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Malaria researchers are getting closer to outsmarting the world’s deadliest parasite

  • Written by Kwesi Akonu Adom Mensah Forson, PhD. Candidate in Biology, University of Virginia
imageMalaria is transmitted to people by mosquitoes infected with a parasite from the _Plasmodium_ family. Jim Gathany via CDC/Dr. William Collins

Every year, malaria kills more than 600,000 people worldwide. Most of them are children under 5 in sub-Saharan Africa. But the disease isn’t confined to poor, rural areas – it’s a global...

Read more: Malaria researchers are getting closer to outsmarting the world’s deadliest parasite

How Trump’s Greenland threats amount to an implicit rejection of the legal principles of Nuremberg

  • Written by Michael Blake, Professor of Philosophy, Public Policy and Governance, University of Washington
imageDaily life on a street at sunset in Nuuk, Greenland, on Jan. 21, 2026. AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka

U.S. President Donald Trump has, for the moment, indicated a willingness to abandon his threat to take over Greenland through military force – saying that he prefers negotiation to invasion. He is, however, continuing to assert that the United...

Read more: How Trump’s Greenland threats amount to an implicit rejection of the legal principles of Nuremberg

Artificial metacognition: Giving an AI the ability to ‘think’ about its ‘thinking’

  • Written by Ricky J. Sethi, Professor of Computer Science, Fitchburg State University; Worcester Polytechnic Institute
imageAIs could use some self-reflection.davincidig/iStock via Getty Images

Have you ever had the experience of rereading a sentence multiple times only to realize you still don’t understand it? As taught to scores of incoming college freshmen, when you realize you’re spinning your wheels, it’s time to change your approach.

This process,...

Read more: Artificial metacognition: Giving an AI the ability to ‘think’ about its ‘thinking’

Political polarization in Pittsburgh communities is rooted in economic neglect − not extremism

  • Written by Ilia Murtazashvili, Professor of Public Policy, University of Pittsburgh
imagePittsburgh is a city where your politics often depend on how your community and neighborhood are doing.Rebecca Droke/AFP Collection via Getty Images

When it comes to political polarization in the United States, the Pittsburgh region offers a useful window into what communities can do about it.

Pittsburgh is a “comeback city.” The...

Read more: Political polarization in Pittsburgh communities is rooted in economic neglect − not extremism

What we get wrong about forgiveness – a counseling professor unpacks the difference between letting go and making up

  • Written by Richard Balkin, Distinguished Professor of Counselor Education, University of Mississippi
imageTake stock of your feelings, and the other person's, before you decide what kind of forgiveness to offer.Jacob Wackerhausen/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Two in five Americans have fought with a family member about politics, according to a 2024 study by the American Psychiatric Association. One in five have become estranged over controversial...

Read more: What we get wrong about forgiveness – a counseling professor unpacks the difference between...

Rebirth of the madman theory? Unpredictability isn’t what it was when it comes to foreign policy

  • Written by Andrew Latham, Professor of Political Science, Macalester College
image🎶 When the madman flips the switch, the nuclear will go for me 🎶Columbia Pictures, CC BY-SA

Tariffs are on, until they are not. Military force is an option … and then it’s off the table.

Erratic behavior and unpredictability is having a moment in foreign policy circles. In the White House and elsewhere, it is seemingly...

Read more: Rebirth of the madman theory? Unpredictability isn’t what it was when it comes to foreign policy

Why too much phosphorus in America’s farmland is polluting the country’s water

  • Written by Dinesh Phuyal, Postdoctoral Associate in Soil, Water and Ecosystem Sciences, University of Florida
imageA spreader sprays sewage sludge, which is rich in phosphorus, across a farm in Oklahoma.AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel

When people think about agricultural pollution, they often picture what is easy to see: fertilizer spreaders crossing fields or muddy runoff after a heavy storm. However, a much more significant threat is quietly and invisibly building...

Read more: Why too much phosphorus in America’s farmland is polluting the country’s water

Marine protected areas aren’t in the right places to safeguard dolphins and whales in the South Atlantic

  • Written by Guilherme Maricato, Pós-doutorando no Programa de Pós-Graduação em Ecologia, UFRJ
imageWhales have become increasingly common in regions such as the northern coast of São Paulo, which also has heavy ship traffic.Julio Cardoso/Projeto Baleia à Vista

The ocean is under increasing pressure. Everyday human activities, from shipping to oil and gas exploration to urban pollution, are affecting the marine environment....

Read more: Marine protected areas aren’t in the right places to safeguard dolphins and whales in the South...

How the polar vortex and warm ocean are intensifying a major US winter storm

  • Written by Mathew Barlow, Professor of Climate Science, UMass Lowell
imageBoston and much of the U.S. faced a cold winter blast in January 2026.Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

A severe winter storm sweeping across the central and eastern U.S. in late January 2026 is threatening states from Texas to New England with crippling freezing rain, sleet and snow. Several governors issued states of emergency as...

