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The Conversation

The ‘average’ revolutionized scientific research, but overreliance on it has led to discrimination and injury

  • Written by Zachary del Rosario, Assistant Professor of Engineering, Olin College of Engineering
imageThe average can tell you a lot about a dataset, but not everything. marekuliasz/iStock via Getty Images Plus

When analyzing a set of data, one of the first steps many people take is to compute an average. You might compare your height against the average height of people where you live, or brag about your favorite baseball player’s batting...

Read more: The ‘average’ revolutionized scientific research, but overreliance on it has led to discrimination...

Though CBS legend Edward R. Murrow is given credit, he wasn’t the first muckraking journalist to question Joseph McCarthy’s communist witch hunts

  • Written by W. Joseph Campbell, Professor Emeritus of Communication, American University School of Communication
imageCBS' Edward R. Murrow was the most influential person in the early years of television news during the 1950s.. Bettmann/Getty Images

It has been 70 years since Edward R. Murrow’s withering broadcast report about Cold War demagogue Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy, a program that has been called television’s “finest half-hour.”

Legendar...

Read more: Though CBS legend Edward R. Murrow is given credit, he wasn’t the first muckraking journalist to...

Ben Shapiro’s hip-hop hypocrisy and white male grievance lands him on top of pop music charts for a brief moment

  • Written by A.D. Carson, Associate Professor of Hip-Hop, University of Virginia
imageConservative political commentator Ben Shapiro speaks at the 2018 Politicon in Los Angeles.

Over the past decade, conservative commentator and podcaster Ben Shapiro has made a living telling his followers that rap isn’t music.

If anyone thinks so, Shapiro tweeted in 2012, “you’re stupid.”

Shapiro explained his reasoning during...

Read more: Ben Shapiro’s hip-hop hypocrisy and white male grievance lands him on top of pop music charts for...

Remembering the 1932 Ford Hunger March: Detroit park honors labor and environmental history

  • Written by Paul Draus, Professor of Sociology; Director, Master of Science in Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of Michigan-Dearborn
imageA Dearborn policeman knocked unconscious was the first casualty of the 1932 Ford Hunger March in Detroit and Dearborn.Walter P. Reuther Library, Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State University/Detroit News Burckhardt.

The intersection of Fort Street and Oakwood Boulevard in southwest Detroit today functions mostly as a thoroughfare for...

Read more: Remembering the 1932 Ford Hunger March: Detroit park honors labor and environmental history

My Malaysia ordeal shows how religion can fuse with populist nationalism to silence dissent

  • Written by Ahmet T. Kuru, Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University
imageMalaysian Islamists rally in favor of sharia law on Nov. 20, 2023.Zahim Mohd/NurPhoto via Getty Images

I hadn’t expected my book tour in Malaysia to end with a confrontation with men who identified themselves as police in a Kuala Lumpur airport.

I arrived in the Muslim-majority country in early January 2024 to promote the Malay translation of...

Read more: My Malaysia ordeal shows how religion can fuse with populist nationalism to silence dissent

COVID-19 rapid tests still work against new variants – researchers keep ‘testing the tests,’ and they pass

  • Written by Nathaniel Hafer, Associate Professor of Molecular Medicine, UMass Chan Medical School
imageRapid tests are inexpensive, easy to use and give fast results, usually within 10 to 15 minutes.Violeta Stoimenova/E+ via Getty Images

By September 2020, just six months after COVID-19 triggered shutdowns across the U.S., it was clear that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, had mutated from its original form.

The question quickly arose...

Read more: COVID-19 rapid tests still work against new variants – researchers keep ‘testing the tests,’ and...

Measles is one of the deadliest and most contagious infectious diseases – and one of the most easily preventable

  • Written by David Higgins, Research Fellow and Instructor in Pediatrics, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
imageYoung children, pregnant people and the immunocompromised are among the most vulnerable to measles.CHBD/E+ via Getty Images

“You don’t count your children until the measles has passed.” Dr. Samuel Katz, one of the pioneers of the first measles vaccine in the late 1950s to early 1960s, regularly heard this tragic statement from...

Read more: Measles is one of the deadliest and most contagious infectious diseases – and one of the most...

Altitude sickness is typically mild but can sometimes turn very serious − a high-altitude medicine physician explains how to safely prepare

  • Written by Brian Strickland, Senior Instructor in Emergency Medicine, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
imageAltitude sickness is rare at elevations of less than 8,200 feet but becomes much more common at higher altitudes.Maya Karkalicheva/Moment via Getty Images

Equipped with the latest gear and a thirst for adventure, mountaineers embrace the perils that come with conquering the world’s highest peaks. Yet, even those who tread more cautiously at...

Read more: Altitude sickness is typically mild but can sometimes turn very serious − a high-altitude medicine...

The tools in a medieval Japanese healer’s toolkit: from fortunetelling and exorcism to herbal medicines

  • Written by Alessandro Poletto, Lecturer in East Asian Religions, Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis
imageAn 'onmyoji,' an expert on yin and yang, performs divination with counting rods in an Edo-period illustration. Kyoto University Library/Wikimedia

“The Tale of Genji,” often called Japan’s first novel, was written 1,000 years ago. Yet it still occupies a powerful place in the Japanese imagination. A popular TV drama, “Dear...

Read more: The tools in a medieval Japanese healer’s toolkit: from fortunetelling and exorcism to herbal...

