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Fracking and health: What we know from Pennsylvania's natural gas boom

  • Written by Sara G. Rasmussen, Ph.D. Candidate in Environmental Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins University

The fracking industry has been an energy success story: Natural gas prices have decreased as fracking has skyrocketed, and natural gas now produces more electricity than coal does, which has resulted in improved air quality. The first states to begin unconventional natural gas development with fracking have cited potential economic, energy and...

Read more: Fracking and health: What we know from Pennsylvania's natural gas boom

Could gay-straight alliances reduce school bullying?

  • Written by Robert Marx, Ph.D. Student, Vanderbilt University
imageOne in five students report being bullied in school.Girl Image via www.shutterstock.com

As students across the country zip up their backpacks and get on the bus for the first day of school, many will have more to focus on than memorizing their new schedules or making it to homeroom on time.

For some, the chief concern will be avoiding the bullying...

Read more: Could gay-straight alliances reduce school bullying?

This little-known pioneering educator put coding in the classroom

  • Written by Therese Keane, Senior Lecturer in Education, Swinburne University of Technology
imageSeymour Papert lectures on LOGO, computers and education.Shen-montpellier, CC BY-SA

A man who was arguably the most influential educator of the last 50 years – though he was not widely known to the American public – died on July 31. A respected mathematician and early pioneer of artificial intelligence, Seymour Papert was 88. His career...

Read more: This little-known pioneering educator put coding in the classroom

Understanding mosquitoes can help us find better ways to kill them

  • Written by Aparna Telang, Assistant Professor of Biology, University of South Florida

Astronomer Royal Dr. Martin Rees wrote in 1999: “What makes things baffling is their degree of complexity, not their sheer size… a star is simpler than an insect.”

You might not think an insect like a mosquito could be so complex, so I thought I would share some lesser-known facts about them.

I am a mosquito researcher who lives...

Read more: Understanding mosquitoes can help us find better ways to kill them

Getting serious about funny: Psychologists see humor as a character strength

  • Written by Janet M. Gibson, Professor of Cognitive Psychology, Grinnell College
imageDon't laugh at the psychological study of humor.Laughing image via www.shutterstock.com.

Humor is observed in all cultures and at all ages. But only in recent decades has experimental psychology respected it as an essential, fundamental human behavior.

Historically, psychologists framed humor negatively, suggesting it demonstrated superiority,...

Read more: Getting serious about funny: Psychologists see humor as a character strength

Who dies in police custody? Texas, California offer new tools to find out

  • Written by Amanda Woog, Postdoctoral Fellow at Institute of Urban Policy Research and Analysis, University of Texas at Austin

How many people die in our criminal justice system each year?

It turns out it is hard to tell, and it depends who you ask.

Following the deaths of Michael Brown, Eric Garner, Freddie Gray and many others at the hands of the police, this lack of information has emerged as one of the most pressing issues in criminal justice reform. Reading media...

Read more: Who dies in police custody? Texas, California offer new tools to find out

What's ailing the ACA: Insurers or Congress?

  • Written by J.B. Silvers, Professor of Health Finance, Case Western Reserve University

Since the Affordable Care Act – or what many call Obamacare – has been labeled a failure since the day it started, according to some political types, it’s difficult to know if the recent defections by large insurance companies are really a death knell or just growing pains.

Aetna dropped a bombshell Aug. 15 when it announced that...

Read more: What's ailing the ACA: Insurers or Congress?

Why silence continues to surround pregnancy discrimination in the workplace

  • Written by Michelle D. Deardorff, Adolph S. Ochs Professor of Government and Head of Political Science and Public Service, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
imageHourly workers make up the lion's share of pregnancy discrimination cases. Pregnant worker via www.shutterstock.com

During the 2016 presidential election, we’ve seen an unusual amount of interest in issues regarding gender equality in the workplace. Discussions of equal pay, the glass ceiling and affordable child care are not typical talking...

