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The Conversation

Americans still trust doctors and scientists during a public health crisis

  • Written by Ellen Peters, Director, Center for Science Communication Research, University of Oregon
Microbiologist Xiugen Zhang working at the Connecticut State Public Health Laboratory.AP Photo/Jessica Hill

The coronavirus epidemic is a health crisis that threatens Americans’ quality of life. Who do Americans trust to lead them through it?

The public opinion firm YouGov has reported that public trust of scientists fell from 2013 to 2017....

Read more: Americans still trust doctors and scientists during a public health crisis

What The Satanic Temple is and why it's opening a debate about religion

  • Written by Joseph P. Laycock, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Texas State University
The Satanic Temple unveils a statue of Baphomet, a winged-goat creature, at a rally for the First Amendment in Little Rock, Arkansas, in August 2018.AP Photo/Hannah Grabenstein

A group called The Satanic Temple went to court in their lawsuit against the city of Scottsdale, Arizona, for religious discrimination in January 2020.

The city’s...

Read more: What The Satanic Temple is and why it's opening a debate about religion

Do wasps have a queen like bees do?

  • Written by Caralyn Zehnder, Lecturer in Biology, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Some wasps are social insects, meaning they live in groups and have a queen.umsiedlungen/Pixabay.com), CC BY-SA

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com.


Is there a queen wasp? - Gabriel H., age 7, Providence, Rhode Island


That’s...

Read more: Do wasps have a queen like bees do?

​Tornadoes that strike at night are more deadly and require more effective warning systems

  • Written by Kelsey Ellis, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Tennessee
Salvaging items from a destroyed home near Lebanon, Tenn., March 3, 2020, after tornadoes ripped across the state. AP Photo/Mark Humphrey

During the hours after midnight on March 3, 2020, tragedy struck middle Tennessee when a tornado ripped through the region, traveling over 50 miles from West Nashville to near Gordonsville. Another tornado forme...

Read more: ​Tornadoes that strike at night are more deadly and require more effective warning systems

Less than one-fifth of reported rapes and sexual assaults lead to arrests

  • Written by Melissa Morabito, Associate Professor of Criminology and Justice Studies, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Protesters attended Harvey Weinstein's first day of trial.lev radin/Shutterstock.comCC BY-ND

As experts in criminologyand the justice system, we were surprised to learn that a jury voted to convict Harvey Weinstein on two counts of rape and sexual assault.

This surprise was based on our more than a decade of research on the attrition of sexual...

Read more: Less than one-fifth of reported rapes and sexual assaults lead to arrests

Biden's resurrection was unprecedented – and well-timed

  • Written by Robert Shrum, Carmen H. and Louis Warschaw Chair in Practical Politics, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden speaks during a campaign rally in Los Angeles on Super Tuesday.Ronen Tivony/Echoes Wire/Barcroft Media via Getty Images

The dominant question going into Super Tuesday was: Did Joe Biden’s sweeping victory in South Carolina come just in time, or was it too late?

The answer is now clear. Biden all-but-...

Read more: Biden's resurrection was unprecedented – and well-timed

What really works to keep coronavirus away? 4 questions answered by a public health professional

  • Written by Brian Labus, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Duane Clark works to sanitize surfaces at the Avenue X subway station in New York City on Tuesday, March 3, 2020.AP Photo/Kevin Hagen

Editor’s note: The World Health Organization has declared that COVID-19, the disease caused by the new coronavirus, has a higher fatality rate than the flu. As of March 4, 2020, nine deaths have been reported...

Read more: What really works to keep coronavirus away? 4 questions answered by a public health professional

Vaccines without needles – new shelf-stable film could revolutionize how medicines are distributed worldwide

  • Written by Maria Croyle, Professor of Pharmaceutics, University of Texas at Austin
Films that dissolve rapidly when placed under the tongue or high in the cheek will make vaccines cheaper and more reliable.Stephen C. Schafer, CC BY-ND

The race is on to identify an effective vaccine for the COVID-19 virus. Once discovered, the next challenge will be manufacturing and distributing it around the world.

My research group has...

Read more: Vaccines without needles – new shelf-stable film could revolutionize how medicines are distributed...

Super Tuesday results show how Latino voters, moderate Democrats and Trump supporters are shaping the election

  • Written by Katie A. Cahill, Associate Director, Howard H. Baker Jr. Center for Public Policy, University of Tennessee
Voting machine operator David Schaefer, right, helps voter Kaitron Gordon with her ballot on Tennessee's Super Tuesday primary in Nashville after deadly overnight tornadoes delayed the start of voting. AP/Mark Humphrey

Editor’s note: From tiny Vermont villages to the tornado-damaged city of Nashville to California’s sprawling suburbs,...

