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The age of hacking brings a return to the physical key

  • Written by Jungwoo Ryoo, Professor of Information Sciences and Technology at Altoona campus, Pennsylvania State University
imageHave hackers driven us back to the age of the physical key?Bautsch

With all the news about Yahoo accounts being hacked and other breaches of digital security, it’s easy to wonder if there’s any real way to keep unauthorized users out of our email and social media accounts.

Everyone knows not to use the same username and password...

Read more: The age of hacking brings a return to the physical key

3-D printing turns nanomachines into life-size workers

  • Written by Chenfeng Ke, Assistant Professor of Chemistry, Dartmouth College
imageMolecular machines are ready to join forces and take on real-world work.Chenfeng Ke, CC BY-ND

Nanomachines are tiny molecules – more than 10,000 lined up side by side would be narrower than the diameter of a human hair – that can move when they receive an external stimulus. They can already deliver medication within a body and serve as c...

Read more: 3-D printing turns nanomachines into life-size workers

Children understand far more about other minds than long believed

  • Written by Henrike Moll, Assistant Professor in Developmental Psychology, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageDon't underestimate what I get about the world around me.Baby image via www.shutterstock.com.

Until a few decades ago, scholars believed that young children know very little, if anything, about what others are thinking. Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget, who is credited with founding the scientific study of children’s thinking, was convinced...

Read more: Children understand far more about other minds than long believed

Reducing and reusing wastewater: Six essential reads for World Water Day

  • Written by Jennifer Weeks, Editor, Environment and Energy, The Conversation
imageLast year's Olympic Games in Rio highlighted the health perils of contaminated waters. AP Photo/Silvia Izquierdo

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories.

Every year on March 22, the United Nations observes World Water Day to highlight the global water crisis. This year the focus is on reducing and reusing wastewater from...

Read more: Reducing and reusing wastewater: Six essential reads for World Water Day

Video games encourage Indigenous cultural expression

  • Written by Elizabeth LaPensée, Assistant Professor of Media and Information and Writing, Rhetoric and American Cultures, Michigan State University
imageIndigenous games like 'Honour Water' can teach Indigenous values and ceremonial practices.Honour Water/Elizabeth LaPensée, CC BY-ND

Video games are robust forms of creative expression merging design, code, art and sound. Unfortunately, many games misrepresent or appropriate from Indigenous communities by falling back on stereotypes or...

Read more: Video games encourage Indigenous cultural expression

Russia, an alleged coup and Montenegro's bid for NATO membership

  • Written by Vesko Garcevic, Professor of the Practice of International Relations, Boston University

Testifying before a congressional committee, FBI Director James Comey has confirmed that his agency is investigating links between the Donald Trump campaign and Russia.

While this investigation continues, Americans should be reminded of the signs of Russian interference in democratic processes outside the U.S. – specifically, in the Balkans.

Sm...

Read more: Russia, an alleged coup and Montenegro's bid for NATO membership

New health care law would lead to more smoking, disease and tobacco industry profits

  • Written by Daniel Orenstein, Postdoctoral fellow, University of California, San Francisco
imageSmoking kills close to 440,000 people in the U.S. each year. California Department of Health Services

House Republicans introduced their American Health Care Act on March 7 to “repeal and replace Obamacare” (the Affordable Care Act). Neither the bill nor Speaker Ryan’s website announcement mentions “tobacco.” But as...

Read more: New health care law would lead to more smoking, disease and tobacco industry profits

Why is water sacred to Native Americans?

  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Research Associate of Women's Studies, Environmental Studies and Native American Religion, Harvard Divinity School, Harvard University

The Lakota phrase “Mní wičhóni,” or “Water is life,” has become a new national protest anthem.

It was chanted by 5,000 marchers at the Native Nations March in Washington, D.C. on March 10, and during hundreds of protests across the United States in the last year. “Mní...

Read more: Why is water sacred to Native Americans?

