NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Nobel prize-winning autophagy research laid groundwork for potential Parkinson's treatment

  • Written by Charbel Moussa, Assistant Professor of Neurology, Georgetown University
imageAutophagy lets neurons clear out harmful proteins. UCI Research via Flickr, CC BY-NC

Yoshinori Ohsumi was awarded the 2016 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine on Oct. 3 “for his discoveries of the mechanisms for autophagy”, which is how cells “recycle” their contents. Autophagy is a quality control mechanism that destroys...

Read more: Nobel prize-winning autophagy research laid groundwork for potential Parkinson's treatment

Why is taking photographs banned in many museums and historic places?

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University

Have you ever pulled out your camera or phone in a museum or historic place and suddenly found a staff person telling you “no photographs”?

I was in London recently and it happened repeatedly in places like Westminster Abbey, Buckingham Palace and Parliament.

The no-photos policy is not limited to just England but is a worldwide...

Read more: Why is taking photographs banned in many museums and historic places?

Columbus Day: Black legend meets White City

  • Written by William Francis Keegan, Professor of Anthropology, University of Florida
imageAgricultural Building at the Worlds Columbian Exposition, Chicago, Illinois, circa 1893.University of Maryland Digital Collections

The story of Christopher Columbus, as with all legends, involves a series of great successes and horrible failures.

Columbus’s current favorability rating hovers somewhere close to those of Hillary Clinton and...

Read more: Columbus Day: Black legend meets White City

What if nature, like corporations, had the rights and protections of a person?

  • Written by Chip Colwell, Lecturer on Anthropology, University of Colorado Denver
imageThe forest around Lake Waikaremoana in New Zealand has been given legal status of a person because of its cultural significance.Paul Nelhams/flickr, CC BY-SA

In recent years, the U.S. Supreme Court has solidified the concept of corporate personhood. Following rulings in such cases as Hobby Lobby and Citizens United, U.S. law has established that...

Read more: What if nature, like corporations, had the rights and protections of a person?

Trump vs. Clinton: Three key moments from the second debate

  • Written by Jeffrey Q. McCune Jr., Associate Professor of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Washington University in St Louis

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton took the debate stage Sunday evening. We asked three scholars from the Washington University in St. Louis, where the debate was held, to pick a key quote from the evening and tell us why it was important.

Rebecca Wanzo

“This was locker room talk.” - Trump

Donald Trump defended the content of a video leaked...

Read more: Trump vs. Clinton: Three key moments from the second debate

Physicists explore exotic states of matter inspired by Nobel-winning research

  • Written by Nandini Trivedi, Professor of Physics, The Ohio State University
imageThings are kind of different on the quantum level.Nandini Trivedi, CC BY

The 2016 Nobel Prize in physics has been awarded to David Thouless, Duncan Haldane and Michael Kosterlitz, three theoretical physicists whose research used the unexpected mathematical lens of topology to investigate phases of matter and the transitions between them.

Topology is...

Read more: Physicists explore exotic states of matter inspired by Nobel-winning research

The curious history of the Nobel Peace Prize

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University

The news that Juan Manuel Santos of Columbia has received the 2016 Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to end his nation’s decades-old civil war is notable in part because the number of contenders for this year’s award set a new record. There were total of 376 nominees, 228 individuals and 148 organizations.

It also serves as an...

Read more: The curious history of the Nobel Peace Prize

António Guterres to be the next UN Secretary-General: Good choice, bad process

  • Written by Adil Najam, Dean, Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University

The next secretary-general of the United Nations, most everyone agreed, was supposed to be a woman. To be exact, a woman from Eastern Europe.

Now it is clear that it is going to be António Guterres, former prime minister of Portugal. Guterres is not from Eastern Europe. And he’s certainly not a woman.

Guterres is generally considered a...

Read more: António Guterres to be the next UN Secretary-General: Good choice, bad process

Fighting another war: How many military personnel and veterans will have PTSD in 2025?

