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Artists and writers are often hesitant to disclose they’ve collaborated with AI – and those fears may be justified

  • Written by Joel Carnevale, Assistant Professor of Management, Florida International University
imageIn a recent survey of more than 2,500 creative professionals, 83% reported using AI in their work.EuroChild/iStock via Getty Images

Generative artificial intelligence has become a routine part of creative work.

Novelists are using it to develop plots. Musicians are experimenting with AI-generated sounds. Filmmakers are incorporating it into their...

Read more: Artists and writers are often hesitant to disclose they’ve collaborated with AI – and those fears...

50 years ago, the Supreme Court broke campaign finance regulation

  • Written by John J. Martin, Assistant Professor of Law, Quinnipiac University
imageMost other democratic countries spend only a fraction of what the U.S. does on elections.Greggory DiSalvo, iStock/Getty Images Plus

In 2024, spending on federal elections totaled almost US$15 billion in the United States. The United Kingdom, in contrast, spent approximately $129 million on its 2024 parliamentary elections – less than 1% of...

Read more: 50 years ago, the Supreme Court broke campaign finance regulation

1 protein to rule them all – why crowning the protein that makes jellyfish glow green as a model can help scientists streamline biology

  • Written by Marc Zimmer, Professor of Chemistry, Connecticut College
imageGreen fluorescent protein has an iconic structure.National Institute of General Medical Sciences/National Institutes of Health via Flickr, CC BY-NC

Fruit flies, mice, zebra fish, yeast and the tiny worm C. elegans are model organisms that have carried modern biology on their backs.

Scientists did not choose them for their charisma. They were chosen...

Read more: 1 protein to rule them all – why crowning the protein that makes jellyfish glow green as a model...

‘Probably’ doesn’t mean the same thing to your AI as it does to you

  • Written by Mayank Kejriwal, Research Assistant Professor of Industrial & Systems Engineering, University of Southern California
imageAre you sure you and the AI chatbot you're using are on the same page about probabilities?Malte Mueller/fStop via Getty Images

When a human says an event is “probable” or “likely,” people generally have a shared, if fuzzy, understanding of what that means. But when an AI chatbot like ChatGPT uses the same word, it’s...

Read more: ‘Probably’ doesn’t mean the same thing to your AI as it does to you

When civil rights protesters are killed, some deaths – generally those of white people – resonate more

  • Written by Aniko Bodroghkozy, Professor of Media Studies, University of Virginia
imagePosters memorialize Renee Good and Alex Pretti, two white Minneapolis residents killed by federal agents.AP Photo/Ryan Murphy

Renee Good and Alex Pretti, two white Minneapolis residents killed in January 2026 by federal agents while protesting the Trump administration’s immigration policy, have become household names. National media outlets...

Read more: When civil rights protesters are killed, some deaths – generally those of white people – resonate...

Florida’s proposed cuts to AIDS drug program threaten patient care and public health

  • Written by Jonathan Appelbaum, Professor Emeritus, College of Medicine, Florida State University
imageThousands of HIV/AIDS patients in Florida could soon lose access to lifesaving medications.Jeff Greenberg/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

More than 128,000 Floridians are living with HIV. The state has the second-highest rate of new HIV diagnoses after Georgia, with approximately 4,500 new diagnoses in 2023, the most recent year for which...

Read more: Florida’s proposed cuts to AIDS drug program threaten patient care and public health

Supreme Court’s Michigan pipeline case is about Native rights and fossil fuels, not just technical legal procedure

  • Written by Mike Shriberg, Professor of Practice & Engagement, School for Environment & Sustainability; Director of the University of Michigan Water Center, University of Michigan
imageAn oil pipeline runs under the Straits of Mackinac, connecting Lake Michigan and Lake Huron and separating Michigan's Lower Peninsula from its Upper Peninsula.AP Photo/Carlos Osorio

What began as a straightforward question from one water-quality advocate has morphed into a high-stakes battle over an oil pipeline at the highest levels of the U.S....

Read more: Supreme Court’s Michigan pipeline case is about Native rights and fossil fuels, not just technical...

Baptists have helped shape debate about religious freedom for over 400 years – up to today’s 10 Commandments laws

  • Written by Christopher Schelin, Assistant Professor of Practical and Political Theologies, Starr King School for the Ministry
imageA copy of the Ten Commandments is posted in a hallway of the Georgia Capitol on June 20, 2024.AP Photo/John Bazemore

Louisiana can proceed with a law requiring public schools to display the Ten Commandments, according to a federal court decision on Feb. 20, 2026. The U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals voted that it is too early to determine...

Read more: Baptists have helped shape debate about religious freedom for over 400 years – up to today’s 10...

Why standing in solidarity with immigrants is an act of accompaniment in Catholic philosophy

  • Written by Kristy Nabhan-Warren, Elizabeth Kahl Figge Chair in Catholic Studies, University of Iowa
imagePeople take part in an anti-ICE protest outside the governor's residence in St. Paul, Minn., on Feb. 6, 2026. AP Photo/Ryan Murphy

In Portland, Oregon, people wearing inflatable frog costumes – The Portland Frog Brigade – danced outside immigration offices. In Chicago, parents and neighbors walked children to and from school, forming...

