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The Conversation

Is the U.S. military strategy doing more harm or good in the Middle East?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Editor’s note: This article is part of our collaboration with Point Taken, a new program from WGBH that will next air on Tuesday, May 17 on PBS and online at pbs.org. The show features fact-based debate on major issues of the day, without the shouting.

With fresh reports that the Islamic State (IS) group has bombed Baghdad to produce the...

Read more: Is the U.S. military strategy doing more harm or good in the Middle East?

Could early music training help babies learn language?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageEarly music activities?PROPhilippe Teuwen, CC BY-SA

Growing up in China, I started playing piano when I was nine years old and learning English when I was 12. Later, when I was a college student, it struck me how similar language and music are to each other.

Language and music both require rhythm; otherwise they don’t make any sense....

Read more: Could early music training help babies learn language?

Why cities should stop building museums and focus on festivals

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLorde performs at the Austin City Limits music festival.Wikimedia Commons/Ralph Aversen, CC BY

Last year the Institute of Museum and Library Services offered a catchy statistic: the United States has more museums than all the Starbucks and McDonald’s combined.

It’s easy to understand why cities will leap at the opportunity to invest in...

Read more: Why cities should stop building museums and focus on festivals

Is it time for a presidential technoethics commission?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWho owns your thoughts? And other important questions raised by technology.Hands and brain via shutterstock.com

A recent New York Times article highlighted the growing integration of technologies and textiles, displaying a photograph of a delicate golden nest of optical fiber. The article reported that this new “functional fabric” has...

Read more: Is it time for a presidential technoethics commission?

America’s ‘exceptional’ lack of a female President in global perspective

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Most Americans believe in the exceptionalism of our nation. However, when it comes to electing a female president, the U.S. is not exceptional. Rather it is an exception to the rule.

The U.S. ranks 97th in global ranking of women in government. Women hold only 19 percent of elected government offices here.

While many countries, including Germany,...

Read more: America’s ‘exceptional’ lack of a female President in global perspective

How Apple Watch and pervasive computing can lure you into leveling up your fitness

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFitness trackers make activity into a contest.Wearable image via www.shutterstock.com.

Hello, my name is Michael, and I’m a Ring Addict.

imageThe rings in question: they close when the goal for the day has been met.Peter Parkes, CC BY

No, not the one ring from “Lord of the Rings”; not the cheap costume jewelry you get at the local...

Read more: How Apple Watch and pervasive computing can lure you into leveling up your fitness

Hard evidence: spanking could lead to health problems, antisocial behavior

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageSpanking is a common parenting practice in the U.S.Father image via www.shutterstock.com

Whether you are a parent who has occasionally spanked your child, an adult with recollections of childhood spanking or even an observer who has witnessed spanking in a public place, you likely have personal experience with the spanking of children for...

Read more: Hard evidence: spanking could lead to health problems, antisocial behavior

Why the eastern coyote should be a separate species: the 'coywolf'

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

There is considerable debate and disagreement among scientists over what to call a canid inhabiting the northeastern United States. In the course of this creature’s less than 100-year history, it has been variously called coyote, eastern coyote, coydog, Tweed wolf, brush wolf, new wolf, northeastern coyote and now coywolf, with nature...

Read more: Why the eastern coyote should be a separate species: the 'coywolf'

Can Puerto Rico escape its $72 billion debt trap and avoid Greece's fate?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

To almost no one’s surprise, Puerto Rico missed a US$422 million debt payment earlier this month, triggering fears among investors that additional defaults are on the way and increasing pressure on Congress to act.

The warnings that this would happen could hardly have been louder. The major credit rating agencies long ago cut Puerto...

Read more: Can Puerto Rico escape its $72 billion debt trap and avoid Greece's fate?

America is 'dropping cyberbombs' -- but how do they work?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageInside the U.S. Army's Cyber Operations Center at Fort Gordon, Georgia.Army-Cyber/flickr

Recently, United States Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work publicly confirmed that the Pentagon’s Cyber Command was “dropping cyberbombs,” taking its ongoing battle against the Islamic State group into the online world. Other American...

Read more: America is 'dropping cyberbombs' -- but how do they work?

More Articles ...

  1. Do no harm to life on Mars? Ethical limits of the 'Prime Directive'
  2. How do you design a home for someone with autism?
  3. The White House won't be handed to Clinton
  4. Is addiction a brain disease?
  5. A closer look at reparations
  6. Why bullying needs more efforts to stop it
  7. Will taxpayers foot the cleanup bill for bankrupt coal companies?
  8. Are we ready to raise taxes on the rich? History says no
  9. Are our smartphones afflicting us all with symptoms of ADHD?
  10. Trump and Clinton victorious: proof that US voting system doesn’t work
  11. Can the oil and gas boom teach us how to fix drug problems in America?
  12. Don't let cybercriminals hide from the FBI
  13. Explainer: What is wrong with America's civic education
  14. The Easter Rising 100 years on: how the Irish revolution fired up American politics
  15. Should the U.S. provide reparations for slavery and Jim Crow?
  16. Are income share agreements a good way to pay for college?
  17. How corruption is hurting Mexico City’s efforts to tackle air pollution
  18. Worrying about being a perfect mother makes it harder to be a good parent
  19. Have children? Here's how kids ruin your romantic relationship
  20. Pregnancy: cooperative paradise or conflict-driven battle between mother and child?
  21. Why the stakes are so high for the Black Panther
  22. Simulating evolution: how close do computer models come to reality?
  23. Cybersecurity's weakest link: humans
  24. Reading to your child: the difference it makes
  25. Should Florida 'frack' its limestone for oil and gas? Two geophysicists weigh in
  26. Domestic violence is often omitted from sentencing reforms. Here's why that's a mistake
  27. New research is connecting genetic variations to schizophrenia and other mental illnesses
  28. Clinton and Trump: different visions of America abroad
  29. Panama Papers revelation: we must rethink data security systems
  30. Getting more energy from the sun: how to make better solar cells
  31. Can you imagine a world without Budweiser? We can
  32. President Trump? Not likely
  33. The one Trump comparison you haven't heard yet
  34. Larry Wilmore's use of the 'n-word' highlights tension Barack Obama, all African-Americans feel
  35. Why public health scholars should study pornography
  36. Should you be worried about PFOA in drinking water? Here's what we know
  37. Looking for art in artificial intelligence
  38. 'Ultracool' dwarf star hosts three potentially habitable Earth-sized planets just 40 light-years away
  39. Has the American military fallen behind?
  40. Biologists lose hard-fought ground in race to save bats as white-nose syndrome spreads west
  41. How universal design can help every voter cast a ballot
  42. When a parent directs a child not be resuscitated, what should educators do?
  43. Poised to make its next big move, Netflix isn't in the business you think it's in
  44. Could knowing how much your coworker earns help close the gender pay gap?
  45. Genetic detectives: how scientists use DNA to track disease outbreaks
  46. Shot or poisoned? Does the choice of Trump or Cruz really matter?
  47. To fight Zika, let's genetically modify mosquitoes – the old-fashioned way
  48. Having trouble picking the right health insurance plan? Let an algorithm decide
  49. It's the year 2020...how's your cybersecurity?
  50. Why more cities need to add up the economic value of trees