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New atlas shows extent of light pollution -- what does it mean for our health?

  • Written by Richard G. 'Bugs' Stevens, Professor, School of Medicine, University of Connecticut
imageWorld map of artificial sky brightness. F. Falchi, et al. Science Advances (2016), CC BY-NC

The new comprehensive World Atlas of Artificial Night Sky Brightness has just appeared in Science Advances. Written by a group of distinguished scientists lead by Italian Fabio Falchi, it is a noteworthy accomplishment. The first atlas appeared in 2001, but...

Read more: New atlas shows extent of light pollution -- what does it mean for our health?

Climate change could alter the chemistry of deepwater lakes and harm ecosystems

  • Written by Alexander L. Forrest, Assistant Professor of Environmental Engineering, University of California, Davis
imageClimate change is warming Lake Tahoe and could alter its chemistry in harmful wayswww.shutterstock.com

In an age of rapid global population growth, demand for safe, clean water is constantly increasing. In 2010 the United States alone used 355 billion gallons of water per day. Most of the available fresh water on Earth’s surface is found in...

Read more: Climate change could alter the chemistry of deepwater lakes and harm ecosystems

Fighting malevolent AI: artificial intelligence, meet cybersecurity

  • Written by Roman V. Yampolskiy, Associate Professor of Computer Engineering and Computer Science, University of Louisville
imageWhat if robots turn against us?Robot and skull via shutterstock.com

With the appearance of robotic financial advisors, self-driving cars and personal digital assistants come many unresolved problems. We have already experienced market crashes caused by intelligent trading software, accidents caused by self-driving cars and hate speech from...

Read more: Fighting malevolent AI: artificial intelligence, meet cybersecurity

Personal beliefs versus scientific innovation: getting past a flat Earth mentality

  • Written by Igor Juricevic, Assistant Professor of Psychology (Perception and Cognition), Indiana University South Bend
imageCan new ideas break through preconceived notions?Light bulb image via www.shutterstock.com.

The history of science is also a history of people resisting new discoveries that conflict with conventional wisdom.

When Galileo promoted Copernicus' theory that the Earth revolves around the sun – counter to church doctrine about the Earth being the...

Read more: Personal beliefs versus scientific innovation: getting past a flat Earth mentality

Aid to dying: What Jainism -- one of India's oldest religions -- teaches us

  • Written by Christopher Key Chapple, Professor of Indic and Comparative Theology, Loyola Marymount University
imageWhat do different end-of-life conversations look like?Rose image via www.shutterstock.com

On June 9, a law allowing patients with terminal illnesses to end their lives with help from a physician came into effect in California, opening conversations about whether human life should be prolonged against the desire to die peacefully and with dignity.

A...

Read more: Aid to dying: What Jainism -- one of India's oldest religions -- teaches us

How might drone racing drive innovation?

  • Written by Jack Langelaan, Associate Professor of Aerospace Engineering, Pennsylvania State University
imageRacing drones in flight.The Drone Racing League, CC BY-ND

Over the past 15 years, drones have progressed from laboratory demonstrations to widely available toys. Technological improvements have brought ever-smaller components required for flight stabilization and control, as well as significant improvements in battery technology. Capabilities once...

Read more: How might drone racing drive innovation?

Californians now have right to 'aid in dying': How did we get here?

  • Written by David Orentlicher, Professor of Law and Co-Director of the William S. and Christine S. Hall Center for Law and Health , Indiana University
imageCalifornia is the fifth state to legalize aid in dying.Hands image via www.shutterstock.com.

Twenty years ago, no one in the United States could claim a right to “physician aid in dying” (also called “physician-assisted suicide”). Today, more than 52 million Americans can.

On June 9, California became the fifth state to...

Read more: Californians now have right to 'aid in dying': How did we get here?

Can Jude Law's 'Genius' capture the essence of Thomas Wolfe?

  • Written by Mark Canada, Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs, Indiana University Kokomo

For Jude Law, playing the part of early 20th-century novelist Thomas Wolfe is a tall order. Yes, the actor is a half-foot shorter than the literary giant he portrays in the film “Genius,” which tells the story of Wolfe and his contentious, complicated relationship with prominent Scribner’s editor Maxwell Perkins (Colin Firth).

