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Every song has a color – and an emotion – attached to it

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageElectronic band STS9 is known for having intoxicating light shows accompany their live performances.Shannon Tompkins/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

Imagine yourself as a graphic designer for New Age musician Enya, tasked with creating her next album cover. Which two or three colors from the grid below do you think would “go...

Read more: Every song has a color – and an emotion – attached to it

In hospitals, a little bit of rudeness can be a very big deal

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageExperiencing rudeness can make it harder for doctors and nurses to do their jobs. Monitor and incubator via www.shutterstock.com.

When someone makes a nasty quip, cuts us off in traffic, ignores our suggestions or takes credit for our work, we get mad, sad and even angry. Rudeness, even just little, can really hurt. We know...

Read more: In hospitals, a little bit of rudeness can be a very big deal

For Asian-American students, stereotypes help boost achievement

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageWhat is behind Asian-American success?Nicola Sapiens De Mitri, CC BY-SA

Conventional wisdom is that all stereotypes are negative and damaging.

African Americans are stereotyped as violent and threatening. Employers stereotype mothers as less competent and less committed. And undocumented immigrants are stereotyped as...

Read more: For Asian-American students, stereotypes help boost achievement

How much has global warming worsened California's drought? Now we have a number

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageReally dry: a Colorado River aqueduct in southern California.Lucy Nicholson/Reuters

With each passing year, human-caused global warming bullies California for more water. Each year, the heat squeezes more moisture from soils and ecosystems.

This is because, as the atmosphere warms, its demand for moisture rises. Just as a...

Read more: How much has global warming worsened California's drought? Now we have a number

Talking to Mars: new antenna design could aid interplanetary communication

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageJean Paul Santos with the finished 4x4 sub-array antenna assembly that may help rovers talk directly with Earth.Matthew Chin, CC BY-NC-ND

When people think about antennas, they often picture old television sets with “rabbit ears” – two metal rods poking above the screen. Essentially, antennas are devices...

Read more: Talking to Mars: new antenna design could aid interplanetary communication

Deflategate has never been about footballs---so what, exactly, is the NFL up to?

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageNFL commissioner Roger Goodell enters the Manhattan Federal Courthouse for the first Deflategate hearing on August 12. Darren Ornitz/Reuters

For the NFL, the second Deflategate hearing this week didn’t go any better than the first. In question after question, Judge Richard Berman pressed the NFL on the specifics of...

Read more: Deflategate has never been about footballs---so what, exactly, is the NFL up to?

Elon Musk’s Brave New World: it worked for Henry Ford; why not Tesla?

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageBut can you make an EV at half the price of that one? Maurizio Pesce/flickr, CC BY-SA

The share price of Tesla Motors shot up this week after a financial analyst said that the electric vehicle maker is “uniquely positioned to dominate” the auto industry.

Is Tesla, with its tightly integrated supply chain,...

Read more: Elon Musk’s Brave New World: it worked for Henry Ford; why not Tesla?

Who says libraries are dying? They are evolving into spaces for innovation

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageToday's libraries are offering skill-building programsKnight Foundation, CC BY-SA

With the expansion of digital media, the rise of e-books and massive budget cuts, the end of libraries has been predicted many times over.

And while it is true that library budgets have been slashed, causing cuts in operating hours and branch...

Read more: Who says libraries are dying? They are evolving into spaces for innovation

More Articles ...

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  2. Ray Tensing was trained, equipped much like 32,000 other campus cops
  3. A melting Arctic demands more – not less – research on earth science
  4. Our obsession with hereditary cancers didn't start when we discovered the breast cancer gene
  5. Cynicism about mobile advertising is greatly misplaced
  6. The fate of the metalheads
  7. Hummingbird tongues are tiny pumps that spring open to draw in nectar
  8. In the push for marketable skills, are we forgetting the beauty and poetry of STEM disciplines?
  9. Libraries on the front lines of the homelessness crisis in the United States
  10. Does selling oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve make sense now?
  11. Will we pick privacy over drone-drops from Amazon?
  12. How the Federal Reserve keeps the US economy from bonking
  13. Fossils suggest an aquatic plant that bloomed underwater was among first flowering plants
  14. The treatment of Yazidi women highlights a historical issue: what makes someone human?
  15. Why American academics are building ties with Cuba
  16. Shift work causes breast cancer in mice, according to a new study – so what does this mean for humans?
  17. Damaging electric currents in space affect Earth's equatorial region, not just the poles
  18. What does it take to become an elementary school teacher? Not just passion
  19. From the Sumerians to Shakespeare to Twain: why fart jokes never get old
  20. Canary in the Gold King Mine: legacy of abandoned mines means more spills
  21. To reduce debt, give students more information to make wise college choice decisions
  22. Researchers carefully protect dangerous pathogens – but how secure are all their data?
  23. Planned Parenthood will survive; some women may not
  24. Jimmy Carter in Cuba
  25. Can jazz thrive in China?
  26. Menstruation is a global health problem – and we need to talk about it
  27. Is the global warming ‘hiatus’ over?
  28. US shouldn't fret over cheaper yuan: China's growing middle class will keep buying 'Made in America'
  29. America's most lethal animal
  30. Better policies are needed to support local adoptions for children orphaned by Ebola
  31. Compton commodified: NWA was always a blend of fiction and reality
  32. Big data algorithms can discriminate, and it's not clear what to do about it
  33. Here's how rape on campus remains a hidden crime
  34. Your brief to the Paris UN climate talks: how we got here and what to watch for
  35. Police should put away the military gear and build connections with young people
  36. Why historically black colleges and universities matter in today's America
  37. When is it ethical to euthanize your pet?
  38. Pacific trade deal’s outlook clouded by patent disputes, elections as talks enter final stage
  39. The biggest infectious disease threat we face isn't Ebola – it's our short attention span
  40. Temporary ban on fishing reflects how fragile Arctic ecosystem is
  41. Why Ferguson erupts
  42. The alarming consequences of scuttling the Iran nuclear deal
  43. News about the success of a new Ebola vaccine may be too good to be true
  44. Iran’s frozen funds: how much is really there and how will they be used?
  45. From Smokey Bear to climate change: the future of wildland fire management
  46. Why the silence of moderate conservatives is dangerous for race relations
  47. Scientists at work: cracking sea lions' high-thrust, low-wake swimming technique
  48. What if it happened again? What we need to do to prepare for a nuclear event
  49. There's no code of ethics to govern digital forensics – and we need one
  50. How Ferguson and #BlackLivesMatter taught us not to look away