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Biologists lose hard-fought ground in race to save bats as white-nose syndrome spreads west

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLittle brown bat found in western Washington in March 2016. The fungus damaged the bat’s wings, making it unable to fly.Progressive Animal Welfare Society (PAWS)

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the U.S. Geological Survey last month delivered a sobering update on the white-nose syndrome (WNS) epidemic in North America. WNS has been...

Read more: Biologists lose hard-fought ground in race to save bats as white-nose syndrome spreads west

How universal design can help every voter cast a ballot

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageOne balloting machine for all voters: universal design is accessible for everyone, with or without disabilities.University of Florida, CC BY-ND

In the 2012 presidential election, 15.6 million people with disabilities reported voting, leaving people without disabilities to make up the remaining 110 million votes cast. The turnout rate for voters...

Read more: How universal design can help every voter cast a ballot

When a parent directs a child not be resuscitated, what should educators do?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDo Not Resuscitate orders are an ethical dilemma for educators.Stephan Hochhaus, CC BY

Most likely schools evoke our best memories as lively places with active playgrounds, determined classrooms, band performances and Friday night football games.

The common factor is happy, healthy and engaged children. As educators, we make and sustain these...

Read more: When a parent directs a child not be resuscitated, what should educators do?

Poised to make its next big move, Netflix isn't in the business you think it's in

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Netflix has been in the headlines a lot recently, and not in a good way.

There’s news about competitor Amazon launching a monthly video service, subscription fees going up, its library of content shrinking and lower global subscriber gains than the company had anticipated.

But since its launch in 1997, Netflix has always been in the headlines....

Read more: Poised to make its next big move, Netflix isn't in the business you think it's in

Could knowing how much your coworker earns help close the gender pay gap?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWant to know how your salary jar stacks up?Money jars via www.shutterstock.com

Pay transparency is all the rage these days.

President Obama has taken action to increase pay transparency among federal contractors. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, which enforces laws prohibiting employment discrimination, recently issued a regulation...

Read more: Could knowing how much your coworker earns help close the gender pay gap?

Genetic detectives: how scientists use DNA to track disease outbreaks

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

They’re the top questions on everyone’s mind when a new disease outbreak happens: where did the virus come from? When did this happen? How long has it been spreading in a particular country or group of people?

These questions have been the foundation of epidemiology, the study of the occurrence and spread of disease, since the days when...

Read more: Genetic detectives: how scientists use DNA to track disease outbreaks

Shot or poisoned? Does the choice of Trump or Cruz really matter?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

When asked to choose between the candidacies of Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, Lindsey Graham, a Republican senator from South Carolina, remarked,

It’s like being shot or poisoned. What does it really matter?

But, in fact, it really does matter for the Republican Party.

imageLindsey Graham.REUTERS/Brian C. Frank

Based on a survey taken before the Iowa...

Read more: Shot or poisoned? Does the choice of Trump or Cruz really matter?

To fight Zika, let's genetically modify mosquitoes – the old-fashioned way

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The near panic caused by the rapid spread of the Zika virus has brought new urgency to the question of how best to control mosquitoes that transmit human diseases. Aedes aegypti mosquitoes bite people across the globe, spreading three viral diseases: dengue, chikungunya and Zika. There are no proven effective vaccines or specific medications to...

Read more: To fight Zika, let's genetically modify mosquitoes – the old-fashioned way

Having trouble picking the right health insurance plan? Let an algorithm decide

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWould you put a heart in a machine's hands?robot heart via www.shutterstock.com

One key goal of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) was to lower health care costs by giving consumers more choice over their insurer.

Economic theory suggests that when consumers make informed and active choices in a competitive market, companies respond by lowering prices...

Read more: Having trouble picking the right health insurance plan? Let an algorithm decide

More Articles ...

  1. Why more cities need to add up the economic value of trees
  2. Has the library outlived its usefulness in the age of Internet? You'd be surprised
  3. 'Burner' phones, social media and online magazines: understanding the technology of terrorism
  4. New climate activist strategy gains steam this election season
  5. How to capture the violent tumult of our roiling universe, moment by moment
  6. Molecular architects: how scientists design new materials
  7. How limiting women's access to birth control and abortions hurts the economy
  8. Kindergartners get little time to play. Why does it matter?
  9. From generations of infidelity and pain, Beyoncé makes 'Lemonade'
  10. Trump culture: threat, fear and the tightening of the American mind
  11. Why the Stop Trump movement isn't working
  12. Debating college's price tag
  13. Why it's impossible to actually be a vegetarian
  14. Are all black students falling behind?
  15. Should we worry about arsenic in baby cereal and drinking water?
  16. Ireland in 1916: the Rising, the War and controversial commemorations
  17. The effect racist rhetoric has on young Latinos, and why all Americans should care
  18. Why Prince’s music will become more accessible after his death
  19. At Chernobyl and Fukushima, radioactivity has seriously harmed wildlife
  20. Forget Fukushima: Chernobyl still holds record as worst nuclear accident for public health
  21. Uber's $100 million settlement with drivers settles very little – here's why
  22. It bears repeating: how scientists are addressing the 'reproducibility problem'
  23. Your devices' latest feature? They can spy on your every move
  24. Why it's tough to find Prince's songs online – and other musicians are thankful
  25. Has climate change really improved U.S. weather?
  26. How Prince's quest for complete artistic control changed the music industry forever
  27. College is worth it. Who should pay for it?
  28. In today's most popular shows, Shakespeare's iconic characters live on
  29. Could Donald Trump change journalism for the better?
  30. How should we compensate poor countries for 'loss and damage' from climate change?
  31. Who was the first woman depicted on American currency?
  32. The rise and fall of Theranos: so many lessons in a drop of blood
  33. Should schools provide free breakfast in classrooms?
  34. Before fusion: a human history of fire
  35. Could gambling be the secret to saving when rates are so low?
  36. Why we need a 'moon shot' to catalogue the Earth's biodiversity
  37. How John Muir's incessant study saved Yosemite
  38. Why the charter school debate has moved beyond 'better' or 'worse'
  39. Do environmental regulations do more harm or good? Presidential candidates disagree
  40. Crackdown on corporate inversions highlights monstrosity of U.S. tax code
  41. When Americans thought hair was a window into the soul
  42. The cavity in health insurance coverage: oral health
  43. Five key takeaways from the New York primary
  44. Syrian refugees: will American hearts and minds change?
  45. Panama Papers: how do leakers leak?
  46. Oxycontin: how Purdue Pharma helped spark the opioid epidemic
  47. Can a burgeoning satanic movement actually effect political change?
  48. Why grammar mistakes in a short email could make some people judge you
  49. 'Should the U.S. take in more or fewer Syrian refugees?'
  50. A decisive New York primary for the Clintons – again