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Debunking the 'gaydar' myth

  • Written by William Cox, Assistant Scientist, Department of Psychology, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageTwo people dress up as Gaydar bots during San Francisco's 2014 gay pride parade.Scott Schiller/flickr, CC BY-NC

Kids are often told that you can’t judge a book by its cover.

Even so, people often believe they can rely on their gut to intuit things about other people. Stereotypes often influence these impressions, whether it’s that a...

Read more: Debunking the 'gaydar' myth

The power of ordinary people facing totalitarianism

  • Written by Kathleen B. Jones, Professor Emerita of Women's Studies, emphasis on politics, San Diego State University
imageA 1969 photo of political theorist and scholar Hannah Arendt. AP Photo

In the weeks since the election of President Donald J. Trump, sales of George Orwell’s “1984” have skyrocketed. But so have those of a lesser-known title, “The Origins of Totalitarianism,” by a German Jewish political theorist Hannah Arendt.

“...

Read more: The power of ordinary people facing totalitarianism

How did we get here? Four essential reads on the status of health care in America

  • Written by Lynne Anderson, Senior Editor, Health & Medicine, The Conversation
imageHouse Speaker Paul Ryan at a March 7, 2017 unveiling of the new health care bill called the American Health Care Plan.Susan Walsh/AP

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories related to the proposed American Health Care Act and the Affordable Care Act, commonly called Obamacare.

Turmoil around health care policy is reaching...

Read more: How did we get here? Four essential reads on the status of health care in America

How a kernel of corn may yield answers into some cancers

  • Written by Kevin M. Folta, Professor and Chair, Horticultural Sciences Department, Graduate Program in Plant Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Florida
imageCells within corn kernels have properties similar to those within human blood cells. www.shutterstock.com

Driving down a country highway in the Midwest can seem an endless ribbon flanked by green walls of corn, neatly planted in stately rows. But who would guess that a plant that feeds a planet might hold clues that could help us better understand,...

Read more: How a kernel of corn may yield answers into some cancers

Trade Facilitation Agreement's benefits may extend well beyond cutting red tape

  • Written by Russell Hillberry, Associate Professor of Agricultural Economics, Purdue University

Late last month the World Trade Organization celebrated the entry into force of the Trade Facilitation Agreement (TFA), a global effort to streamline government procedures governing international trade.

The primary goal of the agreement is to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of agencies that oversee trade, especially in developing...

Read more: Trade Facilitation Agreement's benefits may extend well beyond cutting red tape

How unaccompanied youth become exploited workers in the US

  • Written by Stephanie L. Canizales, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageAn unaccompanied minor from Guatemala, in Hamilton, Ohio.AP Photo/John Minchillo

The Trump administration has released a series of executive orders targeting immigration at the U.S. southern border. Central American families and children traveling alone represent nearly half of all unauthorized migrants apprehended by Customs and Border Protection....

Read more: How unaccompanied youth become exploited workers in the US

Why powerful people fail to stop bad behavior by their underlings

  • Written by Jessica A. Kennedy, Assistant Professor of Management, Vanderbilt University
imageWho you gonna listen to?Ethical dilemma via www.shutterstock.com

Imagine you were recently promoted at work. You now command a higher salary, lead more people and control more of the organization’s resources. As such, you have more influence over strategy, more authority to hire and fire and more responsibility for your team’s outcomes....

Read more: Why powerful people fail to stop bad behavior by their underlings

Did artificial intelligence deny you credit?

  • Written by Anupam Datta, Associate Professor of Computer Science and Electrical and Computer Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University
imageCan an algorithm explain itself?Robot decision via shutterstock.com

People who apply for a loan from a bank or credit card company, and are turned down, are owed an explanation of why that happened. It’s a good idea – because it can help teach people how to repair their damaged credit – and it’s a federal law, the Equal...

Read more: Did artificial intelligence deny you credit?

Whose votes count the least in the Electoral College?