Read more: How the polar vortex and warm ocean are intensifying a major US winter storm

How the polar vortex and warm ocean intensified a major US winter storm

  • Written by Mathew Barlow, Professor of Climate Science, UMass Lowell
imageBoston and much of the U.S. faced a cold winter blast in January 2026.Craig F. Walker/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

A severe winter storm that brought crippling freezing rain, sleet and snow to a large part of the U.S. in late January 2026 left a mess in states from New Mexico to New England. Hundreds of thousands of people lost power across...

Read more: How the polar vortex and warm ocean intensified a major US winter storm

More Articles ...

  1. ICE immigration tactics are shocking more Americans as US-Mexico border operations move north
  2. ‘We want you arrested because we said so’ – how ICE’s policy on raiding whatever homes it wants violates a basic constitutional right, according to a former federal judge
  3. Dogs can need more than kibble, walks and love − consider the escalating expenses of their medical care before you adopt
  4. Your brain can be trained, much like your muscles – a neurologist explains how to boost your brain health
  5. Rheumatoid arthritis has no cure – but researchers are homing in on preventing it
  6. Feeling unprepared for the AI boom? You’re not alone
  7. Is being virtuous good for you – or just people around you? A study suggests traits like compassion may support your own well-being
  8. Doing things alone is on the rise, and businesses should pay more attention to that – even on Valentine’s Day
  9. Dealing with a difficult relationship? Here’s how psychology says you can shift the dynamic
  10. The rise of Reza Pahlavi: Iranian opposition leader or opportunist?
  11. AI-induced cultural stagnation is no longer speculation − it’s already happening
  12. ‘Expertise’ shouldn’t be a bad word – expert consensus guides science and society
  13. Trump’s insistence on personal loyalty from ambassadors could crimp US foreign policy
  14. Hacking the grid: How digital sabotage turns infrastructure into a weapon
  15. Lebanon’s orchards have been burnt, wildlife habitat destroyed by Israeli strikes – raising troubling international law questions
  16. Companies are already using agentic AI to make decisions, but governance is lagging behind
  17. US turns its back on global efforts for women and children terrorized by violence and conflict
  18. A government can choose to investigate the killing of a protester − or choose to blame the victim and pin it all on ‘domestic terrorism’
  19. When it comes to developing policies on AI in K-12, schools are largely on their own
  20. Bearing witness after the witnesses are gone: How to bring Holocaust education home for a new generation
  21. From ancient Rome to today, war-makers have talked constantly about peace
  22. Antibiotic resistance could undo a century of medical progress – but four advances are changing the story
  23. Filming ICE is legal but exposes you to digital tracking – here’s how to minimize the risk
  24. Federal immigration enforcement near schools disrupts attendance, traumatizes students and damages their academic performance
  25. America’s next big clean energy resource could come from coal mine pollution – if we can agree on who owns it
  26. Despite its steep environmental costs, AI might also help save the planet
  27. Why ‘unwinding’ with screens may be making us more stressed – here’s what to try instead
  28. America’s next big critical minerals source could be coal mine pollution – if we can agree on who owns it
  29. The only thing limiting Taylor Swift’s popularity is partisan polarization
  30. Trump’s stated reasons for taking Greenland are wrong – but the tactics fit with the plan to limit China’s economic interests
  31. The world is in water bankruptcy, UN scientists report – here’s what that means
  32. AI cannot automate science – a philosopher explains the uniquely human aspects of doing research
  33. What ‘hope’ has represented in Christian history – and what it might mean now
  34. Some hard-earned lessons from Detroit on how to protect the safety net for community partners in research
  35. Iran’s universities have long been a battleground, where protests happen and students fight for the future
  36. Why Philly has so many sinkholes
  37. What air pollution does to the human body
  38. What triumphalist narratives about Brazil’s high court and Bolsonaro imprisonment leave out
  39. What a bear attack in a remote valley in Nepal tells us about the problem of aging rural communities
  40. Opera is not dying – but it needs a second act for the streaming era
  41. Trump’s Greenland ambitions could wreck 20th-century alliances that helped build the modern world order
  42. Are there thunderstorms on Mars? A planetary scientist explains the red planet’s dry, dusty storms
  43. An ultrathin coating for electronics looked like a miracle insulator − but a hidden leak fooled researchers for over a decade
  44. For 80 years, the president’s party has almost always lost House seats in midterm elections, a pattern that makes the 2026 congressional outlook clear
  45. Chavismo has adapted before – but can Venezuela’s leftist ideology become US friendly and survive?
  46. Supreme Court is set to rule on constitutionality of Trump tariffs – but not their wisdom
  47. 12 ways the Trump administration dismantled civil rights law and the foundations of inclusive democracy in its first year
  48. Thecla, the beast fighter: The saint who faced down lions and killer seals is one of many ‘leading ladies’ in early Christian texts
  49. American farmers, who once fed the world, face a volatile global market with diminishing federal backing
  50. Deep reading can boost your critical thinking and help you resist misinformation – here’s how to build the skill