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How childhood experiences contribute to the education-health link

  • Written by Shanta R. Dube, Associate Professor, School of Public Health, Georgia State University
A teen looking out of a window. Research shows that traumatic events in childhood can affect children as they mature and limit their education, which in turn can harm their health.Jan Andersen/Shutterstock.com

The interconnection between education and health is well established.

Take, for example, smoking. Smoking continues to be the leading cause...

Read more: How childhood experiences contribute to the education-health link

Black Americans mostly left behind by progress since Dr. King's death

  • Written by Sharon Austin, Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of African American Studies, University of Florida
How much has really improved for black people in the U.S. since 1968?Ted Eytan, CC BY-SA

On Apr. 4, 1968, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee, while assisting striking sanitation workers.

That was almost 50 years ago. Back then, the wholesale racial integration required by the 1964 Civil Rights Act was just beginning...

Read more: Black Americans mostly left behind by progress since Dr. King's death

If football is so deadly, why did 103 million people watch the Super Bowl?

  • Written by John Affleck, Knight Chair in Sports Journalism and Society, Pennsylvania State University
A hit from Malcom Jenkins sidelined the Patriots' Brandin Cooks for the night.AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez

During the second quarter of Super Bowl LII, the party stopped, if just for a second.

Tom Brady found Patriots wide receiver Brandin Cooks downfield with a 23-yard completion. Cooks spun around then got laid out by the Eagles’ Malcolm Jenkins,...

Read more: If football is so deadly, why did 103 million people watch the Super Bowl?

Why the global stock market crash doesn't really matter

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University
Another jittery day on Wall Street. Reuters/Brendan McDermid

Stocks, which only recently were hitting a new record practically every other day, suddenly seem to be in free fall. Or at least on a very wild ride.

Global stock markets plunged on Feb. 5, continuing the already precipitous decline from the week before. The Dow Jones industrial average,...

Read more: Why the global stock market crash doesn't really matter

Your mobile phone can give away your location, even if you tell it not to

  • Written by Guevara Noubir, Professor of Computer and Information Science, Northeastern University
Fitness trackers report their location and map the Burning Man festival in the Nevada desert.Screenshot of Strava Heat Map

U.S. military officials were recently caught off guard by revelations that servicemembers’ digital fitness trackers were storing the locations of their workouts – including at or near military bases and clandestine...

Read more: Your mobile phone can give away your location, even if you tell it not to

How one state bridged the cultural divide on climate change to prepare for a stormier future

  • Written by Cameron Wake, Josephine A Lamprey Professor in Climate and Sustainability, University of New Hampshire
Coastal municipalities need to prepare for higher chances of storms and rising sea levels.AP Photo/Jim Cole

The year 2017 painted a grim picture of coastal storms in the eastern United States. Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria were deadly and destructive harbingers of how climate change contributes to bigger storms with stronger winds, greater...

Read more: How one state bridged the cultural divide on climate change to prepare for a stormier future

Teens aren't just risk machines – there's a method to their madness

  • Written by Jessica Flannery, Doctoral Candidate in Clinical Psychology, University of Oregon
Just because everyone else is doing it...Shane Pope, CC BY

You know the conventional wisdom: Adolescents are impulsive by nature, like bombs ready to go off at the most minor trigger. Parents feel they must cross their fingers and hope no one lights the fuse that will lead to an explosion. Adults often try restricting and monitoring teens’...

Read more: Teens aren't just risk machines – there's a method to their madness

White men may be biggest winners when a city snags Amazon’s HQ2

  • Written by Amy Bhatt, Associate Professor of Gender and Women's Studies, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
The tech sector has long had a diversity problem. AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

Amazon may be hosting the biggest – and most economically important – reality show ever as city mayors compete to snag the retailer’s second headquarters. And just like TV, it has a diversity problem.

More than 230 cities made the initial bid, and just...