  • Written by Mohammad S. Jalali, Research Faculty, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
imageWe need better estimates of PTSD to find the best policies to treat it. Marines via Flickr

Post-traumatic stress disorder is a serious public health challenge. It is estimated that about eight million people in the U.S. (2.5 percent of the total population) suffer from it. This rate jumps to about 11 to 20 percent among Iraq and Afghanistan...

Read more: Fighting another war: How many military personnel and veterans will have PTSD in 2025?

'Deepwater Horizon' honors oil rig workers but oversimplifies the blowout

  • Written by Eric van Oort, Professor of Petroleum Engineering, University of Texas at Austin
imageU.S. Coast Guard vessels battle the fire on the Deepwater Horizon while searching for survivors from the rig's 126-person crewU.S. Coast Guard/Wikipedia

When I went to see the movie “Deepwater Horizon” with some of my graduate students last week, I did not expect accuracy. Drilling for oil and gas is not typically viewed favorably or...

Read more: 'Deepwater Horizon' honors oil rig workers but oversimplifies the blowout

More Articles ...

  1. When catastrophe strikes, who foots the bill?
  2. The oppressive seeds of the Colin Kaepernick backlash
  3. Latest jobs report shows why Congress needs to get into the game
  4. Don't shoot the messenger: How RNA could keep us young
  5. Basic income after automation? That’s not how capitalism works!
  6. How Wells Fargo encouraged employees to commit fraud
  7. A military view on climate change: It's eroding our national security and we should prepare for it
  8. Can great apes read your mind?
  9. Clinton and Trump need to address police violence in debate
  10. Play video games, advance science
  11. The opioid epidemic: Six essential reads
  12. Dear Donald Trump: I treat combat veterans with PTSD, and they are not weak
  13. Terrorism fallout shelters: Is it time to resurrect nuclear civil defense?
  14. Hurricane Matthew approaches the eastern US: Six essential reads
  15. What displaced Colombians living abroad think about the peace efforts
  16. What the Trump Foundation controversies reveal about the candidate and his business acumen
  17. The Nobel Prize for Physics goes to topology – and mathematicians applaud
  18. Why one-size-fits-all approach does not work for teacher quality
  19. In parts of the world, bride price encourages parents to educate daughters
  20. Biofuels turn out to be a climate mistake – here's why
  21. How saying you're multiracial changes the way people see you
  22. Should NSA and Cyber Command have separate leadership?
  23. Tired of getting stuck with needles? Ask your doctor to just say 'once.'
  24. Kaine vs. Pence: Two key moments from the debate
  25. Before Nobels: Gifts to and from rich patrons were early science's currency
  26. What Twitter's streaming experiment means for the future of live TV
  27. As Brazil tilts rightward, Lula's leftist legacy of lifting the poor is at risk
  28. Why insurance companies control your medical care
  29. Science is key to U.S. standing, but presidential candidates largely ignore it
  30. The irony of the Anthropocene: People dominate a planet beyond our control
  31. Why the Kaine vs. Pence vice presidential debate matters
  32. Is changing one's race a sign of mental health problems?
  33. What it means to be black in the American educational system
  34. We're failing to solve the world's 'wicked problems.' Here's a better approach
  35. Can Trump create millions of jobs? Don't bet on it
  36. Why Bruce Springsteen's depression revelation matters
  37. Why did Yahoo take so long to disclose its massive security breach?
  38. How to vote for president when you don't like the candidates
  39. Want to understand your child’s test scores? Here’s what to ignore
  40. How trade and immigration are colliding with our two-party system
  41. The curious origin of the double-conk theory for curing amnesia
  42. Déjà vu: Positive train control could have prevented Hoboken accident as officials run out of track on excuses
  43. Putin’s cyber play: What are all these Russian hackers up to?
  44. Why the pundits are wrong about Hillary Clinton dominating the debate
  45. Why dementia burden may be less than feared
  46. The psychology behind why clowns creep us out
  47. Making college affordable: Eight essential reads
  48. The U.S. economy is in desperate need of a strong dose of fiscal penicillin
  49. Climate change and the presidential race: Lessons from the Reagan years
  50. Underwater robots help scientists see where marine larvae go and how they get there