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At the Olympics, athletes show guts, glory – and a lot of ink, including tattoos that profess their faith

  • Written by Gustavo Morello, Professor of Sociology, Boston College
imageArgentina's Rodrigo Isgro walks off the field after a men's rugby sevens practice at the Tokyo Olympics in 2020.AP Photo/David Goldman

This has been a wonderful summer if you follow sports: tennis championships, end-of-season tournaments and soccer’s European Championship and Copa America – all leading up to the most global event of...

Read more: At the Olympics, athletes show guts, glory – and a lot of ink, including tattoos that profess...

Stricter monitoring of tween and teen internet use may not always be better

  • Written by Linda Charmaraman, Senior research scientist, Wellesley Centers for Women, Wellesley College and Director of Youth, Media & Wellbeing Research Lab, Wellesley College
image'Problematic' internet use is associated with mental health concerns like loneliness and depression.Fertnig/E+ via Getty Images

A national conversation about potential links between smartphones and digital media and the ongoing teen mental health crisis has reached a fever pitch.

Research does not definitively show that excessive screen time causes...

Read more: Stricter monitoring of tween and teen internet use may not always be better

Toxoplasma is a common parasite that causes birth defects – but the US doesn’t screen for it during pregnancy

  • Written by Bill Sullivan, Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Indiana University
imageIf you're pregnant, you should pass the cat litter scoop to someone else.Oksana Nazarchuk/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Imagine the shock of your baby being born with a swollen brain, blindness and debilitating seizures. Now imagine learning that these devastating conditions could have been prevented if you took a simple test for the common parasite...

Read more: Toxoplasma is a common parasite that causes birth defects – but the US doesn’t screen for it...

Why are journalists obsessed with Biden’s age? It’s because they’ve finally found an interesting election story

  • Written by Jacob L. Nelson, Associate Professor of Communication, University of Utah
imagePresident Joe Biden participates in the CNN presidential debate on June 27, 2024, in Atlanta.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Since President Joe Biden’s disastrous presidential debate on June 27, 2024, election news coverage has focused on one question: Will he remain in the race?

This focus has been apparent to even the most casual of news...

Read more: Why are journalists obsessed with Biden’s age? It’s because they’ve finally found an interesting...

Surprise: American voters actually largely agree on many issues, including topics like abortion, immigration and wealth inequality

  • Written by Dante Chinni, Director, American Communities Project, Michigan State University
imageFor a country that often feels hopelessly divided, it turns out that there is a lot of agreement among Americans.Nisian Hughes/Getty Images

As the presidential election campaign heats up, media coverage suggests Americans are hopelessly divided and headed for a difficult fall – perhaps also a tense January.

But that isn’t the whole...

Read more: Surprise: American voters actually largely agree on many issues, including topics like abortion,...

From the ’60s till now, TV news coverage of large-scale university protests doesn’t look so different

  • Written by Lisa Fazio, Associate Professor of Psychology, Vanderbilt University
imageA screenshot from ABC's live reporting on the Columbia University pro-Palestinian protest on April 25, 2024, shows the 'campus unrest crackdown.'Vanderbilt Television News Archive, Author provided

While much has changed over the past 50 years, evening television news remains a prominent source of information for Americans.

I am a scholar of psycholo...

Read more: From the ’60s till now, TV news coverage of large-scale university protests doesn’t look so...

Smaller family companies are the unexpected innovation powerhouses in many countries in the world

  • Written by Vitaliy Skorodziyevskiy, Assistant Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship, University of Louisville

Close your eyes and imagine a world where the most innovative companies aren’t big tech giants but family-run businesses. Now open your eyes, because you don’t have to imagine it: It’s reality.

That’s what ourteamofbusinessexperts found in a recent global analysis of research into family-owned and family-run firms.

When we...

Read more: Smaller family companies are the unexpected innovation powerhouses in many countries in the world

Market trust at stake: What the Supreme Court’s ruling in SEC v. Jarkesy means for investors

  • Written by D. Brian Blank, Associate Professor of Finance, Mississippi State University
imageChanges are coming to the SEC.Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

A recent Supreme Court ruling has gotten a lot of attention for how it could reshape government. What’s gotten much less attention is how it could affect markets.

As financeprofessors, we find this at least as important. The Supreme Court’s 6-3 ruling in SEC v. Jarkesy could...

Read more: Market trust at stake: What the Supreme Court’s ruling in SEC v. Jarkesy means for investors

4 books by Black Philadelphia women that depict struggle and joy in the City of Sisterly Love

  • Written by Louis Parascandola, Professor of English, Long Island University, Brooklyn
image'A Black Philadelphia Reader' collects works by Black writers from the city’s founding through the present day. Zave Smith/Photodisc Collection via Getty Images

The four works described below, all written by Black Philadelphia women, appear in my new anthology, “A Black Philadelphia Reader: African American Writings about the City of...

Read more: 4 books by Black Philadelphia women that depict struggle and joy in the City of Sisterly Love

Trump’s criminal conviction won’t stop him from getting security clearance as president − but Biden can still control his access for now

  • Written by Dakota Rudesill, Associate Professor of Law; Senior Faculty Fellow, Mershon Center for International Security Studies, The Ohio State University
imageFormer President Donald Trump walks out of a Manhattan courthouse after he was found guilty in his hush money trial on May 30, 2024. Seth Wenig-Pool/Getty Images

Former President Donald Trump is the presumptive Republican presidential nominee. He is also now a convicted felon, a New York state judgment that concerns a hush money conspiracy before...

