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Six myths about national security intelligence

  • Written by Frederic Lemieux, Professor and Program Director of the Master's degree in Applied Intelligence, Georgetown University

President Trump has gotten off to a rough start with the intelligence community.

The day after being sworn in, Trump spoke at CIA headquarters in an apparent attempt to mend his relationship with the agency. The relationship was frayed in large part due to Trump’s skepticism about an intelligence assessment that suggested Russia had hacked int...

Read more: Six myths about national security intelligence

Trump's policies will affect four groups of undocumented immigrants

  • Written by Susan Bibler Coutin, Professor of Criminology, Law and Society and Anthropology, University of California, Irvine

President Donald Trump is expected to order the deportation of millions of “criminal aliens” this week. During his campaign, he stated his intention to remove all 11 million “illegal immigrants” from the country, although some may be allowed to return.

However, terms like “criminal aliens” and “illegal...

Read more: Trump's policies will affect four groups of undocumented immigrants

From flask to field: How tiny microbes are revolutionizing big agriculture

  • Written by Mathew Wallenstein, Associate Professor and Director, Innovation Center for Sustainable Agriculture, Colorado State University
imageBy unlocking phosphorus from soil, microbes help plants like these sugar beets take it up and boost plant growth.www.Shutterstock.com

Walk into your typical U.S. or U.K. grocery store and feast your eyes on an amazing bounty of fresh and processed foods. In most industrialized countries, it’s hard to imagine that food production is one of the...

Read more: From flask to field: How tiny microbes are revolutionizing big agriculture

Why Wall Street's Dow 20,000 is totally meaningless

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University

The Dow Jones Industrial Average just broke 20,000 for the first time.

Traders and investors cheered this historic high of the world’s most famous stock market index, which is composed of 30 of the biggest and best-performing American companies and is frequently used as a barometer of the strength of the economy.

Even though it took a little...

Read more: Why Wall Street's Dow 20,000 is totally meaningless

Why Trump's wall with Mexico is so popular, and why it won't work

  • Written by David Cook Martín, Professor of Sociology and Assistant Vice President of Global Education, Grinnell College

Donald Trump tweeted on Jan. 6 that “any money spent on building the Great Wall (for the sake of speed), will be paid back by Mexico later.”

The Economist reports that 40 countries have built fences since the fall of the Berlin Wall. Thirty of these were built since 9/11; 15 were built in 2015.

The United States already has about 650...

Read more: Why Trump's wall with Mexico is so popular, and why it won't work

How to secure a smartphone for the tweeter-in-chief

  • Written by Anupam Joshi, Oros Family Professor and Chair, Department of Computer Science & Electrical Engineering, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

As President Donald Trump takes office, he has also taken up a new, digital symbol of the presidency. Before, during and since the campaign, he used an Android smartphone to conduct his business and tweet prolifically, directly reaching millions of followers. But when he was inaugurated, Trump surrendered that device and accepted in its place a...

Read more: How to secure a smartphone for the tweeter-in-chief

Communities plagued by uninsurance also suffer from breakdowns in trust, social connection

  • Written by Tara McKay, Assistant Professor, Vanderbilt University
imageApplicants for insurance wait in Richmond, California in 2014.Eric Risberg/AP file photo.

Dismantling the Affordable Care Act (ACA) without a replacement plan is projected to increase the nation’s uninsured population by 18 million in the first year after repeal and by 32 million in 2026, according to recent estimates by the Congressional...

Read more: Communities plagued by uninsurance also suffer from breakdowns in trust, social connection

It's true, internet surfing during class is not so good for grades

  • Written by Susan Ravizza, Associate Professor of Psychology, Michigan State University
imageShould laptops be used during class?Catalyst Open Source, CC BY-SA

Many universities encourage students to purchase laptops that they can bring to class. Charities like One Laptop per Child provide low-cost laptops to disadvantaged students.

There is no doubt that having a desktop computer or laptop in school is useful for writing papers, gathering...

