NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Why do public bathrooms make us so anxious, and why aren't we doing anything about it?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe treacherous toilet. Rebecca Boyd/flickr, CC BY-NC

“Public” and “toilet” don’t go together, except when they must. And that “must” is the moment we’re not home – when we need to go and can’t hold it in any longer.

Only then do we face the predicament of having to perform a deeply private...

Read more: Why do public bathrooms make us so anxious, and why aren't we doing anything about it?

Talking heads: what toilets and sewers tell us about ancient Roman sanitation

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageRuin of a second-century public toilet in Roman Ostia.Fr Lawrence Lew, OP, CC BY-NC-ND

I’ve spent an awful lot of time in Roman sewers – enough to earn me the nickname “Queen of Latrines” from my friends. The Etruscans laid the first underground sewers in the city of Rome around 500 BC. These cavernous tunnels below the...

Read more: Talking heads: what toilets and sewers tell us about ancient Roman sanitation

Why 1904 testing methods should not be used for today's students

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhy are archaic tests being used today?Clemens v. Vogelsang, CC BY

When I was an elementary school student, schools in my hometown administered IQ tests every couple of years. I felt very scared of the psychologist who came in to give those tests.

I also performed terribly. As a result, at one point, I was moved to a lower-grade classroom so I could...

Read more: Why 1904 testing methods should not be used for today's students

With #OpISIS, Anonymous hacktivists contribute virtual boots on the ground

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAnonymous wants to make sure militant Islamist propaganda video, like this being filmed in Syria, doesn't make it online. Reuters/Stringer

The Islamic State, or ISIS, as well as other terrorist groups, use the internet – and more specifically, social media – as a public relations outlet. They release their public campaigns through...

Read more: With #OpISIS, Anonymous hacktivists contribute virtual boots on the ground

Are Texas textbooks making cops more trigger-happy?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAre textbooks having an impact on the framing of race issues?thefuturistics, CC BY-NC

Perusing a passage on the Civil War in a high school student’s history textbook in Texas might leave you wondering if black Americans were ever enslaved and if there really is any truth to anti-black racism at all.

A natural question is, are these textbooks...

Read more: Are Texas textbooks making cops more trigger-happy?

More Articles ...

  1. Can Tesla's enthusiast customers help it sell the electric car for the everyperson?
  2. Paper or plastic? How disposable bag bans, fees and taxes affect consumer behavior
  3. Many small microaggressions add up to something big
  4. Islamic State versus Da'ish or Daesh? The political battle over naming
  5. Why Paris?
  6. The promise and perils of predictive policing based on big data
  7. Why have the demands of black students changed so little since the 1960s?
  8. Up close at the Democratic Debate in Des Moines
  9. How Islamic law can take on ISIS
  10. Paris attacks push progress at Vienna talks on Syria
  11. Paris: the war with ISIS enters a new stage
  12. Deportations punish children most
  13. Egypt's Sisi signals shift toward Muslim Brotherhood
  14. Scientist at work: searching for tiny neutrinos in the South Pole's thick ice
  15. College students go online to learn about sex
  16. How existentialism can shield us from the free market's dark side
  17. The long and troubled racial past of Mizzou
  18. Can listening to music help you sleep?
  19. Yes, eastern coyotes are hybrids, but the 'coywolf' is not a thing
  20. Unsurprised by Missouri – scholars on the roots of racial unrest on campus
  21. Canada could shed its split personality on climate change at Paris talks
  22. Could a smartphone app help stop the next polio outbreak in Pakistan?
  23. Norwegians using 'Texas' to mean 'crazy' actually isn't so crazy
  24. Social Security, Ponzi schemes and why the government isn't 'stealing' your money
  25. Under the sea: Russia, China and American control of the waterways
  26. Human biases hold key to solving both Europe's refugee crisis and climate change
  27. Body hair helps animals stay clean – and could inspire self-cleaning technologies
  28. Does psychotherapy research with trauma survivors underestimate the patient-therapist relationship?
  29. Scholars: Fox Biz did its job, debate highlighted political differences
  30. Does Missouri president ouster offer lessons to universities grappling with a racist past?
  31. In targeting Exxon on climate, New York puts all corporations on notice
  32. Fox relies on polls too much in planning GOP debate
  33. Why the world still needs nonprofits
  34. How ratings-driven presidential debates are weakening American democracy
  35. Academic print books are dying. What's the future?
  36. US and Chinese tempers rise in the South China Sea
  37. Businesses can actually sue you for posting negative reviews – and now Congress is fighting back
  38. If the US had price on carbon, would Keystone XL have made sense?
  39. As the US heads to climate talks, it seeks a plan to 'trust but verify'
  40. How the science of human behavior is beginning to reshape the US government
  41. Teaching assistants like me? Here's what could change
  42. How computers broke science – and what we can do to fix it
  43. Fitness versus fatness: which matters more?
  44. The activists' playbook behind Obama's Keystone rejection
  45. The Keystone XL pipeline debate is over, but our infrastructure needs are not
  46. Hollywood shines a spotlight on real journalism
  47. Jobs report shows why it's time Speaker Ryan and President Obama sat down for a beer
  48. Black Panthers and Black Lives Matter -- parallels and progress
  49. Labor's rank and file still believe in collective bargaining's power to bolster middle class
  50. Think you're reading the news for free? New research shows you're likely paying with your privacy