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The Conversation

Blinking lights don't make a better knee brace – fighting cognitive biases in testing orthopedic devices

  • Written by Mark Geil, Professor and Chair, Kennesaw State University
How do you know if a brace is better versus the patient just believing it is? Praisaeng/Shutterstock.com

As a researcher in a health-care-related field, I am keenly aware of how frequently economics enters the discussion these days. I am a biomedical engineer who works with patients using orthopedic devices: prosthetics, such as an artificial...

Read more: Blinking lights don't make a better knee brace – fighting cognitive biases in testing orthopedic...

Hurricane evacuation of nursing home residents still an unsolved challenge

  • Written by Lindsay J. Peterson, Instructor, School of Aging Studies, University of South Florida
The nursing home in Hollywood Hills, Fla., where 12 people died after the center lost power from Hurricane Irma in 2017.mpi122/MediaPunch/IPX/AP Photo

Hurricane season is here, with the historical peak of the Atlantic season approaching. While these storms can be terrifying, when a bad one is on the way, people usually have time to prepare. One key...

Read more: Hurricane evacuation of nursing home residents still an unsolved challenge

México quiere construir un tren en el corazón de la región Maya, ¿debería de hacerlo?

  • Written by Gabriel Diaz Montemayor, Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture, University of Arkansas

El presidente mexicano Andrés Manuel López Obrador tiene un sueño para la península de Yucatán. Quiere construir un tren que aproveche la economía del turismo de Cancún para atraer más visitantes a las ciudades coloniales, pueblos mayas y sitios arqueológicos dispersos en la...

Read more: México quiere construir un tren en el corazón de la región Maya, ¿debería de hacerlo?

A new tax on big college and university endowments is sending higher education a message

  • Written by Sarah Waldeck, Distinguished Professor of Law, Loyola University Chicago
Stanford will most likely have to pay a new higher ed tax.AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

The nation’s wealthiest private colleges and universities have a new expense.

Thanks to a provision in the tax reform package that President Donald Trump signed in late 2017, these schools are paying a 1.4% tax on their net investment income. This highly...

Read more: A new tax on big college and university endowments is sending higher education a message

Curious Kids: What is the smallest animal ever?

  • Written by Nicola Di Girolamo, Associate Professor of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Oklahoma State University
The world's smallest frog can fit on a dime.E.N. Rittmeyer et al. (2012)

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.


What is the smallest animal ever? – Peter, Newton, Massachusetts


The biggest animal in the world is easy to see, if...

Read more: Curious Kids: What is the smallest animal ever?

What's private depends on who you are and where you live

  • Written by Richard Wilk, Distinguished Professor and Provost's Professor of Anthropology; Director of the Open Anthropology Institute, Indiana University
Is privacy what you can't see, or where you don't look?Kamil Macniak/Shutterstock.com

Citizens and policymakers around the world are grappling with how to limit companies’ use of data about individuals – and how private various types of information should be. But anthropologists like me know that cultures vary widely in their views of...

Read more: What's private depends on who you are and where you live

How male 'porn superfans' really view women

  • Written by Paul J. Maginn, Associate Professor of Urban/Regional Planning, University of Western Australia

In 2007, the pornography website Pornhub averaged 1 million visits per day. By 2018 this had increased to 92 million visits per day – or 33.5 billion views over the course of a year.

As an interdisciplinarygroupofsexademics,” we’re interested in porn’s cultural role and impact. A common question we hear is whether...

Read more: How male 'porn superfans' really view women

Companies don't need permission from the Business Roundtable to be better corporate citizens

  • Written by Erik Gordon, Professor of Business, University of Michigan

A business group that represents the CEOs of America’s most powerful companies recently issued a statement that may sound like a roar.

But it’s actually more of a whimper.

For decades, the Business Roundtable has maintained that the primary purpose of a corporation is to provide returns for its shareholders. The Roundtable –...

Read more: Companies don't need permission from the Business Roundtable to be better corporate citizens

3 ways China benefits from the Hong Kong protests

  • Written by Deana Rohlinger, Professor of Sociology, Florida State University

The summer of 2019 has seen week after week of protest in Hong Kong.