Read more: Super Tuesday results show how Latino voters, moderate Democrats and Trump supporters are shaping...

Spring is arriving earlier across the US, and that's not always good news

  • Written by Theresa Crimmins, Director, USA National Phenology Network, University of Arizona
Yellow trout lily flowers nearly a week earlier now than in previous decades in the Appalachian Mountains.Katja Schulz/Wikipedia, CC BY

Across much of the United States, a warming climate has advanced the arrival of spring. This year is no exception. In parts of the Southeast, spring has arrived weeks earlier than normal and may turn out to be the w...

Read more: Spring is arriving earlier across the US, and that's not always good news

More Articles ...

  1. The Fed's 'surprise' interest rate cut: 5 questions answered
  2. There’s no easy exit for the US in Afghanistan
  3. A simple way to promote HPV vaccination among Asian American women: Storytelling
  4. Why so many epidemics originate in Asia and Africa – and why we can expect more
  5. Why colleges should think twice before punishing student protesters
  6. What schools can do to reduce the risk that teachers and other educators will sexually abuse children
  7. The sharing economy helps women find new economic opportunities in Jordan
  8. If you want to help after the Nashville tornadoes, give cash, not clothing and other stuff
  9. Why hand-washing really is as important as doctors say
  10. Could a dog pick the next president?
  11. Evangelicals downplay religious expression when working with secular groups
  12. Predicting the coronavirus outbreak: How AI connects the dots to warn about disease threats
  13. Why public health officials sound more worried about the coronavirus than the seasonal flu
  14. Even after blocking an ex on Facebook, the platform promotes painful reminders
  15. Humans domesticated horses – new tech could help archaeologists figure out where and when
  16. The worst humanitarian crisis of the 21st century: 5 questions on Syria answered
  17. The two-party system is here to stay
  18. Coronavirus unites a divided China in fear, grief and anger at government
  19. Trump treats the military as his own – and the troops could suffer
  20. Coronavirus: A simple way to keep workers – and the economy – from getting sick
  21. It's OK to feed wild birds – here are some tips for doing it the right way
  22. Emotional support animals can endanger the public and make life harder for people like me who rely on service dogs
  23. Why do Americans say 'bay-zle' and the English say 'baa-zle'?
  24. Tutoring kids who don't need it is a booming business in affluent areas where parents want to stack the deck
  25. A brief history of invisibility on screen
  26. US successfully planned for the 'endless frontier' of science research in 1945 – now it’s time to plan the next 75 years
  27. Black women prefer hair products marketed with them in mind
  28. Librarians could be jailed and fined under a proposed censorship law
  29. The problem with health care price transparency: We don't have cost transparency
  30. How one man fought South Carolina Democrats to end whites-only primaries – and why that matters now
  31. Why federal judges with life tenure don't need to fear political attacks from Trump or anyone else
  32. Video of 6-year-old girl's arrest shows the perils of putting police in primary schools
  33. ¿Cómo prepararnos para el coronavirus? 3 preguntas y respuestas
  34. How socialism became un-American through the Ad Council’s propaganda campaigns
  35. Why does Swiss cheese have holes?
  36. In gender discrimination, social class matters a great deal
  37. Scaling back SNAP for self-reliance clashes with the original goals of food stamps
  38. Calling someone a 'jackass' is a tradition in US politics
  39. Slave revolt film revisits history often omitted from textbooks
  40. Indigenous people may be the Amazon's last hope
  41. Don't fear a 'robot apocalypse' – tomorrow's digital jobs will be more satisfying and higher-paid
  42. 4 science-based strategies to tame angry political debate and encourage tolerance
  43. Could coronavirus really trigger a recession?
  44. Stocks are plummeting - could coronavirus cause a recession?
  45. Stocks are plummeting – could coronavirus cause a recession?
  46. How India came to love cricket, favored sport of its colonial British rulers
  47. How can we prepare for the coronavirus? 3 questions answered
  48. 7 lessons from 'Hidden Figures' NASA mathematician Katherine Johnson's life and career
  49. People prefer robots to explain themselves – and a brief summary doesn't cut it
  50. A guerrilla-to-entrepreneur plan in Colombia leaves some new businesswomen isolated and at risk