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Sanders exit opened door for Obama to endorse Biden – and offer up his rhetorical skills

  • Written by David A. Frank, Professor of Rhetoric, University of Oregon
Three years after his farewell address, Obama is embracing party politics again. Cheriss May/NurPhoto via Getty Images

The three endorsements Joe Biden needed most came within the space of 48 hours.

First, Bernie Sanders backed his former Democratic rival for president on April 13, effectively ending the Democratic primary. The emergence of a...

Read more: Sanders exit opened door for Obama to endorse Biden – and offer up his rhetorical skills

Researchers seek to repurpose an existing manufacturing platform to produce a COVID-19 vaccine

  • Written by Alan Rudolph, Professor of Biomedical Sciences and Vice President for Research, Colorado State University
Development of vaccines typically takes several months and can be slowed by manufacturing requirements.PHILIPPE DESMAZES/AFP via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

We are both biotechnology researchers and are currently seeking to repurpose an existing medical manufacturing platform to...

Read more: Researchers seek to repurpose an existing manufacturing platform to produce a COVID-19 vaccine

How to reach young voters when they're stuck at home

  • Written by Abby Kiesa, Director of Impact at CIRCLE, Tufts University
Young Minnesota voters cast their ballots on March 3, before the coronavirus outbreak really set in for the U.S.Kerem Yucel/AFP via Getty Images

Colleges across the U.S. have sent students home. High schools – and their elementary and middle-school counterparts – have moved operations online.

As scholars of young people’s...

Read more: How to reach young voters when they're stuck at home

What policing during the pandemic can tell us about crime rates and arrests

  • Written by Tom Nolan, Visiting Associate Professor of Sociology, Emmanuel College
Police keeping a safe distance from patients awaiting COVID-19 tests at a New York hospital.John Minchillo/AP Photo

Social distancing orders in place across the U.S. have added to the long list of low-level offenses that police are charged with enforcing as a routine part of their job.

There are about 18,000 law enforcement agencies in the United...

Read more: What policing during the pandemic can tell us about crime rates and arrests

A philosopher answers everyday moral dilemmas in a time of coronavirus

  • Written by Lee McIntyre, Research Fellow, Center for Philosophy and History of Science, Boston University
Who should get the groceries?Alex Potemkin/iStock / Getty Images Plus

Like a lot of people, we here at The Conversation are facing ethical decisions about our daily life as a result of the coronavirus. Here ethicist Lee McIntyre answers some of our editors’ queries. If you have a question you’d like a philosopher to answer, send it to...

Read more: A philosopher answers everyday moral dilemmas in a time of coronavirus

Screens are keeping us connected now – but they're still disruptive to in-person communication

  • Written by Tracy Dennis-Tiwary, Professor of Psychology, Hunter College
Humans evolved to communicate through eye contact.JGI/Jamie Grill via Getty Images

Digital technology has been a lifeline during the COVID-19 health crisis. Yet, its impact on human relationships remains complex. It allows for work and connection in many domains, but does so in ways that are often intrusive, exhausting and potentially corrosive to...

Read more: Screens are keeping us connected now – but they're still disruptive to in-person communication

Lack of data makes predicting COVID-19's spread difficult but models are still vital

  • Written by Lester Caudill, Professor of Mathematics, University of Richmond
Public health authorities rely on models to make decisions but how accurate are they?Sarah Silbiger/Getty Images

Editor’s note: The question everyone in the world wants answered is how far the new coronavirus will spread and when the pandemic will begin to ebb. To know that, epidemiologists, public health authorities and policymakers rely on...

Read more: Lack of data makes predicting COVID-19's spread difficult but models are still vital

No, CBD is not a miracle molecule that can cure coronavirus, just as it won't cure many other maladies its proponents claim

  • Written by C. Michael White, Professor and Head of the Department of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut
Health fads have come and gone over the decades. Is CBD another one? Getty Images / Lauri Patterson

The claims for CBD’s alleged healing powers have been so exaggerated that it’s no surprise that a CBD maker was recently warned by the New York attorney general for claiming that the molecule can fight COVID-19. There are no credible...

Read more: No, CBD is not a miracle molecule that can cure coronavirus, just as it won't cure many other...

Wildfire smoke worsens coronavirus risk, putting firefighters in extra danger

  • Written by Luke Montrose, Assistant Professor of Community and Environmental Health, Boise State University
New research shows that exposure to air pollution, including wildfire smoke, can make coronavirus particularly deadly.AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

As summer approaches, two forces of nature are on a collision course, and wildland firefighters will be caught in the middle.

