extinct for 100 years
  46. Trump plan to execute 'big drug pushers' will do nothing to stop opioid overdoses
  47. Who is John Bolton and what does he want?
  48. Trump's go-it-alone approach to China trade ignores WTO's better way to win
  49. What the staff does matters more than what's in an organization's mission statement
  50. Kids' fitness is improving, but they still aren't as fit as their parents were