Supreme Court justices in the pews and on the bench – and where Neil Gorsuch fits in

  • Written by Steven K. Green, Professor of Law, Director of the Center for Religion, Law & Democracy, Willamette University

On Jan. 31, President Donald Trump nominated Judge Neil M. Gorsuch of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals to fill the vacancy on the Supreme Court occasioned by the death of Justice Antonin Scalia. The Senate hearing on Judge Gorsuch’s nomination to the Supreme Court started on Monday, March 20.

As important as is a Supreme Court...

Read more: Supreme Court justices in the pews and on the bench – and where Neil Gorsuch fits in

Making poetry their own: The evolution of poetry education

  • Written by Laura Apol, Poet, Associate Professor of Teacher Education, Michigan State University
imageA student performs at the 2013 Louder Than a Bomb slam poetry competition in Boston, Massachusetts.John Tammaro / flickr, CC BY-ND

The American poet William Stafford was often asked by friends, readers, students and colleagues: When did you become a poet? The response he regularly offered was: “The question isn’t when I became a poet;...

Read more: Making poetry their own: The evolution of poetry education

More Articles ...

  1. How companies can stay ahead of the cybersecurity curve
  2. Private prisons, explained
  3. In today's anti-immigrant rhetoric, echoes of Virgil's 'Aeneid'
  4. Does 'green energy' have hidden health and environmental costs?
  5. What would MLK do if he were alive today: Six essential reads
  6. How I used math to develop an algorithm to help treat diabetes
  7. What dung beetles are teaching us about the genetics of sex differences
  8. Want to eat fish that's truly good for you? Here are some guidelines to reeling one in
  9. Tor upgrades to make anonymous publishing safer
  10. Can Silicon Valley's autocrats save democracy?
  11. Street harassment is a public health problem: The case of Mexico City
  12. Could Roe v. Wade be overturned?
  13. Stop obsessing over talent—everyone can sing
  14. Six charts that illustrate the divide between rural and urban America
  15. EU court allows companies to ban headscarves. What will be the impact on Muslim women?
  16. Reagan called America a 'city on a hill' because taxpayers funded the humanities
  17. What's behind phantom cellphone buzzes?
  18. A serious and often overlooked issue for patients with brain diseases: Swallowing
  19. Sky-high drug prices for rare diseases show why Orphan Drug Act needs reform
  20. Bypassing encryption: 'Lawful hacking' is the next frontier of law enforcement technology
  21. The old, dirty, creaky US electric grid would cost $5 trillion to replace. Where should infrastructure spending go?
  22. Trump's planned military buildup is based on faulty claims, not good strategy
  23. Populist Wilders may have come up short, but Dutch intolerance is still real
  24. Donald Trump and Enda Kenny celebrate a tense St. Patrick's Day
  25. North Korea and the dangers of Trump's diplomacy-free Asia strategy
  26. A big pawprint: The environmental impact of pet food
  27. How online hate infiltrates social media and politics
  28. How a Christian movement is growing rapidly in the midst of religious decline
  29. Why US communities should be designing parks for older adults
  30. Revenge isn't always sweet, but it can be beautiful
  31. Why higher interest rates should make you happy
  32. Russian interventions in other people's elections: A brief history
  33. School bus routes are expensive and hard to plan. We calculated a better way
  34. Hot food, fast: The home microwave oven turns 50
  35. Debunking the 'gaydar' myth
  36. The power of ordinary people facing totalitarianism
  37. How did we get here? Four essential reads on the status of health care in America
  38. How a kernel of corn may yield answers into some cancers
  39. Trade Facilitation Agreement's benefits may extend well beyond cutting red tape
  40. How unaccompanied youth become exploited workers in the US
  41. Why powerful people fail to stop bad behavior by their underlings
  42. Did artificial intelligence deny you credit?
  43. Whose votes count the least in the Electoral College?
  44. Upgrading our infrastructure: Targeting repairs for locks, dams and bridges
  45. What's the purpose of President Trump's Navy?
  46. Could the individual insurance market collapse in some states? Here's how that could happen
  47. Why prison building will continue booming in rural America
  48. Curbing climate change has a dollar value — here's how and why we measure it
  49. Mixing glitter and protest to support LGBTQ rights
  50. 3.14 essential reads about pi; for Pi Day