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Will the AI jobs revolution bring about human revolt, too?

  • Written by Kentaro Toyama, Associate Professor, Technology and Global Development, University of Michigan
imageWhen everyone's out of a job, will workers unite?Inspiring/Shutterstock.com

The rise of artificial intelligence threatens to eliminate jobs once considered impossible to automate. One series of papers by Oxford researchers ranks jobs by their estimated susceptibility to automation. Among those most rated likely to vanish – because they...

Read more: Will the AI jobs revolution bring about human revolt, too?

Why were California's wine country fires so destructive?

  • Written by Jon Keeley, Research Ecologist, US Geological Survey
imageBurned area in Santa Rosa, California, Oct. 11, 2017.US Department of Defense

As of late October more than a dozen wildfires north of San Francisco had killed more than 40 people, burned approximately 160,000 acres and destroyed more than 7,000 structures.

This tragic loss of life and property is unprecedented in California. However, the fires are...

Read more: Why were California's wine country fires so destructive?

Soy bibliotecaria en Puerto Rico y sobreviví al Huracán María. Esta es mi historia.

  • Written by Evelyn Milagros Rodriguez, Research, Reference and Special Collections Librarian, University of Puerto Rico - Humacao

Los temporales siempre han sido un tema de interés para mí, ya que nací en septiembre de 1960 durante el Huracán Donna por Puerto Rico. A su paso dejó más de cien muertes en el municipio de Humacao, donde actualmente soy bibliotecaria en el recinto local de la Universidad de Puerto Rico.

En el 1990 Israel...

Read more: Soy bibliotecaria en Puerto Rico y sobreviví al Huracán María. Esta es mi historia.

I'm a librarian in Puerto Rico, and this is my Hurricane Maria survival story

  • Written by Evelyn Milagros Rodriguez, Research, Reference and Special Collections Librarian, University of Puerto Rico - Humacao

I’ve always been fascinated by storms, particularly Puerto Rico’s own history of them. I think it’s because I was born in September 1960 during Hurricane Donna. In its wake, that storm left more than 100 dead in Humacao, the city where I am now a special collections librarian at the University of Puerto Rico.

In 1990, Israel...

Read more: I'm a librarian in Puerto Rico, and this is my Hurricane Maria survival story

The science of fright: Why we love to be scared

  • Written by Arash Javanbakht, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Wayne State University
imageScary pumpkins are the least of what frightens us at Halloween, a day devoted to being frightened. asife/Shutterstock.com

Fear may be as old as life on Earth. It is a fundamental, deeply wired reaction, evolved over the history of biology, to protect organisms against perceived threat to their integrity or existence. Fear may be as simple as a...

Read more: The science of fright: Why we love to be scared

Why Puerto Rico 'doesn't count' to the US government

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University

Hurricanes Irma and Maria devastated Puerto Rico in September, destroying homes, crops and communications. Many weeks later, power has been restored to fewer than 20 percent of homes. A third of the population still lacks reliable drinking water.

I am an economist and have followed the hurricanes’ impact with great interest because my sister...

Read more: Why Puerto Rico 'doesn't count' to the US government

How the US tax code bypasses women entrepreneurs

  • Written by Caroline Bruckner, Executive in Residence, Department of Accounting and Taxation, American University
imageAttendees chat during Dell Women’s Entrepreneur Network conference in 2014. Jack Plunkett/AP Images for Dell

As Republicans in Congress put the finishing touches on a tax plan that’s aimed at overhauling the system, there is one other reform they should consider: making the U.S. tax code fairer to women entrepreneurs.

Currently, federal...

Read more: How the US tax code bypasses women entrepreneurs

How the god you worship influences the ghosts you see

  • Written by Frank T. McAndrew, Cornelia H. Dudley Professor of Psychology, Knox College
imageGallowglass, CC BY-SA

If you’ve ever seen a ghost, you have something in common with 18 percent of Americans.

But while there’s evidence that our brains are hardwired to see ghosts, the apparitions we see tend to vary.

Historians who study and catalogue ghostly encounters across time will tell you that ghosts come in a range of shapes and...

