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New president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints inherits a global faith far more diverse than many realize

  • Written by Brittany Romanello, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Arkansas
imageMissionary Sayon Ang holds up a sign signifying she speaks Cambodian during the twice-annual conference of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints on Oct. 4, 2014, in Salt Lake City.AP Photo/Kim Raff

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has spent the past few weeks in a moment of both mourning and transition. On Sept. 28, 2025, a...

Read more: New president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints inherits a global faith far more...

Political violence: What can happen when First Amendment free speech meets Second Amendment gun rights

  • Written by Gregory P. Magarian, Thomas and Karole Green Professor of Law, Washington University in St. Louis
imageThe proliferation of guns in the U.S. can elevate political rhetoric to political violence.Douglas Sacha, Moment/Getty Images

The assassination in September 2025 of conservative activist Charlie Kirk has heightened attention on the relationship between political rhetoric and political violence.

Even before police had identified a suspect, President...

Read more: Political violence: What can happen when First Amendment free speech meets Second Amendment gun...

Trump is cutting funding to universities with large Hispanic student populations – here’s what to know

  • Written by Joseph Morales, University Diversity Officer, Associate Professor of Ethnic Studies, California State University, Chico
imageA billboard truck criticizing education cuts is parked at Florida International University, an HSI in Miami, in March 2025. John Parra/Getty Images for Students Organizing Now

The Trump administration is trying to eliminate diversity, equity and inclusion programs as part of a broader campaign to end what it calls “wokeness” in...

Read more: Trump is cutting funding to universities with large Hispanic student populations – here’s what to...

Our engineering team is making versatile, tiny sensors from the Nobel-winning ‘metal-organic frameworks’

  • Written by Jie Huang, Chair Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Missouri University of Science and Technology
imageProf. Jie Huang stands with the MOF-based breathalyzer his lab developed with support from the NIH.Michael Pierce/Missouri S&T

When the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry honored Omar Yaghi – the “father of metal-organic frameworks,” or MOFs – along with Susumu Kitagawa and Richard Robson, it celebrated more than the creation...

Read more: Our engineering team is making versatile, tiny sensors from the Nobel-winning ‘metal-organic...

How pollution and the microbiome interact with Tregs, the immune system regulators whose discovery was honored with the Nobel Prize

  • Written by Prakash Nagarkatti, Professor of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, University of South Carolina
imageTreg cells have been thrust into the limelight thanks to the Nobel Prize-winning work of a team of researchers from the U.S. and Japan.jarun011/iStock via Getty Images Plus

A special group of immune cells known as regulatory T cells, or Tregs for short, became an overnight sensation when a trio of U.S. and Japanese scientists won the Nobel Prize in...

Read more: How pollution and the microbiome interact with Tregs, the immune system regulators whose discovery...

Friendships aren’t just about keeping score – new psychology research looks at why we help our friends when they need it

  • Written by Jessica D. Ayers, Assistant Professor of Psychological Science, Boise State University
imageFriendship isn't about a running tally of who's doing more.miodrag ignjatovic/E+ via Getty Images

Despite how natural friendship can feel, people rarely stop to analyze it. How do you know when someone will make a good friend? When is it time to move on from a friendship? Oftentimes, people rely on gut intuitions to answer these kinds of questions.

I...

Read more: Friendships aren’t just about keeping score – new psychology research looks at why we help our...

Flu season has arrived – and so have updated flu vaccines

  • Written by Libby Richards, Professor of Nursing, Purdue University
imageThe flu vaccine is updated every year to include the strains known to be circulating. Cecilie_Arcurs/E+ via Getty Images

As the autumn’s cool weather settles in, so does flu season – bringing with it the familiar experiences of sniffles, fever and cough.

Every year, influenza – the flu – affects millions of people. Most will...

Read more: Flu season has arrived – and so have updated flu vaccines

Can you really be addicted to food? Researchers are uncovering convincing similarities to drug addiction

  • Written by Claire Wilcox, Adjunct Faculty in Psychiatry, University of New Mexico
imageResearch has found that high-sugar, ultraprocessed foods can be addictive for some people.Doucefleur/iStock via Getty Images Plus

People often joke that their favorite snack is “like crack” or call themselves “chocoholics” in jest.

But can someone really be addicted to food in the same way they could be hooked on substances...

Read more: Can you really be addicted to food? Researchers are uncovering convincing similarities to drug...

For war-weary Syria, potential benefits of security pact with Israel comes with big risks

  • Written by Mireille Rebeiz, Chair of Middle East Studies, Dickinson College
imageThe Syrian Defense Ministry was heavily damaged after airstrikes in Damascus on July 16, 2025. AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed

On Sept. 21, 2025, a senior U.S official boasted that an Israeli-Syrian security agreement to resolve months of conflict was “99% complete” and would be announced within two weeks.

Those two weeks have now passed. And...

