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Heat is a serious threat to dairy cows – we're finding innovative ways to keep them cool

  • Written by Alycia Drwencke, Graduate Student, University of California, Davis
Cooling dairy cows with fans and misters at Pacheco Dairy in Kerman, Calif., during a heat wave in 2006. AP Photo/Gary Kazanjian

California is the nation’s top milk-producing state and home to nearly 1.8 million dairy cows. California is also hot, especially for cows, which have trouble keeping cool when the weather gets warm. And when cows...

Read more: Heat is a serious threat to dairy cows – we're finding innovative ways to keep them cool

Why we're training the next generation of lawyers in big data

  • Written by Anne Tucker, Associate Professor of Law, Georgia State University
Man and machine.Africa Studio/shutterstock

Artificial intelligence is transforming the traditional delivery of legal services.

In general terms, the set of tools broadly called “legal analytics” promises to do two things: increase the efficiency of tasks that once required substantial time and human effort, and mine masses of data to...

Read more: Why we're training the next generation of lawyers in big data

Safe, efficient self-driving cars could block walkable, livable communities

  • Written by Daniel Piatkowski, Assistant Professor of Community and Regional Planning, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
When cyclists take over road lanes, self-driving cars will operate less efficiently.Can Balcioglu/Shutterstock.com

Almost exactly a decade ago, I was cycling in a bike lane when a car hit me from behind. Luckily, I suffered only a couple bruised ribs and some road rash. But ever since, I have felt my pulse rise when I hear a car coming up behind my...

Read more: Safe, efficient self-driving cars could block walkable, livable communities

The Catholic Church resists change – but Vatican II shows it's possible

  • Written by Melissa Wilde, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania

Pope Francis has asked the heads of every bishops’ conference around the world to gather for a summit in February to discuss the issue of sexual abuse in the church.

Even as the pope takes these steps, debates continue about what he knew and whether there was a better way of dealing with the perpetrators of abuse. There have been many...

Read more: The Catholic Church resists change – but Vatican II shows it's possible

Brett Kavanaugh goes to the movies

  • Written by Marsha Gordon, Professor of Film Studies, North Carolina State University
Scenes from 'Grease 2' that may have garnered laughs in the 1980s are cringe-worthy by today's standards.Paramount Pictures

I’m a film studies professor, so when I first saw an image of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh’s June 1982 calendar, I immediately noticed his movie plans.

In between exams, a beach trip, basketball camp and...

Read more: Brett Kavanaugh goes to the movies

Kids with cellphones more likely to be bullies – or get bullied. Here are 6 tips for parents

  • Written by Elizabeth Englander, Professor of Psychology, and the Director of the Massachusetts Aggression Reduction Center (MARC), Bridgewater State University
Cellphones carry certain risks for elementary school students.Rido/www.shutterstock.com

Each year, more parents send their young child to elementary school equipped with a smartphone.

For instance, the percentage of third-graders who reported having their own cellphone more than doubled from 19 percent in 2013 to 45 percent in 2017. Similar...

Read more: Kids with cellphones more likely to be bullies – or get bullied. Here are 6 tips for parents

Ruth Bader Ginsburg helped shape the modern era of women's rights – before she went on the Supreme Court

  • Written by Jonathan Entin, Professor Emeritus of Law and Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Case Western Reserve University
Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg paying a courtesy call on Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, D-N.Y., left, and Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., in June 1993, before her confirmation hearing for the Supreme Court. AP/Marcy Nighswander

As the debate about the treatment of women rages across the United States, one Supreme Court nominee arrived at her confirmation...

Read more: Ruth Bader Ginsburg helped shape the modern era of women's rights – before she went on the Supreme...

Most men do not perpetrate sexual violence against women

  • Written by Joan M. Cook, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University
Most men are not sexual predators and enjoy the closeness of the people they love. Pink Panda/Shutterstock.com

With at least three women accusing Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct, and the 81-year-old comedian Bill Cosby sentenced Sept. 25 to three to 10 years in prison for sexual assault, it might seem like predatory men...

