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From ski jumps and sliding bobsleds to engineering snow, here are 5 essential reads on the science of the Winter Olympics

  • Written by Mary Magnuson, Associate Science Editor, The Conversation
imageThe 2026 Winter Olympics will be held in Milan and Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy.AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

Thousands of the world’s best athletes will flock to Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo in Italy in February 2026 for the 25th Winter Olympics. While sports fans are focused on the athletic feats of the Olympians, science enthusiasts can also have...

Read more: From ski jumps and sliding bobsleds to engineering snow, here are 5 essential reads on the science...

Fears about TikTok’s policy changes point to a deeper problem in the tech industry

  • Written by Casey Fiesler, Associate Professor of Information Science, University of Colorado Boulder
imageUsers' fears about TikTok might be a bit off the mark, but nonetheless justified.Noushad Thekkayil/NurPhoto via Getty Images

A little over a year after TikTok temporarily went dark in the United States and users were greeted with a message explaining that “a law banning TikTok has been enacted,” those same U.S. users opened the app to...

Read more: Fears about TikTok’s policy changes point to a deeper problem in the tech industry

What Olympic athletes see that viewers don’t: Machine-made snow makes ski racing faster and riskier – and it’s everywhere

  • Written by Keith Musselman, Assistant Professor in Geography, Mountain Hydrology, and Climate Change, University of Colorado Boulder
imageU.S. skier Rosie Brennan leads a group during the women's team sprint classic cross-country skiing competition at the 2022 Winter Olympics. AP Photo/Aaron Favila

When viewers tune in to the 2026 Winter Olympics, they will see pristine, white slopes, groomed tracks and athletes racing over snow-covered landscapes, thanks in part to a storm that...

Read more: What Olympic athletes see that viewers don’t: Machine-made snow makes ski racing faster and...

Clarence ‘Taffy’ Abel: A pioneering US Olympic hockey star who hid his Indigenous identity to play in the NHL

  • Written by Michael J. Socolow, Professor of Communication and Journalism, University of Maine
imageTaffy Abel, of the U.S. ice hockey team that competed in Chamonix, France, in 1924, was the first U.S. flag bearer at a winter Olympics.The Jones Family Collection

On Dec. 26, 1926, 16,000 hockey fans packed Madison Square Garden to witness the birth of a rivalry between the New York Americans and the brand-new New York Rangers. The game would...

Read more: Clarence ‘Taffy’ Abel: A pioneering US Olympic hockey star who hid his Indigenous identity to play...

A terrorism label that comes before the facts can turn ‘domestic terrorism’ into a useless designation

  • Written by Brian O'Neill, Professor of Practice, International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageHomeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem initially said Alex Pretti committed an ‘act of domestic terrorism’ before saying later that ‘we were using the best information we had at the time.’Al Drago/Getty Image

In separate encounters, federal immigration agents in Minneapolis killed Renée Good and Alex Pretti in...

Read more: A terrorism label that comes before the facts can turn ‘domestic terrorism’ into a useless...

Why corporate America is mostly staying quiet as federal immigration agents show up at its doors

  • Written by Alessandro Piazza, Assistant Professor of Strategic Management, Rice University
imagePeople protest U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement inside a Target store in Minneapolis on Jan. 31, 2026. AP Photo / Julia Demaree Nikhinson

When U.S. Border Patrol agents entered a Target store in Richfield, Minnesota, in early January, detaining two employees, it marked a new chapter in the relationship between corporate America and the...

Read more: Why corporate America is mostly staying quiet as federal immigration agents show up at its doors

You’ve reached your weight loss goal on GLP-1 medications – what now?

  • Written by Amy J. Sheer, Associate Professor of Medicine, University of Florida

GLP-1 drugs have ushered in a new era in weight loss.

In just a few years, medications such as semaglutide and tirzepatide, known by the brand names Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro and Zepbound, have gone from niche diabetes treatments to household names, reshaping how America thinks about weight loss.

A November 2025 Kaiser Family Foundation poll found...

Read more: You’ve reached your weight loss goal on GLP-1 medications – what now?

Overactive immune cells can worsen heart failure – targeting them could offer new treatments

  • Written by Shyam Bansal, Associate Professor of Medicine, Penn State
imageHeart failure affects millions of people around the world.Yuichiro Chino/Moment via Getty Images

Around 64 million people worldwide suffer from heart failure, and nearly half die within the first five years of diagnosis due to a lack of effective treatments to stop the disease from getting worse.

Heart failure occurs when the heart’s ability...

Read more: Overactive immune cells can worsen heart failure – targeting them could offer new treatments

AI-generated text is overwhelming institutions – setting off a no-win ‘arms race’ with AI detectors

  • Written by Bruce Schneier, Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy, Harvard Kennedy School
imageGenerative AI is enabling people to swamp all manner of institutions with documents, forms and messages.sekulicn/E+ via Getty Images

In 2023, the science fiction literary magazine Clarkesworld stopped accepting new submissions because so many were generated by artificial intelligence. Near as the editors could tell, many submitters pasted the...

