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Fethullah Gülen: public intellectual or public enemy?

  • Written by Joshua D. Hendrick, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Global Studies, Loyola University Maryland

On July 15, 2016, the Turkish Republic survived an attempted military coup d’état that killed nearly 300 people and cost more than an estimated US$100 billion.

Immediately following the coup, Turkey’s government began a massive purge of state, military, business and civil society institutions in an attempt to remove alleged...

Read more: Fethullah Gülen: public intellectual or public enemy?

Who owns your tattoo? Maybe not you

  • Written by Shontavia Johnson, Professor of Intellectual Property Law, Drake University

More than 20 percent of all Americans have at least one tattoo, and for millennials that number jumps to almost 40 percent. What could be more intimately a part of you than a work of body art permanently inked into your skin? You probably assume that the tattoo on your body belongs to you. But, in actuality, somebody else might own your tattoo....

Read more: Who owns your tattoo? Maybe not you

Brazil’s sewage woes reflect the growing global water quality crisis

  • Written by Joan Rose, Laboratory Director/Principal Investigator in Water Research, Michigan State University

All eyes are turned toward Rio de Janeiro to watch top athletes from all over the world compete. Yet the headlines continue to highlight the problems with the water quality and the risks to the athletes who swim, row and sail, and even to tourists simply visiting the beaches.

Large concentrations of disease-causing viruses have been found in the...

Read more: Brazil’s sewage woes reflect the growing global water quality crisis

After fatality, autonomous car development may speed up

  • Written by William Messner, John R. Beaver Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Tufts University
imageAs problems occur, rapid design adjustment will advance autonomous cars' abilities.Image of car with sensors via shutterstock.com

The world has witnessed enormous advances in autonomous passenger vehicle technologies over the last dozen years. The performance of microprocessors, memory chips and sensors needed for autonomous driving has greatly...

Read more: After fatality, autonomous car development may speed up

I'm an OB-GYN treating women with Zika: This is what it's like

  • Written by Christine Curry, Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Miami
imageTalking with patients who've had Zika is tough.Pregnant woman and doctor image via www.shutterstock.com.

As a medical student, I remember reading books about the early days of the HIV epidemic and wondering what it was like for doctors to take care of patients who had a new, unknown disease. It seemed to me like it would be frightening for both...

Read more: I'm an OB-GYN treating women with Zika: This is what it's like

Are soaring levels of income inequality making us a more polarized nation?

  • Written by Christos Makridis, Ph.D. Candidate in Labor and Public Economics, Stanford University

Political polarization today is greater than it’s been in recent history – at least since the 1970s. To see that, one need only look at the current U.S. presidential election.

And whatever your political leanings, an overly divided country can hamper its progress, such as the ability to innovate or adapt to geopolitical risk.

Another...

Read more: Are soaring levels of income inequality making us a more polarized nation?

Latinos face digital divide in health care

  • Written by Mariaelena Gonzalez, Assistant Professor of Public Health, University of California, Merced
imageDoctors are turning to digital devices for medical records, but Latinos lag in use of portals to access them.From www.shutterstock.com

When considering Latinos, educators often struggle with how to close the achievement gap. That gap is often defined as a disparity in academic success between native English speakers and those for whom Spanish was...

Read more: Latinos face digital divide in health care

What the Bourne films get right and wrong about amnesia

  • Written by Jennifer Talarico, Associate Professor, Psychology, Lafayette College

In 2002’s “The Bourne Identity,” our protagonist wakes up having been shot and plucked, unconscious, from the Mediterranean on to a fishing boat with no memory of who he is or how he got there. From there, the movie franchise follows Jason Bourne as he recovers memories of past events and rediscovers his identity.

But, although...

Read more: What the Bourne films get right and wrong about amnesia

Why it's hard for adults to learn a second language

  • Written by Brianna Yamasaki, Ph.D. Student, University of Washington
imageWhat makes some individuals good at learning languages?Language image www.shutterstock.com

As a young adult in college, I decided to learn Japanese. My father’s family is from Japan, and I wanted to travel there someday.

