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The Conversation

Teenagers reveal what they really think of Donald Trump

  • Written by Aaron Metzger, Associate Professor of Psychology, West Virginia University
President Donald Trump arrives at a campaign rally in February.Mario Tama/Getty Images

Teenagers in the United States are informed about their political world and capable of effectively evaluating political leaders, including President Donald Trump.

This statement runs counter to stereotypes that adults tend to hold about teens. Ask most adults to...

Read more: Teenagers reveal what they really think of Donald Trump

Both conservatives and liberals want a green energy future, but for different reasons

  • Written by Deidra Miniard, PhD Student in Environmental Science, Indiana University
Wind turbines in the first rays of sunlight at the Saddleback Ridge Wind Project in Carthage, Maine, March 20, 2019.AP Photo/Robert F. Bukaty

Political divisions are a growing fixture in the United States today, whether the topic is marriage across party lines, responding to climate change or concern about coronavirus exposure. Especially in a...

Read more: Both conservatives and liberals want a green energy future, but for different reasons

It’s Hurricane Preparedness Week, and communities aren't ready for both coronavirus and a disaster

  • Written by Mark Abkowitz, Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Director of the Vanderbilt Center for Environmental Management Studies, Vanderbilt University
It's hard to avoid close contact during a hurricane evacuation and recovery.Mehdi Taamallah/AFP/Getty Images

Hurricane season is only weeks away, and many communities are only now considering how to handle a large-scale disaster on top of the coronavirus pandemic.

Forecasters are warning of a more active than usual Atlantic hurricane season, which...

Read more: It’s Hurricane Preparedness Week, and communities aren't ready for both coronavirus and a disaster

Your genes could determine whether the coronavirus puts you in the hospital – and we're starting to unravel which ones matter

  • Written by Austin Nguyen, PhD Candidate in Computational Biology and Biomedical Engineering, Oregon Health & Science University
The relationship between the coronavirus and human genetics is murky. fatido/E+ via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

When some people become infected with the coronavirus, they only develop mild or undetectable cases of COVID-19. Others suffer severe symptoms, fighting to breathe on a...

Read more: Your genes could determine whether the coronavirus puts you in the hospital – and we're starting...

The mysterious disappearance of the first SARS virus, and why we need a vaccine for the current one but didn't for the other

  • Written by Marilyn J. Roossinck, Professor of Plant Pathology and Environmental Microbiology, Pennsylvania State University
Visitors look at new anti-SARS outfits for medical workers on display Thursday Nov. 6, 2003 in Shanghai, China, as the country braced for a resurgence. The disease never made a comeback.AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko

Some people question why the current coronavirus has brought the world to standstill while a previous deadly coronavirus, SARS, did not.

Othe...

Read more: The mysterious disappearance of the first SARS virus, and why we need a vaccine for the current...

Coronavirus is giving smokers incentive to quit, and social distancing could help them do it

  • Written by Amy Harrington, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Research shows smoking or vaping can make coronavirus illnesses worse.krisanapong detraphiphat via Getty Images

The coronavirus pandemic is giving smokers more reasons to give up the habit, and it’s creating a unique window of opportunity to do so.

As a medical doctor working in addiction psychiatry, I work with a lot of patients who smoke or...

Read more: Coronavirus is giving smokers incentive to quit, and social distancing could help them do it

Exercise may help reduce risk of deadly COVID-19 complication: ARDS

  • Written by Zhen Yan, Professor of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Virginia
Exercise has many benefits, including boosting defenses against complications that occur during SARS-CoV-2 infections. Julien McRoberts / Getty Images

Scientists are constantly revealing newly discovered benefits of exercise. In experiments over the past 10 years, my research has found that exercise can help with a respiratory problem known as...

Read more: Exercise may help reduce risk of deadly COVID-19 complication: ARDS

Global sea piracy ticks upward, and the coronavirus may make it worse

  • Written by Brandon Prins, Professor of Political Science & Global Security Fellow at the Howard Baker Center, University of Tennessee
Suspected pirates surrender to the U.S. Coast Guard off the coast of Somalia in 2009.LCDR Tyson Weinert/U.S. Coast Guard

In early April, eight armed raiders boarded the container ship Fouma as it entered the port of Guayaquil, Ecuador. They fired warning shots toward the ship’s bridge, boarded the ship and opened several shipping containers,...

Read more: Global sea piracy ticks upward, and the coronavirus may make it worse

Activist farmers in Brazil feed the hungry and aid the sick as president downplays coronavirus crisis

  • Written by Rebecca Tarlau, Assistant Professor of Education and of Labor and Employment Relations, Pennsylvania State University
A mass grave for COVID-19 victims in Brazil, which has more total cases than anywhere else in Latin America, Manaus, April 2020.Chico Batata via Getty Images

For months, President Jair Bolsonaro of Brazil has insisted the coronavirus is not a serious threat. Beyond instituting a national lockdown in mid-March, his government has left 209 million...

