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Why higher tariffs on Canadian lumber may not be enough to stimulate long-term investments in US forestry

  • Written by Andrew Muhammad, Professor of Agriculture and Resource Economics, University of Tennessee
imageCanadian lumber waits for shipment in a sawmill's yard.Andrej Ivanov/Getty Images

Lumber, especially softwood lumber like pine and spruce, is critical to U.S. home construction. Its availability and price directly affect housing costs and broader economic activity in the building sector. The U.S. imports about 40% of the softwood lumber the nation...

Read more: Why higher tariffs on Canadian lumber may not be enough to stimulate long-term investments in US...

Detroit parents face fines if their children break curfew − research shows the policy could do more harm than good

  • Written by Caitlin Cavanagh, Associate Professor of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University
imageFining parents when their kids break curfew does little to deter juvenile crime. Joseph Weiser/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

Detroit is seeing declines in violent crime, but 33% more young people were victims of gun violence in the city so far in 2025 compared with the previous year, according to local police.

Mayor Mike Duggan and the Detroit...

Read more: Detroit parents face fines if their children break curfew − research shows the policy could do...

Our team of physicists inadvertently generated the shortest X-ray pulses ever observed

  • Written by Uwe Bergmann, Professor of Ultrafast X-Ray Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageThe Stanford linear accelerator creates super short X-ray pulses.Steve Jurvetson/Flickr, CC BY

X-ray beams aren’t used just by doctors to see inside your body and tell whether you have a broken bone. More powerful beams made up of very short flashes of X-rays can help scientists peer into the structure of individual atoms and molecules and...

Read more: Our team of physicists inadvertently generated the shortest X-ray pulses ever observed

Focused sound energy holds promise for treating cancer, Alzheimer’s and other diseases

  • Written by Richard J. Price, Professor of Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia
imageFocused ultrasound directs powerful beams of energy to specific disease targets in the body.Andriy Onufriyenko/Moment via Getty Images

Sound waves at frequencies above the threshold for human hearing are routinely used in medical care. Also known as ultrasound, these sound waves can help clinicians diagnose and monitor disease, and can also provide...

Read more: Focused sound energy holds promise for treating cancer, Alzheimer’s and other diseases

Concerns about AI-written police reports spur states to regulate the emerging practice

  • Written by Andrew Guthrie Ferguson, Professor of Law, George Washington University
imageBody cameras generate audio transcripts that police can feed to AIs that write up reports.Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images

Police are getting a boost from artificial intelligence, with algorithms now able to draft police reports in minutes. The technology promises to make police reports more accurate and comprehensive, as well as save officers time.

T...

Read more: Concerns about AI-written police reports spur states to regulate the emerging practice

Yes, ADHD diagnoses are rising, but that doesn’t mean it’s overdiagnosed

  • Written by Carol Mathews, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Florida
imageDifferences in how ADHD is defined explain why the condition is sometimes perceived as overdiagnosed.Catherine Falls Commercial/Moment via Getty Images

Many news outlets have reported an increase – or surge – in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, or ADHD, diagnoses in both children and adults. At the same time, health care...

Read more: Yes, ADHD diagnoses are rising, but that doesn’t mean it’s overdiagnosed

Jean-Jacques Dessalines: Reassessing the Haitian revolutionary leader’s legacy

  • Written by Julia Gaffield, Associate Professor of History, William & Mary
imageA statue of Jean-Jacques Dessalines, a leader of the Haitian Revolution and the first ruler of an independent Haiti.Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Every Oct. 17, Haiti celebrates Dessalines Day, commemorating the assassination in 1806 of the country’s first head of state postindependence, Jean-Jacques Dessalines.

One of the founding fathers in the...

Read more: Jean-Jacques Dessalines: Reassessing the Haitian revolutionary leader’s legacy

Flamingos are making a home in Florida again after 100 years – an ecologist explains why they may be returning for good

  • Written by Jerome Lorenz, Biology Researcher, Florida International University
imagePeaches, who was blown into Florida by Hurricane Idalia in 2023, was sighted in Mexico in June 2025.Kara Durda/Audubon Florida

Hurricane Idalia blew a flamboyance, or flock, of 300-400 flamingos that was likely migrating between the Yucatan Peninsula and Cuba off course in August 2023 and unceremoniously deposited the birds across a wide swath of...

Read more: Flamingos are making a home in Florida again after 100 years – an ecologist explains why they may...

Typhoon leaves flooded Alaska villages facing a storm recovery far tougher than most Americans will ever experience

  • Written by Rick Thoman, Alaska Climate Specialist, University of Alaska Fairbanks
imageA Coast Guard helicopter flies over flooded homes in Kipnuk, Alaska, on Oct. 12, 2025.U.S. Coast Guard

Remnants of a powerful typhoon swept into Western Alaska’s Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta on Oct. 12, 2025, producing a storm surge that flooded villages as far as 60 miles up the river. The water pushed homes off their foundations and set some afloat...