Is the United States overestimating China’s power?

  • Written by Dan Murphy, Executive Director of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government, Harvard Kennedy School
imageMade it, Mao! Top of the World?DigitalVision Vectors via Getty Images

Which country is the greatest threat to the United States? The answer, according to a large proportion of Americans, is clear: China.

Half of all Americans responding to a mid-2023 survey from the Pew Research Center cited China as the biggest risk to the U.S., with Russia...

Read more: Is the United States overestimating China’s power?

More Articles ...

  1. Texas fires: With over 1 million acres of grassland burned, cattle ranchers face struggles ahead to find and feed their herds
  2. Yes, Trump’s PACs really can pay his legal fees
  3. What does a state’s secretary of state do? Most run elections, a once-routine job facing increasing scrutiny
  4. This is Texas hold ‘em – why Texas is fighting the US government to secure its border with Mexico
  5. Caitlin Clark’s historic scoring record shines a spotlight on the history of the Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women
  6. What is IVF? A nurse explains the evolving science and legality of in vitro fertilization
  7. How Russia has managed to shake off the impact of sanctions – with a little help from its friends
  8. Bias hiding in plain sight: Decades of analyses suggest US media skews anti-Palestinian
  9. Climate comedy works − here’s why, and how it can help lighten up a politically heavy year in 2024
  10. We’ve been here before: AI promised humanlike machines – in 1958
  11. How teens benefit from being able to read ‘disturbing’ books that some want to ban
  12. A personal tale of intellectual humility – and the rewards of being open-minded
  13. Can Trump be prosecuted? Supreme Court will take up precedent-setting case to define the limits of presidential immunity
  14. Mounting research shows that COVID-19 leaves its mark on the brain, including with significant drops in IQ scores
  15. W.E.B. Du Bois’ study ‘The Philadelphia Negro’ at 125 still explains roots of the urban Black experience – sociologist Elijah Anderson tells why it should be on more reading lists
  16. More than 100K Michigan voters pick ‘uncommitted’ over Biden − does that matter for November?
  17. Nigeria’s security problems deepen as Anglophone insurgency in Cameroon spills across border
  18. How educator Gloria Jean Merriex used dance, drills and devotion to turn around a failing elementary school in a year
  19. What’s next for $25B supermarket supermerger after FTC sues to block it, saying it could raise prices
  20. Low-level blasts from heavy weapons can cause traumatic brain injury − 2 engineers explain the physics of invisible cell death
  21. Anyone can play Tetris, but architects, engineers and animators alike use the math concepts underlying the game
  22. Mental fatigue has psychological triggers − new research suggests challenging goals can head it off
  23. The true cost of food is far higher than what you spend at the checkout counter
  24. GOP primary elections use flawed math to pick nominees
  25. How media coverage of presidential primaries fails voters and has helped Trump
  26. US temporarily avoids government shutdown but threat remains: 4 essential reads
  27. US barrels toward another government shutdown showdown: 4 essential reads
  28. Betty Smith enchanted a generation of readers with ‘A Tree Grows in Brooklyn’ − even as she groused that she hoped Williamsburg would be flattened
  29. Where does lightning strike? New maps pinpoint 36.8 million yearly ground strike points in unprecedented detail
  30. Gifts that live on, from best bodices to money for bridge repairs: Women’s wills in medieval France give a glimpse into their surprising independence
  31. Hundreds of thousands of US infants every year pay the consequences of prenatal exposure to drugs, a growing crisis particularly in rural America
  32. Yulia Navalnaya, widow of Alexei Navalny, steps forward to lead the Russian opposition – 3 points to understand
  33. Belief in the myth of outlaw heroes partly explains Donald Trump’s die-hard support
  34. E-bike incentives are a costly way to cut carbon emissions, but they also promote health, equity and cleaner air
  35. What the ancient Indian text Bhagavad Gita can teach about not putting too much of our identity and emotions into work
  36. Omega-3 fatty acids are linked to better lung health, particularly in patients with pulmonary fibrosis
  37. A Texas court ruling on a Black student wearing hair in long locs reflects history of racism in schools
  38. I went to CPAC as an anthropologist to understand Trump’s base − they believe, more than ever, he is a savior
  39. As war in Ukraine enters third year, 3 issues could decide its outcome: Supplies, information and politics
  40. What ancient farmers can really teach us about adapting to climate change – and how political power influences success or failure
  41. Anti-immigrant pastors may be drawing attention – but faith leaders, including some evangelicals, are central to the movement to protect migrant rights
  42. How is snow made? An atmospheric scientist describes the journey of frozen ice crystals from clouds to the ground
  43. ‘Swarm of one’ robot is a single machine made up of independent modules
  44. NRA loses New York corruption trial over squandered funds – retired longtime leader Wayne LaPierre must repay millions of dollars
  45. The South Carolina primary is likely to reveal the eventual Republican presidential nominee - 3 points to understand
  46. Early COVID-19 research is riddled with poor methods and low-quality results − a problem for science the pandemic worsened but didn’t create
  47. Making the moral of the story stick − a media psychologist explains the research behind ‘Sesame Street,’ ‘Arthur’ and other children’s TV
  48. The Russia-Ukraine War has caused a staggering amount of cultural destruction – both seen and unseen
  49. Louisiana governor makes it easier for companies to receive lucrative tax breaks that take money away from cash-strapped schools
  50. How governments handle data matters for inclusion