Read more: Why standing in solidarity with immigrants is an act of accompaniment in Catholic philosophy

Violent aftermath of Mexico’s ‘El Mencho’ killing follows pattern of other high-profile cartel hits

  • Written by Angélica Durán-Martínez, Associate Professor of Political Science, UMass Lowell
imageA soldier stands guard by a charred vehicle in Michoacán state, Mexico, on Feb. 22, 2026.AP Photo/Armando Solis

The death of a major cartel boss in Mexico has unleashed a violent backlash in which members of the criminal group have paralyzed some cities through blockades and attacks on property and security forces.

At least 73 people have died...

Read more: Violent aftermath of Mexico’s ‘El Mencho’ killing follows pattern of other high-profile cartel hits

More Articles ...

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  2. Picky eating starts in the womb – a nutritional neuroscientist explains how to expand your child’s palate
  3. What is Bluetooth and how does it work?
  4. How transparent policies can protect Florida school libraries amid efforts to ban books
  5. Algorithms that customize marketing to your phone could also influence your views on warfare
  6. Colleges face a choice: Try to shape AI’s impact on learning, or be redefined by it
  7. Michelangelo hated painting the Sistine Chapel – and never aspired to be a painter to begin with
  8. How Homeland Security’s subpoenas and databases of protesters threaten the ‘uninhibited, robust, and wide-open’ free speech protected by Supreme Court precedent
  9. Meekness isn’t weakness – once considered positive, it’s one of the ‘undersung virtues’ that deserve defense today
  10. Why Stephen Colbert is right about the ‘equal time’ rule, despite warnings from the FCC
  11. As war in Ukraine enters a 5th year, will the ‘Putin consensus’ among Russians hold?
  12. Supreme Court rules against Trump’s emergency tariffs – but leaves key questions unanswered
  13. Enforcing Prohibition with a massive new federal force of poorly trained agents didn’t go so well in the 1920s
  14. How Dracula became a red-hot lover
  15. After a 32-hour shift in Pittsburgh, I realized EMTs should be napping on the job
  16. Individual donors provide only a small slice of university research funding – but Jeffrey Epstein’s ties with academics show why screening matters
  17. Menstrual pads and tampons can contain toxic substances – here’s what to know about this emerging health issue
  18. Colorado has high levels of radon, which can cause lung cancer – here’s how to lower your risk
  19. Trump administration axed nutrition education program that saved more money than it cost, even as government encourages healthier eating
  20. Probability underlies much of the modern world – an engineering professor explains how it actually works
  21. I’m a philosopher who tries to see the best in others – but I know there are limits
  22. Last nuclear weapons limits expired – pushing world toward new arms race
  23. ‘Learning to be humble meant taming my need to stand out from the group’ – a humility scholar explains how he became more grounded
  24. Why Michelangelo’s ‘Last Judgment’ endures
  25. The greatest risk of AI in higher education isn’t cheating – it’s the erosion of learning itself
  26. Why the ‘Streets of Minneapolis’ have echoed with public support – unlike the campus of Kent State in 1970
  27. Russia tested NATO’s airspace 18 times in 2025 alone – a 200% surge that signals a dangerous shift
  28. Do animals have a future on Hollywood sets?
  29. FDA’s abrupt flip-flop on Moderna’s mRNA flu shot highlights growing risks to drug-makers of investing in vaccines
  30. Tahoe avalanche: What causes snow slopes to collapse? A physicist and skier explains, with tips for surviving
  31. How Jesse Jackson set the stage for Bernie Sanders and today’s progressives
  32. How deregulation made electricity more expensive, not cheaper
  33. When ICE sweeps a community, public health pays a price – and recovery will likely take years
  34. Florida’s immigrant entrepreneurs are creating jobs and prosperity in their communities
  35. Your gut microbes can be anti-aging – scientists are uncovering how to keep your microbiome youthful
  36. TrumpRx, Trump Kennedy Center, Trump National Parks passes − government free speech allows the president to name things after himself
  37. From Gettysburg to Minneapolis: How the American Civil War continues to shape how we understand contemporary political conflicts and their dangers
  38. I asked students whether they’d want to be teachers? They quickly responded, ‘Why would I?’
  39. Iran-US nuclear talks may fail due to both nations’ red lines – but that doesn’t make them futile
  40. Revisiting the story of Clementine Barnabet, a Black woman blamed for serial murders in the Jim Crow South
  41. In World War II’s dog-eat-dog struggle for resources, a Greenland mine launched a new world order
  42. Coffee crops are dying from a fungus with species-jumping genes – researchers are ‘resurrecting’ their genomes to understand how and why
  43. New dietary guidelines prioritize ‘real food’ – but low-income pregnant women can’t easily obtain it
  44. 3 generations of Black Philadelphia students report persistent anti-Black attitudes in schools
  45. Warming winters are disrupting the hidden world of fungi – the result can shift mountain grasslands to scrub
  46. White men file workplace discrimination claims but are less likely to face inequity than other groups
  47. Atrocities take place in democratic nations as well as autocratic ones – our database has logged them all
  48. How do people know their interests? The shortest player in the NBA shows how self-belief matters more than biology
  49. How a largely forgotten Supreme Court case can help prevent an executive branch takeover of federal elections
  50. Do special election results spell doom for Republicans in 2026?