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How nanotechnology can help us grow more food using less energy and water

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageTreated with zinc nanoparticles, mung bean plants like these grew larger and produced more beansChad Zuber/Shutterstock.com

With the world’s population expected to exceed nine billion by 2050, scientists are working to develop new ways to meet rising global demand for food, energy and water without increasing the strain on natural resources....

Read more: How nanotechnology can help us grow more food using less energy and water

After the rediscovery of a 19th-century novel, our view of black female writers is transformed

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageVictorian-era, middle-class black women who loved to read and write didn't have many role models. Jeffrey Green

Two years ago, I was in the United Kingdom working on a follow-up project for my books “Black London” and “Black Victorians/Black Victoriana.” While looking through old British newspapers, I was astonished to read...

Read more: After the rediscovery of a 19th-century novel, our view of black female writers is transformed

Want to lose weight? Train the brain, not the body

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWant help to lose weight? Train your brain.Scale image via shutterstock.com

Despite massive government, medical and individual efforts to win the war on obesity, 71 percent of Americans are overweight. The average adult is 24 pounds heavier today than in 1960. Our growing girth adds some US$200 billion per year to our health care expenditure,...

Read more: Want to lose weight? Train the brain, not the body

What does it mean for researchers, journalists and the public when secrecy surrounds science?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePeople get suspicious when ethically fraught science is discussed behind closed doors.DNA image via www.shutterstock.com.

Did you hear about the secret meeting earlier this month at Harvard Medical School? The one where scientists schemed to create a parentless human being from scratch? Maybe you read one of the skeptical newsarticles, or the...

Read more: What does it mean for researchers, journalists and the public when secrecy surrounds science?

Why do only some people get 'skin orgasms' from listening to music?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageMany can identify with the phenomenon of feeling a thrill – followed by a chill – when listening to a particularly moving piece of music. 'Pink' via www.shutterstock.com

Have you ever been listening to a great piece of music and felt a chill run up your spine? Or goosebumps tickle your arms and shoulders?

The experience is called frisson...

Read more: Why do only some people get 'skin orgasms' from listening to music?

The trillion dollar question nobody is asking the presidential candidates

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

As it seeks to modernize its nuclear arsenal, the United States faces a big choice, one which Barack Obama should ponder before his upcoming Hiroshima speech.

Should we spend a trillion dollars to replace each of our thousands of nuclear warheads with a more sophisticated substitute attached to a more lethal delivery system? Or should we keep only...

Read more: The trillion dollar question nobody is asking the presidential candidates

Worried about arsenic in your baby's rice cereal? There are other foods that can provide essential iron

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat are you looking at?Baby eating via www.shutterstock.com.

Last month, the FDA proposed setting a limit of 100 parts per billion for inorganic arsenic in infant rice cereal. This proposal came after FDA analysis of research linking inorganic arsenic exposure to lung and bladder cancer, adverse pregnancy outcomes and decreased performance on...

Read more: Worried about arsenic in your baby's rice cereal? There are other foods that can provide essential...

New political divide on both sides of Atlantic: populists v cosmopolitans

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

“Disaster narrowly averted” was the British Guardian newspaper’s view of the defeat – by only 31,000 votes out of 4.64 million – of the far right Freedom Party in Austria’s presidential elections this past weekend.

But it is hard to escape the conclusion that varied forms of populism – whether...

Read more: New political divide on both sides of Atlantic: populists v cosmopolitans

More Articles ...

  1. The hefty price of 'study drug' misuse on college campuses
  2. Troubled waters: conflict in the South China Sea explained
  3. We need to know the algorithms the government uses to make important decisions about us
  4. Touch creates a healing bond in health care
  5. Transgender Americans
  6. Obama's trip to Vietnam and Japan isn't just a friendly visit
  7. It's easier to defend against ransomware than you might think
  8. Could a tweet or a text increase college enrollment or student achievement?
  9. Wildfires in West have gotten bigger, more frequent and longer since the 1980s
  10. Why we need better ways to cut greenhouse gases from agriculture
  11. Why trans rights nationwide are only a matter of time
  12. Are the high-rolling quants of horse racing our friends or foes?
  13. Is commercial aviation as safe and secure as we're told?
  14. Kennewick Man will be reburied, but quandaries around human remains won't
  15. Family matters: how video games help successful aging
  16. What happens when middle schoolers take to Twitter? They become learners
  17. Can being a good storyteller lead to love?
  18. Catching metastatic cancer cells before they grow into tumors: a new implant shows promise
  19. The paradox of peak-based ozone air pollution standards
  20. HIV 'test and treat' strategy can save lives -- but it needs to be easier for patients to start treatment
  21. What Rousseff's impeachment means for Brazil's struggling millions
  22. Trump and Clinton want to bring back millions of outsourced jobs – here's why they can't
  23. Chinese philosophy is missing from U.S. philosophy departments. Should we care?
  24. New overtime rule will give economy a boost, but 'ossified' labor law still needs fixing
  25. A tale of two oil and gas boomtowns – a boost to the economy, a tricky landing
  26. Hand washing stops infections, so why do health care workers skip it?
  27. Securing web browsing: protecting the Tor network
  28. Could the mystery of the meow actually be solved by a new talking cat collar?
  29. Sexual harassment compromises graduate students' safety
  30. European data suggests the gig economy helped create Trump, Sanders
  31. New report on GE crops avoids simple answers -- and that's the point, study members say
  32. Why the effects of 2016 El Niño trumped climate change in the Alberta wildfires
  33. Why the history of news explains its future
  34. Big data's 'streetlight effect': where and how we look affects what we see
  35. In a digital archive of fugitive slave ads, a new portrait of slavery emerges
  36. Nanoparticles in baby formula: should parents be worried?
  37. What counts as 'medical marijuana' varies from state to state – and that's a problem
  38. Society's biggest problems need more than a nudge
  39. A 'sixth sense' for humidity helps insects stay out of climatic trouble
  40. Is Dilma Rousseff's impeachment a coup or Brazil's window of opportunity?
  41. Why Obama will have the last laugh
  42. What is Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's real crime?
  43. To better conserve wildlife, consider all kinds of animals, not just the ones we hunt
  44. Does social media help the government-citizen relationship? Depends who you ask
  45. Is the U.S. military strategy doing more harm or good in the Middle East?
  46. Could early music training help babies learn language?
  47. Why cities should stop building museums and focus on festivals
  48. Is it time for a presidential technoethics commission?
  49. America’s ‘exceptional’ lack of a female President in global perspective
  50. How Apple Watch and pervasive computing can lure you into leveling up your fitness