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Finding trust and understanding in autonomous technologies

  • Written by David Danks, Professor of Philosophy and Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University

In 2016, self-driving cars went mainstream. Uber’s autonomous vehicles became ubiquitous in neighborhoods where I live in Pittsburgh, and briefly in San Francisco. The U.S. Department of Transportation issued new regulatory guidance for them. Countless papers and columns discussed how self-driving cars shouldsolveethical quandaries when...

Read more: Finding trust and understanding in autonomous technologies

How to get ready for the economic recession coming in 2017

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University
imageTime to stock up?Canned goods via www.shutterstock.com

My outlook for 2017 and beyond is that the U.S. economy will likely see another recession.

Yes, the economic picture currently looks wonderful. The Dow and S&P 500 are at record levels. Unemployment is well below 5 percent of the labor force. Inflation is still tame. The U.S. dollar is...

Read more: How to get ready for the economic recession coming in 2017

As Republicans ready to dismantle ACA, insurers likely to bolt

  • Written by J.B. Silvers, Professor of Health Finance, Case Western Reserve University
imageThe Capitol Building as seen in Washington, D.C., Thursday, Dec. 8, 2016. AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

There’s a joke among insurers that there are two things that health insurance companies hate to do – take risks and pay claims. But, of course, these are the essence of their business!

Yet, if they do too much of either, they...

Read more: As Republicans ready to dismantle ACA, insurers likely to bolt

'The 120 Days of Sodom' – counterculture classic or porn war pariah?

  • Written by Will McMorran, Senior Lecturer in French & Comparative Literature, Queen Mary University of London
imageThe original scroll on which the Marquis de Sade wrote the draft of 'The 120 Days of Sodom.'Christophe Ena/AP Photo

Over the past year, politicians on the right have railed against the supposed tyranny of political correctness.

Perhaps it’s fitting, then, that as 2016 draws to a close, arguably the most obscene and offensive work of fiction...

Read more: 'The 120 Days of Sodom' – counterculture classic or porn war pariah?

Thirteen ways to keep free radicals away, and why it's so important

  • Written by Manal Elfakhani, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Nutrition, Georgia State University
imageHoliday dinner table.From www.shutterstock.com

The holiday season is in full swing, and with it comes time for family celebration while gathering around tables full of delicious foods with seasonal spices! But it can also be a stressful time of year, with substantial meal preparation as well as stress in the gut from digesting highly caloric and...

Read more: Thirteen ways to keep free radicals away, and why it's so important

Single-sex schools: Could they harm your child?

  • Written by Lise Eliot, Associate Professor of Neuroscience, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science
imageAre single-sex schools better?Franklin Park Library, CC BY

Gender-segregated education is making a comeback. Single-sex classrooms, long discouraged under Title IX, the federal law that prohibits gender discrimination in education, have been gaining prominence in recent years, especially in urban charter schools.

This fall, Los Angeles saw the...

Read more: Single-sex schools: Could they harm your child?

Why academics consulting with industry on health care may be an idea whose time has come

  • Written by Darius Lakdawalla, Quintiles Chair in Pharmaceutical Development and Regulatory Innovation, University of Southern California
imageThe case for academic-industry collaboration. Teamwork image via www.shutterstock.com.

Perhaps ironically, the advent of the Trump presidency could signal an even greater role for academics in shaping public policy. The president-elect has set out an ambitious agenda, but with many details left to fill in, and congressional Democrats are preparing...

Read more: Why academics consulting with industry on health care may be an idea whose time has come

More online shopping means more delivery trucks. Are cities ready?

  • Written by Anne Goodchild, Associate Professor and Director, Supply Chain Transportation and Logistics Center, University of Washington
imageParking in the traffic lane in downtown SeattleAP Photo/Elaine Thompson

Two converging trends – the rise of e-commerce and urban population growth – are creating big challenges for cities. Online shoppers are learning to expect the urban freight delivery system to bring them whatever they want, wherever they want it, within one to two...

Read more: More online shopping means more delivery trucks. Are cities ready?