Read more: White men may be biggest winners when a city snags Amazon’s HQ2

5 things to know about North and South Korea

  • Written by Ji-Young Lee, Assistant Professor, American University School of International Service

Editor’s note: Professor Ji-Young Lee of American University answers five questions to help put issues related to North Korea’s nuclear weapons capabilities into context.


Why is there a North and a South Korea?

Before there was a North and South Korea, the peninsula was ruled as a dynasty known as Chosŏn, which existed for more than...

Read more: 5 things to know about North and South Korea

Why treating addiction with medication should be carefully considered

  • Written by Scott Teitelbaum, Professor of Psychiatry, University of Florida
Vivitrol, a non-opioid medication, is used to treat some cases of opioid dependence. Addiction specialists stress that not all patients need medication, but that many do.AP Photo/Carla K. Carlson

When a patient has diabetes, doctors typically prescribe insulin, along with diet and exercise. When a patient has high blood pressure, we prescribe...

Read more: Why treating addiction with medication should be carefully considered

More Articles ...

  1. Trump's push for new offshore drilling is likely to run aground in California
  2. Sessions' war on pot could speed up marijuana legalization nationwide
  3. Improve your internet safety: 4 essential reads
  4. Your next hearing aid could be a video game
  5. How rich are the rich? If only you knew
  6. 5 charts show why the South is the least healthy region in the US
  7. 3 questions about the FISA court answered
  8. Trump and Nunes torch tradition of trust between Congress and FBI
  9. The complex history of 'In God We Trust'
  10. How Americans came to embrace meditation, and with it, Hinduism
  11. The transformation of the Super Bowl ad experience
  12. Fed up with Big Beer's incursion, independent craft breweries push back
  13. Does energy storage make the electric grid cleaner?
  14. Debunking 3 myths behind 'chain migration' and 'low-skilled' immigrants
  15. Are autonomous cars really safer than human drivers?
  16. Black America's 'bleaching syndrome'
  17. Does college turn people into liberals?
  18. As Arctic sea ice shrinks, new research shows how much energy polar bears use to find food
  19. How kindness can make a difference in cancer care
  20. #MeToo is riding a new wave of feminism in India
  21. How lotto scammers defraud elderly Americans and fuel gang wars in Jamaica
  22. What's behind America's promotion of religious liberty abroad
  23. Why I teach a course called 'White Racism'
  24. Charity and taxes: 4 questions answered
  25. The deepest-dwelling fish in the sea is small, pink and delicate
  26. A century ago, progressives were the ones shouting 'fake news'
  27. How Facebook could really fix itself
  28. The education of Ursula Le Guin
  29. Why colleges must change how they teach calculus
  30. What employers can do to stop the next Larry Nassar
  31. Americans are saving energy by staying at home
  32. How mass incarceration harms U.S. health, in 5 charts
  33. Online social networks can help fight social anxiety
  34. Want to be president of Mexico? There's an app for that
  35. 3 key quotes from Trump's first State of the Union, explained
  36. Why Amazon and friends' plan could be a major disrupter of health care system
  37. Trump's path to citizenship for 1.8 million will leave out nearly half of all Dreamers
  38. Can scientists learn to make 'nature forecasts' just as we forecast the weather?
  39. Talent doesn't explain the success of the Patriots and Eagles
  40. California's other drought: A major earthquake is overdue
  41. The art of the public apology
  42. The hidden history of black nationalist women's political activism
  43. Nassar's abuse reflects more than 50 years of men's power over female athletes
  44. Here's how workers would spend the corporate tax cut – if they had a voice
  45. Promising male birth control pill has its origin in an arrow poison
  46. Why ignoring mental health needs of young Syrian refugees could harm us all
  47. Why it's too soon for Davos billionaires to toast Trump's 'pro-business' policies
  48. Presidential corruption verdict shows just how flawed Brazil's justice system is
  49. Trump's travel ban is just one of many US policies that legalize discrimination against Muslims
  50. Millions of refugees could benefit from big data – but we're not using it