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Generative AI is forcing people to rethink what it means to be authentic

  • Written by Victor R. Lee, Associate Professor of Learning Sciences and Technology Design in Education, Stanford University
imageGenerative AI thrives on exploiting people's reflexive assumptions of authenticity by producing material that looks like 'the real thing.'artpartner-images/The Image Bank via Getty Images

It turns out that pop stars Drake and The Weeknd didn’t suddenly drop a new track that went viral on TikTok and YouTube in April 2023. The photograph that...

Read more: Generative AI is forcing people to rethink what it means to be authentic

Respectful persuasion is a relay race, not a solo sprint – 3 keys to putting it in practice

  • Written by Colin Marshall, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Washington
imageSure, you can try to force people to agree with you -- but respectful persuasion is something else.Andrii Yalanskyi/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The 2024 presidential election is still a year and a half away, but it can feel much closer: President Joe Biden has made his reelection bid official, presumed candidates are giving out-of-state speeches,...

Read more: Respectful persuasion is a relay race, not a solo sprint – 3 keys to putting it in practice

Whether or not a man convicted of abusing African 'orphans' is exonerated, the missionary system that brought him to Kenya was always deeply flawed

  • Written by Andreana Prichard, Associate Professor of Honors and African History, University of Oklahoma
imageSome African countries are seeking to replace orphanages with family-based care.himarkley/E+ via Getty Images

Matthew Durham, a young missionary from Oklahoma, was convicted in 2015 of raping three girls and molesting a boy at the Upendo Children’s Home. He had volunteered at the Kenyan orphanage from 2012 to 2014.

A federal jury found Durham...

Read more: Whether or not a man convicted of abusing African 'orphans' is exonerated, the missionary system...

Every cancer is unique – why different cancers require different treatments, and how evolution drives drug resistance

  • Written by Joshua Warrick, Associate Professor of Pathology, Penn State
imageMost tumors are made up of many different kinds of cancer cells, as shown in this pancreatic cancer sample from a mouse.Ravikanth Maddipati/Abramson Cancer Center at the University of Pennsylvania via National Cancer Institute

Cancer is an evolutionary disease. The same forces that turned dinosaurs into birds turn normal cells into cancer: genetic...

Read more: Every cancer is unique – why different cancers require different treatments, and how evolution...

The Federal Reserve and the art of navigating a soft landing ... when economic data sends mixed signals

  • Written by Christopher Decker, Professor of Economics, University of Nebraska Omaha
image'Surely we can avoid an economic crash? We can, but don't call me Shirley!'Paramount Pictures/Fathom Events

With inflation easing and the U.S. economy cooling, is the Federal Reserve done raising interest rates? After all, gently bringing down the trajectory of prices without crashing the economy was the central bank’s objective when it began...

Read more: The Federal Reserve and the art of navigating a soft landing ... when economic data sends mixed...

Recent banking crises are rooted in a system that rewards excessive risk-taking -- as First Republic's failure shows

  • Written by Alexandra Digby, Adjunct Assistant professor of Economics, University of Rochester
imageAnother U.S. bank bit the dust.AaronP/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images via Getty Images

First Republic Bank became the second-biggest bank failure in U.S. history after the lender was seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. and sold to JPMorgan Chase on May 1, 2023. First Republic is the latest victim of the panic that has roiled small and midsize...

Read more: Recent banking crises are rooted in a system that rewards excessive risk-taking -- as First...

Cannabis-derived products like delta-8 THC and delta-10 THC have flooded the US market – two immunologists explain the medicinal benefits and potential risks

  • Written by Prakash Nagarkatti, Professor of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology, University of South Carolina
imageThousands of cannabis-derived products are now on the market.skodonnell/E+ via Getty Images

These days you see signs for delta-8 THC, delta-10 THC and CBD, or cannabidiol, everywhere – at gas stations, convenience stores, vape shops and online. Many people are rightly wondering which of these compounds are legal, whether it is safe to consume...

Read more: Cannabis-derived products like delta-8 THC and delta-10 THC have flooded the US market – two...