Assassination of the Russian ambassador a big loss for Turkey

  • Written by Sibel Oktay, Assistant Professor of Political Science and Global Studies, University of Illinois at Springfield

The latest victim of Turkey’s climate of insecurity is Andrey Karlov, the Russian ambassador to Turkey.

Karlov was assassinated Dec. 19 by a 22-year-old police officer. Disguised as a security guard in a black suit, the gunman stood behind Karlov as the ambassador was speaking in an art gallery just yards from the U.S. embassy.

“Don&rsq...

Read more: Assassination of the Russian ambassador a big loss for Turkey

Does being wealthy make you more charitable?

  • Written by Ashley Whillans, Ph.D. Candidate in Social Psychology, University of British Columbia
imageGive a little?Wad of cash via www.shutterstock.com

Each year, the average American family donates approximately 3.4 percent of its discretionary income to charity. Most of these charitable contributions are made from October to December, known as the “giving season” in the nonprofit sector.

So what inspires individuals to donate to...

Read more: Does being wealthy make you more charitable?

More Articles ...

  1. Why you'd have to eat 64 cans of green beans per day - every day - to get too much BPA
  2. Obstacle avoidance: The challenge for drone package delivery
  3. Tell a different story about Santa this holiday season
  4. Are Brazilians Latinos? What their identity struggle tells us about race in America
  5. Why you can’t fry eggs (or testicles) with a cellphone
  6. Could Hulu and Google upend the TV industry in 2017?
  7. Trump is not a European-style populist. That’s our problem
  8. How ancient wisdom can help managers give their employees better feedback
  9. A sacred light in the darkness: Winter solstice illuminations at Spanish missions
  10. High rates of medical student depression: What do they say about our health system?
  11. Rating, ranking and recommending: Three R's for the internet age
  12. Brick-and-mortar retailers should nix deep discounts to make most of jittery shopping season
  13. Policy uncertainty discourages innovation and hurts the environment
  14. Obama administration's big science and tech innovation: Socially engaged policy
  15. Another reason to exercise every day during the holidays
  16. Can legal activist Scott Pruitt undo clean air and water protections as head of EPA?
  17. Why children believe (or not) that Santa Claus exists
  18. How to know when holiday drinking is hurting your brain
  19. Earth on the docket: Why Obama can't ignore this climate lawsuit by America's youth
  20. Why are young women without wrinkles using Botox?
  21. 'Slacktivism' that works: 'Small changes' matter
  22. How news sites' online comments helped build our hateful electorate
  23. Venezuela on the verge of dictatorship: Can dialogue or demonstrations turn it around?
  24. How one political outsider picked a cabinet
  25. Lesson one for Rick Perry: The Energy Department doesn't produce much energy
  26. What Trump Foundation's 'self-dealing' disclosure means for a conflicted president-elect
  27. Why sex gets better in older age
  28. The high cost of pursuing a dream to be a veterinarian
  29. Jesus Christ, businessman: From John Humphrey Noyes to Donald Trump
  30. Yellen's Fed faces a tricky rates dilemma in 2017 that may end up tripping up Trump
  31. Federal Reserve offers vote of confidence in US economy (so there's no reason to panic)
  32. Why 'thoughts and prayers' after mass shootings fall short
  33. Trump questionnaire recalls dark history of ideology-driven science
  34. Why the British love the National Health Service
  35. What Castro's death and Trump's election mean for Cuba's economic awakening
  36. How your college friendships help you – or don't
  37. What does research say about how to effectively communicate about science?
  38. Trump and Tillerson face the Middle East
  39. 1990s Oregon campaigns anticipated Trump's politics of division
  40. The emerging science of 'bromosexual' friendships
  41. The US environmental movement needs a new message
  42. 'Even though I am a girl...': John Glenn's fan mail and sexism in the early space program
  43. Cybersecurity's next phase: Cyber-deterrence
  44. Why kids who have trouble behaving in preschool fall behind
  45. Trump trolls, Pirate Parties and the Italian Five Star Movement: The internet meets politics
  46. Normalizing fascists
  47. Break out of your echo chamber: Technology arranges lunch with someone new
  48. Why OPEC's gambit to raise oil prices might not work
  49. How learning a new language improves tolerance
  50. Celebrity voices are powerful, but does the First Amendment let them say anything they want?