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Passport bottleneck is holding up international travel by Americans eager to see the world as COVID-19 eases

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Clinical Associate Professor of Markets, Public Policy and Law, Boston University
imageA JetBlue employee poses next to a Boston replica of London's Big Ben before the launch of nonstop flights between Boston and London in 2022.David L. Ryan/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

The World Health Organization declared on May 5, 2023, that the COVID-19 pandemic is no longer a public health emergency. Although the virus is still causing hosp...

Read more: Passport bottleneck is holding up international travel by Americans eager to see the world as...

I unintentionally created a biased AI algorithm 25 years ago – tech companies are still making the same mistake

  • Written by John MacCormick, Professor of Computer Science, Dickinson College
imageFacial recognition software misidentifies Black women more than other people.JLco - Ana Suanes/iStock via Getty Images

In 1998, I unintentionally created a racially biased artificial intelligence algorithm. There are lessons in that story that resonate even more strongly today.

The dangers of bias and errors in AI algorithms are now well known....

Read more: I unintentionally created a biased AI algorithm 25 years ago – tech companies are still making the...

Can China broker peace in Yemen – and further Beijing's Middle East strategy in the process?

  • Written by Mahad Darar, Ph.D. Student of Political Science, Colorado State University
imageA Houthi fighter patrols an area during Yemen's civil war.Mohammed Hamoud/Getty Images

After nearly a decade of grinding conflict, Yemen looks to be inching toward a peace deal.

Talks between the Houthi movement controlling much of the country’s north and Saudi Arabia, the regional power backing an anti-Houthi coalition in the war, are ongoing...

Read more: Can China broker peace in Yemen – and further Beijing's Middle East strategy in the process?

Biden's dragging poll numbers won't matter in 2024 if enough voters loathe his opponent even more

  • Written by Charles R. Hunt, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Boise State University
imageJoe Biden doesn't need to be popular to win the 2024 election -- he just needs his opponent to be more unpopular.Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Commentators were quick to note President Joe Biden’s low job approval and favorability ratings after he announced his long-expected reelection bid on April 25, 2023.

Others have publicly urged Biden not...

Read more: Biden's dragging poll numbers won't matter in 2024 if enough voters loathe his opponent even more

The coronation of King Charles III: 5 Essential reads on the big royal bash – and what it all means

  • Written by Matt Williams, Senior Breaking News and International Editor
imageA yarn of pomp and pageantryPlanet One Images/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

The United Kingdom is about to embark on an orgy of flag-waving pomp and pageantry in celebration of King Charles III’s coronation.

Charles is already the ruling monarch, having ascended to the throne following the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth II in...

Read more: The coronation of King Charles III: 5 Essential reads on the big royal bash – and what it all means

The real priest behind 'The Pope's Exorcist' was a fan of Hollywood horror films

  • Written by Joseph P. Laycock, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, Texas State University
imageA still from the film 'The Pope's Exorcist' showing Russell Crowe as the real-life Vatican exorcist.Sony Pictures

On April 14, 2023, Sony Pictures released “The Pope’s Exorcist,” a horror film inspired by the life of the Rev. Gabriele Amorth. Amorth served as the exorcist for the Diocese of Rome from 1986 until his death in 2016...

Read more: The real priest behind 'The Pope's Exorcist' was a fan of Hollywood horror films

Peanut butter is a liquid – the physics of this and other unexpected fluids

  • Written by Ted Heindel, University Professor, Bergles Professor of Thermal Science, and Director of the Center for Multiphase Flow Research and Education, Iowa State University
imageThe knife easily leaves swirls in the spread.rimglow/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Those Transportation Security Administration requirements are drilled into every frequent flyer’s head: You can carry on liquids that are only less than 3.4 ounces (100 milliliters) in volume each.

But when the TSA recently confiscated a jar of Jif under this...

Read more: Peanut butter is a liquid – the physics of this and other unexpected fluids

Fed rate hikes, recession fears and political backlash leave ESG investors at a crossroads

  • Written by Sehoon Kim, Assistant Professor of Finance, University of Florida
imageESG investing looks for companies that do well on environmental, social and governance benchmarks. Zhengshun Tang/Moment via Getty Images

The Federal Reserve raised interest rates again on May 3, 2023, by a quarter point, making it the Fed’s 10th rate hike since March 2022 in an ongoing fight to tame inflation. These rate hikes have been...

Read more: Fed rate hikes, recession fears and political backlash leave ESG investors at a crossroads

Black mothers trapped in unsafe neighborhoods signal the stressful health toll of gun violence in the U.S.

  • Written by Loren Henderson, Associate Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageThe stress of experiencing high levels of community violence harms entire families.skynesher/E+ via Getty Images

Black mothers are the canaries in the coal mine when it comes to the mental and physical harms of stress from living with gun violence in America.

In the U.S., Black people are likelier than white people to reside in impoverished, racially...

Read more: Black mothers trapped in unsafe neighborhoods signal the stressful health toll of gun violence in...