But...

Read more: Can Jude Law's 'Genius' capture the essence of Thomas Wolfe?

Putting CO2 away for good by turning it into stone

  • Written by Martin Stute, Professor of Environmental Science, Columbia University

We seriously need to do something about CO2 emissions. Besides shifting to renewable energy sources and increasing energy efficiency, we need to start putting some of the CO2 away before it reaches the atmosphere. Perhaps the impacts of human-induced climate change will be so severe that we might even have to capture CO2 from the air and convert...

Read more: Putting CO2 away for good by turning it into stone

Technology is improving – why is rural broadband access still a problem?

  • Written by Brian Whitacre, Associate Professor and Extension Economist, Oklahoma State University
imageGetting internet access to rural areas can be difficult.Tractor laying cables via shutterstock.com

There is a well-documented “digital divide” between rural and urban areas when it comes to broadband access. As of 2015, 74 percent of households in urban areas of the U.S. had residential broadband connections, compared with only 64...

Read more: Technology is improving – why is rural broadband access still a problem?

More Articles ...

  1. How Hillary Clinton's 'smart power' feminism informs her foreign policy
  2. Are some students more at risk of assault on campuses?
  3. Campuses aren't safe. Are universities doing enough?
  4. Are you getting the best health care? Evidence says: maybe not
  5. Trump's 'America First': echoes from 1940s
  6. Clinton seizes on environmental justice but progress requires deep reforms
  7. How Bernie Sanders can still become president
  8. Saturated fats make some cells lose track of time -- and that's bad
  9. Why the Deep Space Atomic Clock is key for future space exploration
  10. Are pop stars destined to die young?
  11. Three female scholars react to Hillary Clinton's historic nomination
  12. How fish and clean water can protect coral reefs from warming oceans
  13. Are we in the midst of a public space crisis?
  14. Using computers to better understand art
  15. We behave a lot more badly than we remember
  16. How the Antiquities Act has expanded the national park system and fueled struggles over land protection
  17. Rules change, new voters mean an unpredictable primary day in California
  18. What are septic shock and sepsis? The facts behind these deadly conditions
  19. Is it time to break with colonial legacy of zoos?
  20. The Puerto Rican primary matters. Here's why
  21. Stories of vaccine-related harms are influential, even when people don't believe them
  22. We’re (not) running out of water -- a better way to measure water scarcity
  23. Obsessed with reality TV? You may be a narcissist
  24. Why young people aren't keeping up: from the Joneses to the Kardashians
  25. Why are public colleges and universities enrolling too many out-of-state students?
  26. Limiting access to payday loans may do more harm than good
  27. Weak jobs report shows we need a president with a plan, but it's too soon to panic
  28. Google wins in court, and so does losing party Oracle
  29. Gorilla’s death calls for human responsibility, not animal personhood
  30. Is OPEC's oil era over?
  31. Moving beyond pro/con debates over genetically engineered crops
  32. Using lasers to make data storage faster than ever
  33. Why music lessons need to keep up with the times
  34. What is chronic pain and why is it hard to treat?
  35. The women who are taking on Wal-Mart
  36. The limits of intellectual reason in our understanding of the natural world
  37. The strongest bones on the planet hold important clues
  38. Beyond Asimov: how to plan for ethical robots
  39. Accurate science or accessible science in the media – why not both?
  40. Why high school stays with us forever
  41. Brazil: no longer the country of the future?
  42. Is the spelling bee success of Indian-Americans a legacy of British colonialism?
  43. Why are fewer people getting married?
  44. What the new overtime rules mean for you and your boss
  45. In America, domestic extremists are a bigger risk than foreign terrorism
  46. Unlocking the secrets of bacterial biofilms – to use against them
  47. Perspectives on antibiotic resistance: how we got here, where we're headed
  48. Explainer: how campus policies limit free speech
  49. Inside ISIS' looted antiquities trade
  50. In 2015, more people committed suicide in U.S. jails than over the last decade