New research suggests that the smoke firefighters breathe on the front lines...

Read more: Wildfire smoke worsens coronavirus risk, putting firefighters in extra danger

Students fight pandemic – and get real-world experience – by using 3D printers to make face shields

  • Written by Johannes Strobel, Professor of Information Science & Learning Technologies, University of Missouri-Columbia
Health care workers at Lake Regional Hospital in Osage Beach, Missouri, wear face shields donated by students from Camdenton High School in Camdenton, Missouri.Provided courtesy of Camdenton High School, CC BY-ND

When high school teachers in Camdenton, Missouri, read about how personal protective equipment for health care workers was in short supply...

Read more: Students fight pandemic – and get real-world experience – by using 3D printers to make face shields

More Articles ...

  1. What we do and do not know about COVID-19's infectivity and viral load
  2. What we do and do not know about COVID-19's infectious dose and viral load
  3. Coronavirus lockdowns are pushing mass transit systems to the brink – and low-income riders will pay the price
  4. Income inequality is getting worse in US urban areas
  5. Why the Supreme Court made Wisconsin vote during the coronavirus crisis
  6. Birthed by HBCU students, this organization offers important lessons for today's student activists
  7. Shuttered by the coronavirus, many gay bars – already struggling – are now on life support
  8. Do people become more selfless as they age?
  9. Ignaz Semmelweis, the doctor who discovered the disease-fighting power of hand-washing in 1847
  10. Bees seeking bacteria: How bees find their microbiome
  11. Cold War-style preparedness could help fight future pandemics
  12. Journalists are recognizing they're writing a rough draft of history – and can't say definitively 'that's the way it is'
  13. Journalists are recognizing they're writing a rough draft of history -- and can't say definitively that's the way it is
  14. COVID-19 may hit rural residents hard, and that spells trouble because of lack of rural health care
  15. Isolating together is challenging – and relationship stresses can affect biological functioning
  16. Want to know how many people have the coronavirus? Test randomly
  17. Will COVID-19 be the death of summer vacation?
  18. 5 ways parents can motivate children at home during the pandemic – without nagging or tantrums
  19. US pharmacists can now test for coronavirus – they could do more if government allowed it
  20. US pharmacists can now test for coronavirus. They could do more if government allowed it
  21. Ancient texts encouraged hope and endurance when they spoke of end times
  22. Scientists have found oil from the Deepwater Horizon blowout in fishes' livers and on the deep ocean floor
  23. What is the SBA? An unheralded agency faces the unprecedented task of saving America's small businesses
  24. Party on! Why some young people are more concerned about their reputations than catching coronavirus
  25. Making music at a distance – how to come together online to spark your creativity
  26. 3 things to consider before you let your child play chess online
  27. Muslim women who cover their faces find greater acceptance among coronavirus masks – 'Nobody is giving me dirty looks'
  28. Who wants to be a governor now?
  29. Plummeting tax revenues will put governors in tough budget situations
  30. Terrorists, militants and criminal gangs join the fight against the coronavirus
  31. Videoconferencing keeps people connected while the coronavirus keeps them inside – but privacy and security are far from perfect
  32. Study shows pangolins may have passed new coronavirus from bats to humans
  33. Why coronavirus death rates can't be summed up in one simple number
  34. Older Americans are risking coronavirus exposure to get their medications
  35. Colombia hopes for 'humanitarian' ceasefire during coronavirus as violence resurges
  36. Coronavirus will test US's civic health too
  37. The unintended consequences of marijuana decriminalization
  38. A decade after the Deepwater Horizon explosion, offshore drilling is still unsafe
  39. Inside the Beatles' messy breakup, 50 years ago
  40. Going back to school to deal with hard times? For-profit schools could make things even harder
  41. Why your local store keeps running out of flour, toilet paper and prescription drugs
  42. Video: The coronavirus pandemic lays bare a host of cyber issues
  43. Clear, consistent health messaging critical to stemming epidemics and limiting coronavirus deaths
  44. COVID-19 is hitting black and poor communities the hardest, underscoring fault lines in access and care for those on margins
  45. How can the houseless fight the coronavirus? A community organization partners with academics to create a grassroots hand-washing infrastructure
  46. For asthma patients, the novel coronavirus can be scary. Here's what you need to know
  47. Coronavirus research done too fast is testing publishing safeguards, bad science is getting through
  48. Here's how Americans coped during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic
  49. Coronavirus: Developing economies are getting crushed – here's why their rich neighbors should help them
  50. Digital surveillance can help bring the coronavirus pandemic under control – but also threatens privacy