Read more: Why silence continues to surround pregnancy discrimination in the workplace

Playing at torture, a not so trivial pursuit

  • Written by Nicholas Bowman, Associate Professor of Communication Studies, West Virginia University

From 2003 to 2009, Camp Bucca was a detention facility used by the U.S. military to house prisoners from the Iraq War. As early as 2004, news reports surfaced that the camp was the site of prisoner abuse and torture. Some military experts have linked this abuse and torture to the formation of the Islamic State, or ISIS, group.

By the end of 2016,...

Read more: Playing at torture, a not so trivial pursuit

How the Islamic State recruits and coerces children

  • Written by Mia Bloom, Professor of Communication, Georgia State University

This week the world once again witnessed an Islamic State’s use of at least one child bomber, perhaps two.

A child between the ages of 12 and 14 was reportedly the culprit behind a suicide attack – blowing up the wedding of Besna and Nurettin Akdogan in Gaziantep, Turkey and killing 54 people on Aug. 20.

Although now the Turkish...

Read more: How the Islamic State recruits and coerces children

More Articles ...

  1. Voter ID laws: Why black Democrats' fight for the ballot in Mississippi still matters
  2. Get better election predictions by combining diverse forecasts
  3. Harried doctors can make diagnostic errors: They need time to think
  4. How Dostoevsky predicted Trump's America
  5. Suburban sprawl and poor preparation worsened flood damage in Louisiana
  6. Louisiana's Cajun Navy shines light on growing value of boat rescuers
  7. King Coal is dethroned in the US – and that's good news for the environment
  8. Slavery on campus – recovering the history of Washington College's discarded slaves
  9. Relationship advice from the government doesn't help low-income couples – here's what might
  10. How racism has shaped welfare policy in America since 1935
  11. Big Tobacco aims its guns to kill California tobacco tax
  12. Why we're wrong to blame immigrants for our sputtering economies
  13. With skateboarding's inclusion in Tokyo 2020, a once-marginalized subculture enters the spotlight
  14. How bigotry crushed the dreams of an all-black Little League team
  15. From wine to weed: Keeping the marijuana farm small and local
  16. After the NSA hack: Cybersecurity in an even more vulnerable world
  17. Can a single region in Florida show the state how to adapt to climate change?
  18. Should writing for the public count toward tenure?
  19. What does social science say about how a female president might lead?
  20. A pregnant woman's immune response could lead to brain disorders in her kids
  21. DOJ report on Baltimore echoes centuries-old limits on African-American freedom in the Charm City
  22. How companies learn what children secretly want
  23. Algorithms can be more fair than humans
  24. Nuclear power deserves a level playing field
  25. Compete or suckle: Should troubled nuclear reactors be subsidized?
  26. Is misuse of prescription painkillers among youth athletes leading to heroin use?
  27. Why the guns-on-campus debate matters for American higher education
  28. Here's what coworkers think when you suck up to your boss
  29. Don't run (and don't laugh): The little-known history of racewalking
  30. Disasters and kids – how to help them recover
  31. The political role of drone strikes in US grand strategy
  32. Range anxiety? Today's electric cars can cover vast majority of daily U.S. driving needs
  33. Not easy being blue: Fatal shootings, job stress make it hard to be a cop
  34. Making college matter
  35. Turkey's post-coup commitment to democracy offers chance to resolve Kurdish crisis
  36. Are U.S. politics beyond a joke?
  37. Parasitic flies, zombified ants, predator beetles – insect drama on Mexican coffee plantations
  38. Beyond borders: Why we need global action to protect migratory birds
  39. Why science and engineering need to remind students of forgotten lessons from history
  40. So what if some female Olympians have high testosterone?
  41. Why get a liberal education? It is the life and breath of medicine
  42. Breaking the fourth wall in human-computer interaction: Really talking to each other
  43. Dusty plasma in the universe and in the laboratory
  44. Is the US electoral system really 'rigged'?
  45. How the IOC effectively maintains a gag order on nonsponsors of the Olympics
  46. As Rio bay waters show, we badly need innovation in treating human wastes
  47. Cotton farmers profit from simple steps to help pollinators
  48. Is the 'lesser of two evils' an ethical choice for voters?
  49. Setting robots in motion, quickly and efficiently
  50. How adult learners are not getting 21st-century skills