Read more: For war-weary Syria, potential benefits of security pact with Israel comes with big risks

A Denver MD has spent 2 decades working with hospitalized patients experiencing homelessness − here’s what she fears and what gives her hope

  • Written by Sarah Stella, Professor of Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
imagePeople experiencing homelessness are more likely to end up in the emergency room.Helen H. Richardson/The Denver Post via Getty Images

On a recent early fall morning, hope was in short supply.

My first patient was a regular. Mr. D was a man in his 50s with diabetes. He had been living on Denver’s streets for most of the past five years, two...

Read more: A Denver MD has spent 2 decades working with hospitalized patients experiencing homelessness −...

More Articles ...

  1. In 1776, Thomas Paine made the best case for fighting kings − and for being skeptical
  2. Refinery fires, other chemical disasters may no longer get safety investigations
  3. Gaza peace plan risks borrowing more from Tony Blair’s failures in the Middle East than his success in Northern Ireland
  4. Metal-organic frameworks: Nobel-winning tiny ‘sponge crystals’ with an astonishing amount of inner space
  5. Nobel Prize in physics awarded for ultracold electronics research that launched a quantum technology
  6. For Trump’s perceived enemies, the process may be the punishment
  7. James Comey’s indictment is a trademark tactic of authoritarians
  8. Why higher ed’s AI rush could put corporate interests over public service and independence
  9. Winning a bidding war isn’t always a win, research on 14 million home sales shows
  10. Jane Fonda, other stars, revive the Committee for the First Amendment – a group that emerged when the anti-communist panic came for Hollywood
  11. Geothermal energy has huge potential to generate clean power – including from used oil and gas wells
  12. Seasonal allergies may increase suicide risk – new research
  13. Federal shutdown deals blow to already hobbled cybersecurity agency
  14. 1 gene, 1 disease no more – acknowledging the full complexity of genetics could improve and personalize medicine
  15. Even small drops in vaccination rates for US children can lead to disease outbreaks
  16. From the pulpit to the picket line: For many miners, religion and labor rights have long been connected in coal country
  17. Tribal colleges and universities aren’t well known, but are a crucial steppingstone for Native students
  18. The Supreme Court is headed toward a radically new vision of unlimited presidential power
  19. Wings, booze and heartbreak – what my research says about the hidden costs of sports fandom
  20. Why free speech rights got left out of the Constitution – and added in later via the First Amendment
  21. More young adults are living with their parents than previous generations did
  22. Health insurance subsidy standoff pits affordable care for millions against federal budget constraints
  23. How does your immune system stay balanced? A Nobel Prize-winning answer
  24. What are solar storms and the solar wind? 3 astrophysicists explain how particles coming from the Sun interact with Earth
  25. Watchdog journalism’s future may lie in the work of independent reporters like Pablo Torre
  26. A fragmented legal system and threat of deportation are pushing higher education out of reach for many undocumented students
  27. Conflict at the drugstore: When pharmacists’ and patients’ values collide
  28. How to conduct post-atrocity research – key insights from practitioners in the field
  29. Hamas has run out of options – survival now rests on accepting Trump’s plan and political reform
  30. How the government shutdown is hitting the health care system – and what the battle over ACA subsidies means
  31. Commuters have bemoaned Philly’s public transit for decades − in 1967, a librarian got the city to listen
  32. What past education technology failures can teach us about the future of AI in schools
  33. As an OB-GYN, I see firsthand how misleading statements on acetaminophen leave expectant parents confused, fearful and lacking in options
  34. Children can be systematic problem-solvers at younger ages than psychologists had thought – new research
  35. Virtual particles: How physicists’ clever bookkeeping trick could underlie reality
  36. Science costs money – research is guided by who funds it and why
  37. History is repeating itself at the FBI as agents resist a director’s political agenda
  38. Florida’s 1,100 natural springs are under threat – a geographer explains how to restore them
  39. Cuba’s leaders see their options dim amid blackouts and a shrinking economy
  40. US economy is already on the edge – a prolonged government shutdown could send it tumbling over
  41. Supreme Court to decide if Colorado’s law banning conversion therapy violates free speech
  42. Supreme Court opens with cases on voting rights, tariffs, gender identity and campaign finance to test the limits of a constitutional revolution
  43. Moral panics intensify social divisions and can lead to political violence
  44. Shutdowns are as American as apple pie − in the UK and elsewhere, they just aren’t baked into the process
  45. Where George Washington would disagree with Pete Hegseth about fitness for command and what makes a warrior
  46. Breastfeeding is ideal for child and parent health but challenging for most families – a pediatrician explains how to find support
  47. Meet Irene Curie, the Nobel-winning atomic physicist who changed the course of modern cancer treatment
  48. How VR and AI could help the next generation grow kinder and more connected
  49. Venezuela and US edge toward war footing − but domestic concerns, international risks may hold Washington back
  50. Trump scraps the nation’s most comprehensive food insecurity report − making it harder to know how many Americans struggle to get enough food