Yellen puts Congress on notice over impending debt default date: 5 essential reads on what's at stake

  • Written by Matt Williams, Senior Breaking News and International Editor
imageTreasury Secretary Janet Yellen doesn't want to look back in anger over a debt deadline missed.Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images

Lawmakers have been given notice of a new deadline if they are to avoid a damaging default on U.S. debt: June 1, 2023.

If Congress fails to raise the nation’s borrowing limit by that date, Treasury Secretary Janet...

Read more: Yellen puts Congress on notice over impending debt default date: 5 essential reads on what's at...

More Articles ...

  1. Online predators target children’s webcams, study finds
  2. Twitter played a role in the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank – new research
  3. The thinking error that makes people susceptible to climate change denial
  4. Body lotions, mothballs, cleaning fluids and other widely used products contain known toxic chemicals, study finds
  5. Math teachers hold a bias against girls when the teachers think gender equality has been achieved
  6. Rejected Oklahoma plea for death penalty commutation highlights clemency’s changing role in US death penalty system
  7. Are some human rights more important than others? Religious freedom advocates often put it first
  8. Kids cartoon characters that use AI to customize responses help children learn
  9. Generative AI is forcing people to rethink what it means to be authentic
  10. What causes volcanoes to erupt?
  11. Respectful persuasion is a relay race, not a solo sprint – 3 keys to putting it in practice
  12. Whether or not a man convicted of abusing African 'orphans' is exonerated, the missionary system that brought him to Kenya was always deeply flawed
  13. Every cancer is unique – why different cancers require different treatments, and how evolution drives drug resistance
  14. The Federal Reserve and the art of navigating a soft landing ... when economic data sends mixed signals
  15. Recent banking crises are rooted in a system that rewards excessive risk-taking -- as First Republic's failure shows
  16. Cannabis-derived products like delta-8 THC and delta-10 THC have flooded the US market – two immunologists explain the medicinal benefits and potential risks
  17. Sudan's plunge into chaos has geopolitical implications near and far – including for US strategic goals
  18. Emmett Till's accuser, Carolyn Bryant Donham, has died – here's how the 1955 murder case helped define civil rights history
  19. How the US military used magazines to target 'vulnerable' groups with recruiting ads
  20. SNAP work requirements don’t actually get more people working – but they do drastically limit the availability of food aid
  21. In 'Air,' Michael Jordan's silence speaks volumes about the marketing of Black athletes
  22. Human activities in Asia have reduced elephant habitat by nearly two-thirds since 1700, dividing what remains into ever-smaller patches
  23. US-South Korea nuclear weapons deal – what you need to know
  24. Biden's coronation no-show is no snub – more telling is whom he sends to King Charles' big day
  25. Saving broadcasting's past for the future -- archivists are working to capture not just tapes of TV and radio but the experience of tuning in together
  26. Latino youth struggle with sense of belonging in school
  27. Historic flooding in Fort Lauderdale was a sign of things to come – a look at who is most at risk and how to prepare
  28. Why Kurt Vonnegut's advice to college graduates still matters today
  29. 'Got polio?' messaging underscores a vaccine campaign's success but creates false sense of security as memories of the disease fade in US
  30. AI is exciting – and an ethical minefield: 4 essential reads on the risks and concerns about this technology
  31. Cognitive flexibility is essential to navigating a changing world – new research in mice shows how your brain learns new rules
  32. Harry Belafonte leveraged stardom for social change, his powerful voice always singing a song for justice
  33. Leprosy-causing bacteria found in armadillo specimens highlight value of museum collections for tracking pathogens
  34. Arctic sea ice loss and fierce storms leave Kivalina Search and Rescue fighting to protect their island from climate disasters
  35. A tweak to the University of Nebraska's logo shows how the once benign 'OK' sign has entered a 'purgatory of meaning'
  36. Mifepristone is under scrutiny in the courts, but it has been used safely and effectively around the world for decades
  37. Challenging the FDA's authority isn't new – the agency's history shows what's at stake when drug regulation is in limbo
  38. The invasion of Iraq defined US' foreign relations – but in popular Iraqi literature, the war is just a piece of the country's complex history
  39. In protecting land for wildlife, size matters – here's what it takes to conserve very large areas
  40. Willie Nelson at 90: Country music's elder statesman still on the road again
  41. What Socrates' 'know nothing' wisdom can teach a polarized America
  42. White power movements in US history have often relied on veterans -- and not on lone wolves
  43. In centennial year, Turkish voters will choose between Erdoğan’s conservative path and the founder’s modernist vision
  44. South Korea, US presidents to meet in Washington – amid wary glances in the direction of Pyongyang, Beijing and Moscow
  45. Social media scatters your brain, and then you buy stuff you don't need
  46. 80 is different in 2023 than in 1776 – but even back then, a grizzled Franklin led alongside a young Hamilton
  47. Fast fashion still comes with deadly risks, 10 years after the Rana Plaza disaster – the industry's many moving pieces make it easy to cut corners
  48. The Supreme Court rules mifepristone can remain available – here's how 2 conflicting federal court decisions led to this point
  49. 'Stand your ground' laws empower armed citizens to defend property with violence – a simple mistake can get you shot, or killed
  50. Watch out for dangerous combinations of over-the-counter cold medicine and prescription drugs – two pharmacoepidemiology experts explain the risks