However, many of my classmates and I found it difficult to learn a language in adulthood. We struggled to connect new sounds...

Read more: Why it's hard for adults to learn a second language

The talking dead: how personality drives smartphone addiction

  • Written by James A. Roberts, Professor of Marketing, Baylor University
imageSome people are more prone to become glued to their phones than others.'Phone Woman' via www.shutterstock.com

How many times a day do you check your smartphone?

According to a recent survey, the typical American checks once every six-and-a-half minutes, or approximately 150 times every day. Other research has found that number to be as high as 300...

Read more: The talking dead: how personality drives smartphone addiction

More Articles ...

  1. Build disaster-proof homes before storms strike, not afterward
  2. If cash is king, how can stores refuse to take your dollars?
  3. Geomythology: Can geologists relate ancient stories of great floods to real events?
  4. On rocky road to Rio, the biggest loser may be the glory of hosting Olympics
  5. Music training speeds up brain development in children
  6. Expanding citizen science models to enhance open innovation
  7. Will the Amish turn out for Trump? Don’t bet the farm
  8. Don't let the scale fool you: Why you could still be at risk for diabetes
  9. Deadly medical errors are less common than headlines suggest
  10. What the favorite TV shows of Trump supporters can tell us about his appeal
  11. Will social media define the success of the Olympic Games?
  12. Can environmentalists learn to love – or just tolerate – nuclear power?
  13. Radicals in the Democratic Party, from Upton Sinclair to Bernie Sanders
  14. Can 'climate corridors' help species adapt to warming world?
  15. Museum economics: how the contemporary art boom is hurting the bottom line
  16. It's not 'corporate poaching' – it's a free market for brilliant people
  17. As coal mining declines, community mental health problems linger
  18. Why Bernie Sanders' supporters should be good losers
  19. As the Olympics approach, stains on Rio's architecture, infrastructure
  20. Why many people don't talk about traumatic events until long after they occur
  21. The future of genetic enhancement is not in the West
  22. Sex on TV: Less impact on teens than you might think
  23. Why Brazil's post-Olympics hangover will hit so hard
  24. Since ancient Greece, the Olympics and bribery have gone hand in hand
  25. Want college to be affordable? Start with Pell Grants
  26. In Zika, echoes of US rubella outbreak of 1964-65
  27. Philip Morris gets its ash kicked in Uruguay; where will it next blow smoke?
  28. A record 65.3 million people were displaced last year: What does that number actually mean?
  29. Why 'Sharknado 4' matters: Do climate disaster movies hurt the climate cause?
  30. How vulnerable to hacking is the US election cyber infrastructure?
  31. Traveling to Mars with immortal plasma rockets
  32. Help your children play out a story and watch them become more creative
  33. Can your Facebook friends influence your decision to buy a house?
  34. Do opioids make pain worse?
  35. German responses to terror range from cautious to conspiratorial
  36. A third term for the Clintons?
  37. More than scenery: National parks preserve our history and culture
  38. Clinton vs. Trump: Whose acceptance speech hit the right note?
  39. Will the historic nature of Clinton's nomination give her a bump in the polls?
  40. Does practice make an Olympian? Not by itself
  41. What's really behind our obsession with 'clean' athletes?
  42. Candidates control their own social media. What message are they sending?
  43. How black grassroots politics led to the 14th Amendment and black citizenship
  44. GMOs lead the fight against Zika, Ebola and the next unknown pandemic
  45. How will Turkey's failed coup and massive purge affect its economic future?
  46. Going public: Could Clinton's health care proposals work?
  47. Why Turkey wants to silence its academics
  48. What is a party platform, and why do candidates often ignore them?
  49. The science behind Hillary Clinton's problems with trust
  50. Why fear of childbirth must be studied in the US