Read more: Trump’s criminal conviction won’t stop him from getting security clearance as president − but...

More Articles ...

  1. ‘The immortal Gods alone have neither age nor death’: Wisdom from Greek tragedies for Joe Biden
  2. Joe Biden commits to staying in the race – like Nixon, his biggest threat comes from within his own party
  3. Dig safely when building sandcastles and tunnels this summer – collapsing sand holes can cause suffocation and even death
  4. By revealing their mental health struggles, pro athletes are scoring with fans
  5. Hajj in extraordinary heat: what a scholar of Islam saw in Mecca
  6. Unregulated online political ads pose a threat to democracy
  7. When scientific citations go rogue: Uncovering ‘sneaked references’
  8. Extreme heat waves broiling the planet in 2024 aren’t normal: How climate change is heating up weather around the world
  9. Extreme heat waves broiling the US in 2024 aren’t normal: How climate change is heating up weather around the world
  10. 4 things to watch for as NATO leaders meet in US capital for high-stakes summit
  11. Oklahoma’s superintendent orders public schools to teach the Bible – relying on controversial views about religious freedom
  12. One memorable speech can turn around a faltering campaign − how Nixon did it with his ‘Checkers’ talk
  13. Navigating mental health treatment options can be overwhelming – a clinical psychologist explains why it’s worth the effort
  14. Nevada is a battleground state – and may be a bellwether of more extreme partisanship
  15. 2024 is not 1968 − and the Democratic convention in Chicago will play out very differently than in the days of Walter Cronkite
  16. Wildfire smoke linked to thousands of premature deaths every year in California alone
  17. Why the Olympic Games are a ‘civil religious’ ceremony with a global congregation
  18. Britain’s new prime minister has a chance to reset ties with the White House – but a range of thorny issues and the US election make it more tricky
  19. Detroit’s legacy of housing inequity has caused long-term health impacts − these policies can help mitigate that harm
  20. Fandom usually means tracking your favorite team for years − so why are the Olympics so good at making us root for sports and athletes we tune out most of the time?
  21. To guard against cyberattacks in space, researchers ask ‘what if?’
  22. Why US schools need to shake up the way they teach physics
  23. Flirting with disaster: When endangered wild animals try to mate with domestic relatives, both wildlife and people lose
  24. Why Nepal had a religious monarchy − and why some people want it back
  25. Supreme Court of Oklahoma says no to Catholic charter school – but this may not be the end of the boundary-pushing saga
  26. Even short trips to space can change an astronaut’s biology − a new set of studies offers the most comprehensive look at spaceflight health since NASA’s Twins Study
  27. Hurricane Beryl’s rapid intensification, Category 5 winds so early in a season were alarming: Here’s why more tropical storms are exploding in strength
  28. Hurricane Beryl’s rapid intensification and Category 5 winds are alarming: Here’s why more tropical storms are exploding in strength
  29. The Catholic Church is using the upcoming Paris Olympics to engage young people − but several popes have already promoted sports as a way to teach Christian values
  30. Colorado is home to the longest-running gay rodeo in the world
  31. Cultural differences impede trade for most countries — but not China
  32. Charities are allowed to do some lobbying, but many do none at all
  33. From diagnosing brain disorders to cognitive enhancement, 100 years of EEG have transformed neuroscience
  34. ‘Above the law’ in some cases: Supreme Court gives Trump − and future presidents − a special exception that will delay his prosecution
  35. Supreme Court kicks cases about tech companies’ First Amendment rights back to lower courts − but appears poised to block states from hampering online content moderation
  36. Supreme Court rules that Trump had partial immunity as president, but not for unofficial acts − 4 essential reads
  37. To insure or self-insure? The question homeowners must answer amid impact of climate change
  38. How was popcorn discovered? An archaeologist on its likely appeal for people in the Americas millennia ago
  39. Disability community has long wrestled with ‘helpful’ technologies – lessons for everyone in dealing with AI
  40. What’s next after Supreme Court curbs regulatory power: More focus on laws’ wording, less on their goals
  41. 5 questions after the NCAA’s $2.75B settlement to pay college athletes
  42. Black economic boycotts of the civil rights era still offer lessons on how to achieve a just society
  43. Loss of Supreme Court legitimacy can lead to political violence
  44. US’s terrorist listing of European far-right group signals fears of rising threat − both abroad and at home
  45. Knowing when to call it quits takes courage and confidence - 3 case studies
  46. Supreme Court rules cities can ban homeless people from sleeping outdoors – Sotomayor dissent summarizes opinion as ‘stay awake or be arrested’
  47. How camping bans − like the one the Supreme Court just upheld − can fit into ‘hostile design’: Strategies to push out homeless people
  48. Supreme Court makes prosecution of Trump on obstruction charge more difficult, with ruling to narrowly define law used against him and Jan. 6 rioters
  49. ICE detainees suffer preventable deaths − Q A with a medical researcher about systemic failures
  50. Federal funding for major science agencies is at a 25-year low