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Why Facebook belongs in the math classroom

  • Written by Jonathan Hulgan, Assistant Professor of Mathematics, Emory University
What can you learn from your connections on social media?AlesiaKan/shutterstock.com

Take a close look at your Facebook friends.

Some of your friends are also friends with each other, while others are not. It’s quite likely that you can find a “clique” who are all friends with each other.

It’s also possible you may have a...

Read more: Why Facebook belongs in the math classroom

Notre Dame has shaped the intellectual life of Paris for eight centuries

  • Written by Emily E. Graham, Assistant Professor of Medieval History, Oklahoma State University
Professional mountain climbers installing synthetic, waterproof tarps over the gutted, exposed exterior of Notre Dame Cathedral.AP Photo/Thibault Camus

The burning wreckage of the 12th-century Notre-Dame de Paris led to an immediate outpouring of grief over the damage to its irreplaceable architecture and works of art.

But as a scholar of medieval...

Read more: Notre Dame has shaped the intellectual life of Paris for eight centuries

Planned burns can reduce wildfire risks, but expanding use of 'good fire' isn't easy

  • Written by Courtney Schultz, Associate Professor of Forest and Natural Resource Policy, Colorado State University
A U.S. Forest Service employee using a drop torch during a planned burn in Arizona's Coconino National Forest.USFS/Ian Horvath, CC BY-SA

As spring settles in across the United States, western states are already preparing for summer and wildfire season. And although it may seem counter-intuitive, some of the most urgent conversations are about...

Read more: Planned burns can reduce wildfire risks, but expanding use of 'good fire' isn't easy

DNA as you've never seen it before, thanks to a new nanotechnology imaging method

  • Written by David M. Gilbert, Professor of Molecular Biology, Florida State University
A map of DNA with the double helix colored blue, the landmarks in green, and the start points for copying the molecule in red.David Gilbert/Kyle Klein, CC BY-NDThe first revealing image of DNA taken using X-ray diffraction.Raymond Gosling/King's College LondonThe helical DNA staircase. The building blocks of DNA, or bases, lie horizontally between...

Read more: DNA as you've never seen it before, thanks to a new nanotechnology imaging method

How your employer uses perks like wellness programs, phones and free food to control your life

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon
Free office food isn't there just to fill your bellyfizkes/Shutterstock.com

Companies offer all sorts of benefits and extras to attract the most favored workers, from health care and stock options to free food. But all those perks come at a price: your freedom.

There’s a reason labor historians call these perks “welfare capitalism,&rdquo...

Read more: How your employer uses perks like wellness programs, phones and free food to control your life

Central American women fleeing violence experience more trauma after seeking asylum

  • Written by Laurie C. Heffron, Assistant Professor of Social Work, St. Edward's University
Many of these female asylum-seekers have already been abused before they cross the border.AP Photo/Gregory Bull

The number of Central American women who make difficult, often harrowing, journeys to the United States to flee domestic and gang violence is rising.

I’m a social science researcher and a social worker who has interviewed hundreds...

Read more: Central American women fleeing violence experience more trauma after seeking asylum

No cure for Alzheimer's disease in my lifetime

  • Written by Norman A. Paradis, Professor of Medicine, Dartmouth College
In most cases, scientists are still unsure of what causes Alzheimer's disease.FGC / Shutterstock.com

Biogen recently announced that it was abandoning its late stage drug for Alzheimer’s, aducanumab, causing investors to lose billions of dollars.

They should not have been surprised.

Not only have there been more than 200 failed trials for...

Read more: No cure for Alzheimer's disease in my lifetime

'I got there first!' How your subjective experience of time makes you think you did – even when you didn't

  • Written by Ty Tang, Research Scientist in Cognitive Science, Arizona State University
How can both be sure the other hit it out?J and L Photography/Getty Images (for web use only)

Imagine a championship match between two rival basketball teams. The game is tied, seconds left on the shot clock, two players lunge forward, reaching for the ball. In a split second, their hands both collide with the ball, but neither player gains...

Read more: 'I got there first!' How your subjective experience of time makes you think you did – even when...

Un año después del levantamiento popular en Nicaragua, Ortega retoma el control

  • Written by Benjamin Waddell, Associate Professor of Sociology, Fort Lewis College

Hace un año, el gobierno de Nicaragua estaba al borde del colapso.