Read more: How the god you worship influences the ghosts you see

Tricking and treating has a history

  • Written by Regina Hansen, Senior Lecturer, Rhetoric, Boston University
imageHalloween parade in New York.AP Photo/Andres Kudacki

Over the past few decades, Halloween celebrations have gained in popularity, not only with children and families, but with all those fascinated with the spooky and scary.

As a scholar of myth andreligion in popular culture, I look at Halloween with particular interest – especially the ways...

Read more: Tricking and treating has a history

How I discovered a wellspring of sexual harassment complaints

  • Written by Joan Cook, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University
imageGretchen Carlson at an event Oct. 17, 2017 to promote a book she has written on how harassed women can empower themselves. AP Photo/Andy Krapo

Since allegations of former Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein’s abhorrent treatment of women have come to public light, we once again have an opportunity to talk about sexual harassment. These...

Read more: How I discovered a wellspring of sexual harassment complaints

More Articles ...

  1. Don't blame California wildfires on a 'perfect storm' of weather events
  2. Is it time for a Cyber Peace Corps?
  3. Dark matter: The mystery substance physics still can't identify that makes up the majority of our universe
  4. Martin Luther's spiritual practice was key to the success of the Reformation
  5. Why aren't we curing the world's most curable diseases?
  6. For cattle farmers in the Brazilian Amazon, money can't buy happiness
  7. The best way to deal with failure
  8. Will anyone protect the Rohingya?
  9. It's not just O'Reilly and Weinstein: Sexual violence is a 'global pandemic'
  10. The mental health toll of Puerto Rico's prolonged power outages
  11. Cosmic alchemy: Colliding neutron stars show us how the universe creates gold
  12. How companies can learn to root out sexual harassment
  13. California needs to rethink urban fire risk after wine country tragedy
  14. A new clue into treatments for triple negative breast cancer, a mean disease
  15. Rebooting the mathematics behind gerrymandering
  16. Is @realDonaldTrump addicted to Twitter?
  17. Are religious people more moral?
  18. The psychology of the clutch athlete
  19. Japan's vote for Abe could worsen prospects for peace with North Korea, China
  20. India outlawed commercial surrogacy – clinics are finding loopholes
  21. Our laws don't do enough to protect our health data
  22. Will Obamacare marketplaces suffer as open enrollment begins?
  23. Terrorist leaders in the Philippines are dead – will democracy be restored?
  24. In Central America, gangs like MS-13 are bad – but corrupt politicians may be worse
  25. The IRS targeting scandal was fake, but IRS budget woes are a real problem
  26. Does regulating artificial intelligence save humanity or just stifle innovation?
  27. Is local news on the cusp of a renaissance?
  28. Is marriage obsolete? 4 essential reads
  29. Breast cancer risk higher in western parts of time zones; is electric light to blame?
  30. Micro solutions for a macro problem: How marine algae could help feed the world
  31. In defense of cash: why we should bring back the $500 note and other big bills
  32. Why bystanders rarely speak up when they witness sexual harassment
  33. How seeing problems in the brain makes stigma disappear
  34. I teach ethics at the university where Richard Spencer spoke
  35. Why is Saudi Arabia suddenly so paranoid?
  36. 'Geostorm' movie shows dangers of hacking the climate – we need to talk about real-world geoengineering now
  37. Teens are sleeping less – but there's a surprisingly easy fix
  38. How China's skewed sex ratio is making President Xi's job a whole lot harder
  39. Scientist at work: Measuring public health impacts after disasters
  40. Are many hate crimes really examples of domestic terrorism?
  41. Why the European Union's hands are tied over Catalonia
  42. Is racial bias driving Trump's neglect of Puerto Rico?
  43. US health care system: A patchwork that no one likes
  44. A statistical fix for the replication crisis in science
  45. The difference between cybersecurity and cybercrime, and why it matters
  46. Why is there so little research on guns in the US? 5 questions answered
  47. How media sexism demeans women and fuels abuse by men like Weinstein
  48. Solving the political ad problem with transparency
  49. Why Russia thinks it's exceptional
  50. Is youth football past its prime?