Read more: AI-generated text is overwhelming institutions – setting off a no-win ‘arms race’ with AI detectors

How women are reinterpreting the menstrual taboos in Chinese Buddhism

  • Written by Megan Bryson, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Tennessee
image'Blood Pond Hell 'detail depicted in a 1940 Taipei Hell Scroll. The Trustees of the British Museum

In many religions and cultures, women who are menstruating or who just gave birth are not allowed to enter sacred sites, such as temples, or participate in religious rituals. This is because they are often seen as ritually impure.

Early Christians cite...

Read more: How women are reinterpreting the menstrual taboos in Chinese Buddhism

More Articles ...

  1. Has Little Caesars Arena boosted economic activity in Detroit? We looked at hotel and short-term rental industry data to find out
  2. ‘Less lethal’ crowd-control weapons still cause harm – 2 physicians explain what they are and their health effects
  3. ICE and Border Patrol in Minnesota − accused of violating 1st, 2nd, 4th and 10th amendment rights − are testing whether the Constitution can survive
  4. Schools are increasingly telling students they must put their phones away – Ohio’s example shows mixed results following new bans
  5. Women have been mapping the world for centuries – and now they’re speaking up for the people left out of those maps
  6. Congress has exercised minimal oversight over ICE, but that might change
  7. Lüften sounds simple – but ‘house-burping’ is more complicated in Pittsburgh
  8. ‘Inoculation’ helps people spot political deepfakes, study finds
  9. Philly theaters unite to stage 3 plays by Pulitzer-winning playwright James Ijames
  10. Trump wants to shutter the Kennedy Center for 2 years – an arts management professor explains what that portends
  11. An epic border: Finland’s poetic masterpiece, the Kalevala, has roots in 2 cultures and 2 countries
  12. Medicare is experimenting with having AI review claims – a cost-saving measure that could risk denying needed care
  13. Reclaiming water from contaminated brine can increase water supply and reduce environmental harm
  14. The Supreme Court may soon diminish Black political power, undoing generations of gains
  15. Climate change threatens the Winter Olympics’ future – and even snowmaking has limits for saving the Games
  16. Confused by the new dietary guidelines? Focus on these simple, evidence-based shifts to lower your chronic disease risk
  17. Federal power meets local resistance in Minneapolis – a case study in how federalism staves off authoritarianism
  18. Data centers told to pitch in as storms and cold weather boost power demand
  19. Clergy protests against ICE turned to a classic – and powerful – American playlist
  20. NASA’s Artemis II plans to send a crew around the Moon to test equipment and lay the groundwork for a future landing
  21. A human tendency to value expertise, not just sheer power, explains how some social hierarchies form
  22. Certain brain injuries may be linked to violent crime – identifying them could help reveal how people make moral choices
  23. Building with air – how nature’s hole-filled blueprints shape manufacturing
  24. Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl show is part of long play drawn up by NFL to score with Latin America
  25. Whether it’s Valentine’s Day notes or emails to loved ones, using AI to write leaves people feeling crummy about themselves
  26. Stroke survivors can counterintuitively improve recovery by strengthening their stronger arm – new research
  27. Denmark’s generous child care and parental leave policies erase 80% of the ‘motherhood penalty’ for working moms
  28. Trump’s climate policy rollback plan relies on EPA rescinding its 2009 endangerment finding – but will courts allow it?
  29. Suspending family-based immigrant visas weakens US families and the economy
  30. Is the whole universe just a simulation?
  31. From ski jumping to speedskating, winter sports represent physics in action
  32. Life isn’t all diamonds – money and fame don’t shield the many ‘Real Housewives’ facing criminal charges
  33. 800 years after his death, the legends and legacy of Francis of Assisi endure
  34. US exit from the World Health Organization marks a new era in global health policy – here’s what the US, and world, will lose
  35. 3 things to know about Kevin Warsh, Trump’s nod for Fed chair
  36. I’m a former FBI agent who studies policing, and here’s how federal agents in Minneapolis are undermining basic law enforcement principles
  37. Short on resources, special educators are using AI – with little knowledge of the effects
  38. Grammys’ AI rules aim to keep music human, but large gray area leaves questions about authenticity and authorship
  39. From Colonial rebels to Minneapolis protesters, technology has long powered American social movements
  40. What Franco’s fascist regime in Spain can teach us about today’s America
  41. Trump’s Greenland threats reveals no-win dilemma at the heart of European security strategy
  42. US military action in Iran risks igniting a regional and global nuclear cascade
  43. How the Supreme Court might protect the Fed’s independence by using employment law in Trump v. Cook
  44. Anti-ICE protesters are following same nonviolent playbook used by people in war zones across the world to fight threats to their communities
  45. Over 100 deaths linked to January storms – here’s how to stay safe when cold, snowy weather moves in
  46. Winter storms don’t have to be deadly – here’s how to stay safe before, during and after one hits
  47. Over 100 deaths linked to January storm: Here’s how to stay safe as more cold, stormy weather moves in
  48. Americans want heat pumps – but high electricity prices may get in the way
  49. Rescheduling marijuana would be a big tax break for legal cannabis businesses – and a quiet form of deregulation
  50. America is falling behind in the global EV race – that’s going to cost the US auto industry