Las protestas contra el presidente Daniel Ortega estallaron en todo el país el 18 de abril de 2018 después de que el gobierno aprobara calladamente un impuesto sobre los cheques de pensiones de los jubilados. Los manifestantes bloquearon carreteras y vías...

Read more: Un año después del levantamiento popular en Nicaragua, Ortega retoma el control

It's 2019 – where's my supersuit?

  • Written by Karl Zelik, Assistant Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Biomedical Engineering, and Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, Vanderbilt University
It's every kid's dream to have her own supersuit.S.Borisov/Shutterstock.com

I loved the “Thundercats” cartoon as a child, watching cat-like humanoids fighting the forces of evil. Whenever their leader was in trouble, he’d unleash the Sword of Omens to gain “sight beyond sight,” the ability to see events happening at...

Read more: It's 2019 – where's my supersuit?

More Articles ...

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  2. Let's get real with college athletes about their chances of going pro
  3. The case for African American reparations, explained
  4. Identicide: How demographic shifts can rip a country apart
  5. What's on the far side of the Moon?
  6. FUCT gets day in court as SCOTUS considers dropping slippery moral standard when granting trademarks
  7. 'I'm not a traitor, you are!' Political argument from the Founding Fathers to today's partisans
  8. Why federal student aid should be restored for people in prison
  9. A quest to reconstruct Baltimore's American Indian 'reservation'
  10. What Leonardo's depiction of Virgin Mary and Jesus tells us about his religious beliefs
  11. Understanding the periodic table through the lens of the volatile Group I metals
  12. Japan’s next emperor is a modern, multilingual environmentalist
  13. In India, WhatsApp is a weapon of antisocial hatred
  14. Can the census ask if you're a citizen? Here's what's at stake in the Supreme Court battle over the 2020 census
  15. Qué piensan realmente los hispanos acerca de Trump
  16. What happens when a big business tries to take over and rename a neighborhood
  17. How 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame' inspired the cathedral's 19th-century revival
  18. Did Trump obstruct justice? 5 questions Congress must answer
  19. How artificial intelligence systems could threaten democracy
  20. Will Netflix eventually monetize its user data?
  21. 'You're unallocated!' and other BS companies use to obscure reality
  22. 5 things to consider before you hire a tutor for your child
  23. Who are Sri Lanka's Christians?
  24. To solve climate change and biodiversity loss, we need a Global Deal for Nature
  25. Bringing the border closer to home, one immersion trip at a time
  26. Why political meddling with central banks is a terrible idea – and the Federal Reserve is no exception
  27. War games shed light on real-world strategies
  28. When is dead really dead? Study on pig brains reinforces that death is a vast gray area
  29. Mueller report: How Congress can and will follow up on an incomplete and redacted document
  30. What happens next with the Mueller report? 3 essential reads
  31. A comedian who played a president on TV might actually become Ukraine's president
  32. A comedian who played a president on TV just became Ukraine's president
  33. Trump declares economic war on Cuba
  34. If my measles shot was years ago, am I still protected? 5 questions answered
  35. Bolsonaro's approval rating is worse than any past Brazilian president at the 100-day mark
  36. Brain scans help shed light on the PTSD brain, but they cannot diagnose PTSD
  37. As governments adopt artificial intelligence, there's little oversight and lots of danger
  38. Notre Dame's history is 9 centuries of change, renovation and renewal
  39. How Columbine became a blueprint for school shooters
  40. New cholesterol study may lead you to ask: Pass the eggs, or pass on the eggs?
  41. Should you apply to a college that has had a recent scandal?
  42. One year after Nicaraguan uprising, Ortega is back in control
  43. Abraham Lincoln, Joe Biden and the politics of touch
  44. Why Pete Buttigieg may be reviving progressive ideals of the Social Gospel Movement
  45. Russia isn't the first country to protest Western control over global telecommunications
  46. Sea creatures store carbon in the ocean – could protecting them help slow climate change?
  47. The new digital divide is between people who opt out of algorithms and people who don't
  48. A political stalemate over Puerto Rican aid is leaving all US disaster funding in limbo
  49. In Notre Dame fire, echoes of the 1837 blaze that destroyed Russia's Winter Palace
  50. The dirt on soil loss from the Midwest floods