Read more: Typhoon leaves flooded Alaska villages facing a storm recovery far tougher than most Americans...

What the First Amendment doesn’t protect when it comes to professors speaking out on politics

  • Written by Neal H. Hutchens, University Research Professor of Education, University of Kentucky
imageEmployees at public and private colleges do not have the same First Amendment rights. dane_mark/Royalty-free

American colleges and universities are increasingly firing or punishing professors and other employees for what they say, whether it’s on social media or in the classroom.

After the Sept. 10, 2025, killing of conservative activist...

Read more: What the First Amendment doesn’t protect when it comes to professors speaking out on politics

More Articles ...

  1. The limits of free speech protections in American broadcasting
  2. Industrial facilities owned by profitable companies release more of their toxic waste into the environment
  3. Starbucks wants you to stay awhile – but shuttering its mobile-only pickup locations could be a risky move
  4. In defense of ‘surveillance pricing’: Why personalized prices could be an unexpected force for equity
  5. New student loan limits could change who gets to become a professor, doctor or lawyer
  6. Supreme Court redistricting ruling could upend decades of voting rights law – and tilt the balance of power in Washington
  7. ‘Space tornadoes’ could cause geomagnetic storms – but these phenomena, spun off ejections from the Sun, aren’t easy to study
  8. Far fewer Americans support political violence than recent polls suggest
  9. Why are elements like radium dangerous? A chemist explains radioactivity and its health effects
  10. 3-legged lizards can thrive against all odds, challenging assumptions about how evolution works in the wild
  11. Climate tipping points sound scary, especially for ice sheets and oceans – here’s why there’s still room for optimism
  12. What are climate tipping points? They sound scary, especially for ice sheets and oceans, but there’s still room for optimism
  13. How the government shutdown is making the air traffic controller shortage worse and leading to flight delays
  14. Natural World Heritage sites under growing threat, but bright spots remain
  15. María Corina Machado’s peace prize follows Nobel tradition of awarding recipients for complex reasons
  16. From artificial atoms to quantum information machines: Inside the 2025 Nobel Prize in physics
  17. Government shutdown hasn’t left consumers glum about the economy – for now, at least
  18. Government shutdown hasn’t left US consumers glum about the economy – for now, at least
  19. A white poet and a Sioux doctor fell in love after Wounded Knee – racism and sexism would drive them apart
  20. The new president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will inherit a global faith far more diverse than many realize
  21. New president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints inherits a global faith far more diverse than many realize
  22. Political violence: What can happen when First Amendment free speech meets Second Amendment gun rights
  23. Trump is cutting funding to universities with large Hispanic student populations – here’s what to know
  24. Our engineering team is making versatile, tiny sensors from the Nobel-winning ‘metal-organic frameworks’
  25. How pollution and the microbiome interact with Tregs, the immune system regulators whose discovery was honored with the Nobel Prize
  26. Friendships aren’t just about keeping score – new psychology research looks at why we help our friends when they need it
  27. Flu season has arrived – and so have updated flu vaccines
  28. Can you really be addicted to food? Researchers are uncovering convincing similarities to drug addiction
  29. For war-weary Syria, potential benefits of security pact with Israel comes with big risks
  30. A Denver MD has spent 2 decades working with hospitalized patients experiencing homelessness − here’s what she fears and what gives her hope
  31. In 1776, Thomas Paine made the best case for fighting kings − and for being skeptical
  32. Refinery fires, other chemical disasters may no longer get safety investigations
  33. Gaza peace plan risks borrowing more from Tony Blair’s failures in the Middle East than his success in Northern Ireland
  34. Metal-organic frameworks: Nobel-winning tiny ‘sponge crystals’ with an astonishing amount of inner space
  35. Nobel Prize in physics awarded for ultracold electronics research that launched a quantum technology
  36. For Trump’s perceived enemies, the process may be the punishment
  37. James Comey’s indictment is a trademark tactic of authoritarians
  38. Why higher ed’s AI rush could put corporate interests over public service and independence
  39. Winning a bidding war isn’t always a win, research on 14 million home sales shows
  40. Jane Fonda, other stars, revive the Committee for the First Amendment – a group that emerged when the anti-communist panic came for Hollywood
  41. Geothermal energy has huge potential to generate clean power – including from used oil and gas wells
  42. Seasonal allergies may increase suicide risk – new research
  43. Federal shutdown deals blow to already hobbled cybersecurity agency
  44. 1 gene, 1 disease no more – acknowledging the full complexity of genetics could improve and personalize medicine
  45. Even small drops in vaccination rates for US children can lead to disease outbreaks
  46. From the pulpit to the picket line: For many miners, religion and labor rights have long been connected in coal country
  47. Tribal colleges and universities aren’t well known, but are a crucial steppingstone for Native students
  48. The Supreme Court is headed toward a radically new vision of unlimited presidential power
  49. Wings, booze and heartbreak – what my research says about the hidden costs of sports fandom
  50. Why free speech rights got left out of the Constitution – and added in later via the First Amendment