The protests began June 9 when as many as a million people marched against a bill that could allow suspects to be extradited to China. Hong Kong’s chief executive, Carrie Lam, who was appointed by Chinese Premier Li Keqiang in 2017, proclaimed the legislation dead days...

Read more: 3 ways China benefits from the Hong Kong protests

Why Trump's tweets on Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib go into the heart of American Jewish politics

  • Written by Noam Pianko, Professor, University of Washington
President Trump recently pressed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to block the entry of two congresswomen to Israel.AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File

President Trump recently asked Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to deny entry to two Democratic congresswomen planning to visit Israel. Representatives Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib, Trump...

Read more: Why Trump's tweets on Ilhan Omar and Rashida Tlaib go into the heart of American Jewish politics

More Articles ...

  1. These college rankings focus on schools that help students get ahead
  2. Examining a video's changes over time helps flag deepfakes
  3. Can sun umbrellas ever become fashionable again in America?
  4. Feral pigs harm wildlife and biodiversity as well as crops
  5. Amazon fires are destructive, but they aren't depleting Earth's oxygen supply
  6. Democrats turn a venerable legal tool into a declaration of war
  7. Poland invites nationalism in its commemoration of WWII by moving location and inviting Trump
  8. Catholic Church sex abuse: The difference a Pennsylvania grand jury made in lives of survivors
  9. Setting the historical record straight for the critics of The New York Times project on slavery in America
  10. The Amazon is burning: 4 essential reads on Brazil's vanishing rainforest
  11. Removing mini-shampoos from hotel rooms won't save the environment
  12. Why do college textbooks cost so much? 7 questions answered
  13. Why we need to get back to Venus
  14. Bargain-hunting robocars could spell the end for downtown parking – cities need to plan ahead now
  15. Curious kids: Why don't hummingbirds get fat or sick from drinking sugary nectar?
  16. Changes for a landmark agreement mean immigrant children face harsher treatment in US
  17. 400 years of black giving: From the days of slavery to the 2019 Morehouse graduation
  18. How to have an all-renewable electric grid
  19. Don't ban new technologies – experiment with them carefully
  20. How Hong Kong's protests are affecting its economy
  21. White nationalists' extreme solution to the coming environmental apocalypse
  22. Increasing numbers of Americans support gun background checks
  23. Politicians don't seem to laugh at themselves as much anymore
  24. How to invest if you're worried a recession is coming
  25. Climate scientists may not be the best communicators of climate threats
  26. Mexican women are angry about rape, murder and government neglect – and they want the world to know
  27. What is Haitian Voodoo?
  28. When does trash talking work?
  29. College rankings might as well be student rankings
  30. Trump administration revives public charge clause that kept Nazi-era refugees from the US
  31. The misguided attacks on 'This Land Is Your Land'
  32. How two Islamic groups fell from power to persecution: Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and Turkey's Gulenists
  33. What states that don't protect LGBTQ workers from discrimination have in common
  34. Students who plan to seek more education than needed for their career earn more money
  35. Guatemala: Corrupción, inseguridad son los primeros retos para el próximo presidente
  36. Guatemala: Corrupción e inseguridad son los primeros retos del próximo presidente
  37. Cómo enseñar mejor a nuestros hijos en la era del big data
  38. Stem cells could regenerate organs – but only if the body won't reject them
  39. Ocean warming has fisheries on the move, helping some but hurting more
  40. Bring on the technology bans!
  41. 5 tips for college students to avoid burnout
  42. Before Trump eyed Greenland: Here’s what happened last time the US bought a large chunk of the Arctic
  43. Who is responsible when an inmate commits suicide?
  44. Who is responsible when an inmate dies by suicide?
  45. Too many people think satirical news is real
  46. Free college proposals should include private colleges
  47. A cyberattack could wreak destruction comparable to a nuclear weapon
  48. How Democrats can win back workers in 2020
  49. Why are people still dying from Legionnaires' disease?
  50. 'Christian left' is reviving in America, appalled by treatment of migrants