Read more: Most men do not perpetrate sexual violence against women

How is 'new NAFTA' different? A trade expert explains

  • Written by Amanda M. Countryman, Associate Professor of Agricultural Economics, Colorado State University

On Sept. 30, the U.S., Canada and Mexico reached a deal to scrap NAFTA and replace it with a new trade accord, narrowly meeting a self-imposed deadline for consensus.

Although U.S. President Donald Trump plans to sign the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement in 60 days, the new accord has a long road ahead as lawmakers in all three countries must...

Read more: How is 'new NAFTA' different? A trade expert explains

The Left’s Gift to Nixon

  • Written by Phillip Martin, Podcast host

1968 is often remembered as a time of revolution, when liberal activists stood up to the powers that be and established progressive movements that endure to this day. However, 1968 was also the year the GOP’s Richard Nixon won the White House – and the start of more than two decades of nearly unbroken Republican power in the executive...

Read more: The Left’s Gift to Nixon

More Articles ...

  1. Politicians have long used the 'forgotten man' to win elections
  2. Trump prophecy and other Christian movements: 3 essential reads
  3. Can 'persuasive technology' change behavior and help people better manage chronic diseases?
  4. We provided psychological first aid after the Las Vegas shooting – here's what we learned
  5. Kavanaugh is a reminder: Accused sexual harassers get promoted anyway
  6. Kavanaugh confirmation a reminder: Accused sexual harassers get promoted anyway
  7. Is a polygraph a reliable lie detector?
  8. Lo que deben saber los adolescentes sobre seguridad cibernética
  9. 50 years of the Boeing 747: How the 'queen of the skies' reigned over air travel
  10. How the media encourages – and sustains – political warfare
  11. On the Supreme Court, difficult nominations have led to historical injustices
  12. Is it immoral to watch football?
  13. US generosity after disasters: 4 questions answered
  14. Cryptocurrencies, blockchains and their dark side: 4 essential reads
  15. Trusting states to do right by special education students is a mistake
  16. Freezing fuel economy standards will slow innovation and make US auto companies less competitive
  17. A decade of commercial space travel – what’s next?
  18. Has one of math's greatest mysteries, the Riemann hypothesis, finally been solved?
  19. Teen 'boys will be boys': A brief history
  20. The data is in: Americans who don't finish high school are less healthy than the rest of the US
  21. Want to help after a disaster? Consider waiting a bit
  22. Can pink really pacify?
  23. How Australia can help the US make democracy harder to hack
  24. After a fatal shark attack on Cape Cod, will the reaction be coexistence or culling?
  25. 10 US military bases are named after Confederate generals
  26. Things have changed since Anita Hill – sort of
  27. How the mafia uses violence to control politics
  28. Mapping the 100 trillion cells that make up your body
  29. How humans fit into Google’s machine future
  30. Scientists have been drilling into the ocean floor for 50 years – here's what they've found so far
  31. Fraud can scuttle nonprofits but the bigger and older ones fare better
  32. Hiring highly educated immigrants leads to more innovation and better products
  33. You can trust the polls in 2018, if you read them carefully
  34. Don't frack so close to me: Colorado voters will weigh in on drilling distances from homes and schools
  35. Why God Votes Republican
  36. Refugees from Venezuela are fleeing to Latin American cities, not refugee camps
  37. Why older skin heals with less scarring
  38. Memories of trauma are unique because of how brains and bodies respond to threat
  39. Something's going on here: Building a comprehensive profile of conspiracy thinkers
  40. The next cold war? US-China trade war risks something worse
  41. As life expectancies rise, so are expectations for healthy aging
  42. Thirty years on, why 'The Satanic Verses' remains so controversial
  43. Human-caused climate change severely exposes the US national parks
  44. The weird world of one-sided objects
  45. The blissful and bizarre world of ASMR
  46. Spray-on antennas unlock communication of the future
  47. ¿Desea donar el cambio de la compra? Pedir donaciones benéficas en el supermercado es un buen negocio
  48. Why the unemployment rate will never get to zero percent – but it could still go a lot lower
  49. Paper-based electronics could fold, biodegrade and be the basis for the next generation of devices
  50. Shrinking the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument is a disaster for paleontology