Read more: It's true, internet surfing during class is not so good for grades

Our psychological biases mean order matters when we judge items in sequence

  • Written by Robin Kramer, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in the Department of Psychology, Trent University
imageDoes gold go to the best divers or the ones with the best place in the order?AP Photo/Matt Dunham

We often need to make decisions about sequences of things or people rather than just a single item in isolation. For instance, in an everyday setting, we might choose which smartphone to buy after trying out several. There are also more high-stakes...

Read more: Our psychological biases mean order matters when we judge items in sequence

Understanding net neutrality: Seven essential reads

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Editor, Science + Technology, The Conversation
imageVia shutterstock.com

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories.

imageAjit Pai.Federal Communications Commission

With the selection of Ajit Pai to chair the Federal Communications Commission, President Trump has elevated a major foe of net neutrality from the minority on the commission to its head. Pai, already a commissioner and...

Read more: Understanding net neutrality: Seven essential reads

More Articles ...

  1. Trump, trade and the TPP: Seven essential reads
  2. Research shows how to grow more cassava, one of the world's key food crops
  3. Overcoming 'cyber-fatigue' requires users to step up for security
  4. How should you read unnamed sources and leaks?
  5. Why it's hard to 'just get over it' for people who have been traumatized
  6. How a major immigration raid affected infant health
  7. The changing nature of America's irreligious explained
  8. Did Jeff Sessions forget wanting to execute pot dealers?
  9. Mind the gaps: Reducing hunger by improving yields on small farms
  10. Paid family leave policies are expanding, but are new mothers actually taking time off?
  11. Earthquakes triggered by humans pose growing risk
  12. Will Trump negotiate a better coal deal for taxpayers?
  13. China steps up as US steps back from global leadership
  14. Dispatch from DC: On the National Mall, the state of a nation
  15. Donald Trump waves goodbye to era of baby boomer presidents
  16. Trump's cabinet: Eight essential reads
  17. Trump's inaugural speech: Is it morning or mourning in America?
  18. NATO's future when America comes first
  19. Price, author of long proposal to replace Obamacare, short on specifics in hearing
  20. The art of protesting during Donald Trump's presidency
  21. Sultan Donald Trump?
  22. Is part of Chelsea Manning's legacy increased surveillance?
  23. Why each side of the partisan divide thinks the other is living in an alternate reality
  24. Can Trump make real change as president?
  25. Why it's so hard for women to break into the C-suite
  26. Data should smash the biological myth of promiscuous males and sexually coy females
  27. Rural America matters to all Americans
  28. Fixes, not repeals, more typical for major legislation like Obamacare
  29. Will President Obama's clean energy legacy endure?
  30. Why the 'free market' for drugs doesn’t work and what we can do about it
  31. Are third-party candidates spoilers? What voting data reveal
  32. Many household products contain antimicrobial chemicals banned from soaps by the FDA
  33. Why time seems to fly – or trickle – by
  34. How can we predict the hottest year on record when weather forecasts are so uncertain?
  35. Rural America, already hurting, could be most harmed by Trump's promise to repeal Obamacare
  36. Why the legacy of Shakers will endure
  37. Using electricity, not molecules, to switch cells on and off
  38. One way Trump is different from European nationalists
  39. Trump snubs ethical norms because we've forgotten why they matter
  40. How progressives can still make change in the age of Trump
  41. Can marijuana treat MS symptoms? It's hard for researchers to find out
  42. Is mass murder becoming a form of protest?
  43. Detecting methane leaks with infrared cameras: They're fast, but are they effective?
  44. Military honor in the age of Trump
  45. What does Trump’s election mean for digital freedom of speech?
  46. Can Ryan Zinke balance conservation and development as interior secretary?
  47. What shaped King's prophetic vision?
  48. Obama's legacy in science, technology and innovation
  49. Helping universities combat depression with mobile technology
  50. Electroconvulsive therapy: A history of controversy, but also of help