Read more: Activist farmers in Brazil feed the hungry and aid the sick as president downplays coronavirus...

Everyday ethics: When should we lift the lockdown?

  • Written by Lee McIntyre, Research Fellow, Center for Philosophy and History of Science, Boston University
The roads are open, but not yet the shops.Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

A lot of people are facing ethical decisions about their daily life as a result of the coronavirus. Ethicist Lee McIntyre has stepped in to help provide advice over the moral dilemmas we face. If you have a question you’d like a philosopher to answer, send it to us at u...

Read more: Everyday ethics: When should we lift the lockdown?

More Articles ...

  1. Coronavirus could revolutionize work opportunities for people with disabilities
  2. A majority of vaccine skeptics plan to refuse a COVID-19 vaccine, a study suggests, and that could be a big problem
  3. Coronavirus medical costs could soar into hundreds of billions as more Americans become infected
  4. We call workers 'essential' – but is that just referring to the work, not the people?
  5. Will we ever be able to shrink and grow stuff?
  6. How people react to the threat of disease could mean COVID-19 is reshaping personalities
  7. How using music to parent can liven up everyday tasks, build family bonds
  8. Leaders' empathy matters in the midst of a pandemic
  9. Pants or no pants? Tips for virtual job interviews from home
  10. EPA decides to reject the latest science, endanger public health and ignore the law by keeping an outdated fine particle air pollution standard
  11. How cafes, bars, gyms, barbershops and other 'third places' create our social fabric
  12. Why offering businesses immunity from coronavirus liability is a bad idea
  13. What are the 'reopen' protesters really saying?
  14. Your guide to the 2020 census questionnaire
  15. The impulse to garden in hard times has deep roots
  16. Why the WHO, often under fire, has a tough balance to strike in its efforts to address health emergencies
  17. Spring signals female bees to lay the next generation of pollinators
  18. The 'first scientist's 800-year-old tonic for what ails us: The truth
  19. Why are kids asking such big questions during the pandemic?
  20. We found and tested 47 old drugs that might treat the coronavirus: Results show promising leads and a whole new way to fight COVID-19
  21. Why apparel brands' efforts to police their supply chains aren't working
  22. Coronavirus: Why is it so hard to aid small businesses hurt by a disaster?
  23. Infected with the coronavirus but not showing symptoms? A physician answers 5 questions about asymptomatic COVID-19
  24. Language differences spark fear amid the coronavirus pandemic
  25. Refugees tell stories of problems – and unity – in facing the coronavirus
  26. How could an explosive Big Bang be the birth of our universe?
  27. How Apple and Google will let your phone warn you if you've been exposed to the coronavirus
  28. Masks and distancing make it tough for the hard-of-hearing, but here's how to help
  29. Can your community handle a natural disaster and coronavirus at the same time?
  30. Brazilian mystics say they're sent by aliens to 'jump-start human evolution' – but their vision for a more just society is not totally crazy
  31. Endangered tigers face growing threats from an Asian road-building boom
  32. Archaeologists have a lot of dates wrong for North American indigenous history – but we're using new techniques to get it right
  33. Empty pews take a financial toll on many US congregations
  34. I was a nurse on the front lines of Ebola, and I saw that nurses need support for the trauma and pain they experience
  35. Wait times remain stubbornly long in hospital emergency rooms
  36. Top football recruits bring in big money for colleges – COVID-19 could threaten revenue
  37. Are we living in a dystopia?
  38. What does 'survival of the fittest' mean in the coronavirus pandemic? Look to the immune system
  39. As states weigh human lives versus the economy, history suggests the economy often wins
  40. Scientist at work: Trapping urban coyotes to see if they can be 'hazed' away from human neighborhoods
  41. Very good dogs don't necessarily make very good co-workers
  42. Climate change threatens drinking water quality across the Great Lakes
  43. Why are white supremacists protesting to 'reopen' the US economy?
  44. Kids have a right to a basic education, according to a new legal milestone
  45. COVID-19 is a dress rehearsal for entrepreneurial approaches to climate change
  46. How the Trump administration accidentally insured over 200,000 through Obamacare
  47. 3 volunteering guidelines to heed during the coronavirus pandemic
  48. 3 crisis-leadership lessons from Abraham Lincoln
  49. Measuring maternal grief in Africa
  50. Who's at risk of not being counted in the 2020 census: 6 essential reads