  • Written by Dale R. Durran, Professor of Atmospheric Sciences and Adjunct Professor of Applied Mathematics, University of Washington
imageWeighing up your votesnorthcharleston/flickr, CC BY

In the days following the 2016 presidential election, many pundits and voters alike were stunned by the disparity between the popular vote, which went for Hillary Clinton, and the Electoral College, which favored Donald Trump.

If the president were elected by popular vote, every voter’s...

Read more: Whose votes count the least in the Electoral College?

Upgrading our infrastructure: Targeting repairs for locks, dams and bridges

  • Written by Hussam N. Mahmoud, Assistant Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Director, Structural Laboratory, Colorado State University
imageMaintenance work on Lock and Dam 8 on the Mississippi River near Genoa, Wisconsin.Patrick Moes, USACE/Flickr, CC BY

For the second time in a row, America’s infrastructure has earned a grade of D+ from the American Society of Civil Engineers. ASCE issues these report cards every four years, grading the state of U.S. bridges, dams, parks,...

Read more: Upgrading our infrastructure: Targeting repairs for locks, dams and bridges

More Articles ...

  1. What's the purpose of President Trump's Navy?
  2. Could the individual insurance market collapse in some states? Here's how that could happen
  3. Why prison building will continue booming in rural America
  4. Curbing climate change has a dollar value — here's how and why we measure it
  5. Mixing glitter and protest to support LGBTQ rights
  6. 3.14 essential reads about pi; for Pi Day
  7. The House health plan: Here's how the numbers don't add up for the poor
  8. How disaster relief efforts could be improved with game theory
  9. My doctor says there’s a guideline for my treatment – but is it right for me?
  10. Life on Earth is used to gravity – so what happens to our cells and tissues in space?
  11. Neil Gorsuch and the First Amendment: Questions the Senate Judiciary Committee should ask
  12. Why losing a dog can be harder than losing a relative or friend
  13. Now under attack, EPA's work on climate change has been going on for decades
  14. Why we should not know our own passwords
  15. Is the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization?
  16. Six years after Fukushima, much of Japan has lost faith in nuclear power
  17. If men are favored in our society, why do they die younger than women?
  18. House plan to replace Obamacare 'has Republican DNA,' especially regarding mandate
  19. From the mundane to the divine, some of the best-designed products of all time
  20. Largest deportation campaign in US history is no match for Trump's plan
  21. Want to help Chicago's youth? Pay more attention to the effect of violence on police
  22. The WikiLeaks CIA release: When will we learn?
  23. Why Trump’s 'skinny' budget is already dead
  24. We don't need to double world food production by 2050 – here's why
  25. A look at the House health care plan through the lens of faith, hope and charity
  26. Despite differences in culture, US and India fall short in childbirth in similar ways
  27. How 'cannibalism' by breast cancer cells promotes dormancy: A possible clue into cancer recurrence
  28. Scientific theories aren't mere conjecture – to survive they must work
  29. Here's why your gut instinct is wrong at work – and how to know when it isn't
  30. Draining the swamp: A guide for outsiders and career politicians
  31. How to use digital devices this Lent for holy reflection
  32. How the US military is using 'violent, chaotic, beautiful' video games to train soldiers
  33. Low-income girls often feel unprepared for puberty
  34. What fax machines can teach us about electric cars
  35. Famines in the 21st century? It's not for lack of food
  36. Trump's immigration executive orders: The demise of due process and discretion
  37. No doubt about it: smokefree laws cut heart attacks in big way
  38. Rape on campus: Athletes, status, and the sexual assault crisis
  39. Trump's revised travel ban still faces legal challenges
  40. Why artificial turf may truly be bad for kids
  41. How traditional medicine can play a key role in Latino health care
  42. New York 2140: A novelist's vision of a drowned city that still never sleeps
  43. How our morals might politically polarize just about anything
  44. Americans and Mexicans living at the border are more connected than divided
  45. Lessons in resistance from MLK, the 'conservative militant'
  46. Why Wall Street is like a used car lot
  47. America's broadband market needs more competition
  48. Communicating climate change: Focus on the framing, not just the facts
  49. Can the government save money by privatizing prisons, Medicare and other functions?
  50. What would Mark Twain think of Donald Trump?