Sudan's plunge into chaos has geopolitical implications near and far – including for US strategic goals

  • Written by Christopher Tounsel, Associate Professor of History, University of Washington
imageJordanians being evacuated from Sudan amid fighting between two factions.AP Photo/Raad Adayleh

The sight of diplomats fleeing Sudanamid chaotic scenes reflects the gravity of the situation, but also the extent of international interest in the strife-torn nation.

Days into fighting that has left at least 400 people dead, governments from across the...

Read more: Sudan's plunge into chaos has geopolitical implications near and far – including for US strategic...

Emmett Till's accuser, Carolyn Bryant Donham, has died – here's how the 1955 murder case helped define civil rights history

  • Written by Davis W. Houck, Professor, Florida State University
imageCarolyn Bryant Donham, left, reads newspaper accounts of the Emmett Till murder trial in 1955. Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

Carolyn Bryant Donham, the white woman who accused Black teenager Emmett Till of making inappropriate advances toward her in 1955, has died at the age of 88 in Louisiana, according to a coroner’s report.

Nearly 68 years...

Read more: Emmett Till's accuser, Carolyn Bryant Donham, has died – here's how the 1955 murder case helped...

More Articles ...

  1. How the US military used magazines to target 'vulnerable' groups with recruiting ads
  2. SNAP work requirements don’t actually get more people working – but they do drastically limit the availability of food aid
  3. In 'Air,' Michael Jordan's silence speaks volumes about the marketing of Black athletes
  4. Human activities in Asia have reduced elephant habitat by nearly two-thirds since 1700, dividing what remains into ever-smaller patches
  5. US-South Korea nuclear weapons deal – what you need to know
  6. Biden's coronation no-show is no snub – more telling is whom he sends to King Charles' big day
  7. Saving broadcasting's past for the future -- archivists are working to capture not just tapes of TV and radio but the experience of tuning in together
  8. Latino youth struggle with sense of belonging in school
  9. Historic flooding in Fort Lauderdale was a sign of things to come – a look at who is most at risk and how to prepare
  10. Why Kurt Vonnegut's advice to college graduates still matters today
  11. 'Got polio?' messaging underscores a vaccine campaign's success but creates false sense of security as memories of the disease fade in US
  12. AI is exciting – and an ethical minefield: 4 essential reads on the risks and concerns about this technology
  13. Cognitive flexibility is essential to navigating a changing world – new research in mice shows how your brain learns new rules
  14. Harry Belafonte leveraged stardom for social change, his powerful voice always singing a song for justice
  15. Leprosy-causing bacteria found in armadillo specimens highlight value of museum collections for tracking pathogens
  16. Arctic sea ice loss and fierce storms leave Kivalina Search and Rescue fighting to protect their island from climate disasters
  17. A tweak to the University of Nebraska's logo shows how the once benign 'OK' sign has entered a 'purgatory of meaning'
  18. Mifepristone is under scrutiny in the courts, but it has been used safely and effectively around the world for decades
  19. Challenging the FDA's authority isn't new – the agency's history shows what's at stake when drug regulation is in limbo
  20. The invasion of Iraq defined US' foreign relations – but in popular Iraqi literature, the war is just a piece of the country's complex history
  21. In protecting land for wildlife, size matters – here's what it takes to conserve very large areas
  22. Willie Nelson at 90: Country music's elder statesman still on the road again
  23. What Socrates' 'know nothing' wisdom can teach a polarized America
  24. White power movements in US history have often relied on veterans -- and not on lone wolves
  25. In centennial year, Turkish voters will choose between Erdoğan’s conservative path and the founder’s modernist vision
  26. South Korea, US presidents to meet in Washington – amid wary glances in the direction of Pyongyang, Beijing and Moscow
  27. Social media scatters your brain, and then you buy stuff you don't need
  28. 80 is different in 2023 than in 1776 – but even back then, a grizzled Franklin led alongside a young Hamilton
  29. Fast fashion still comes with deadly risks, 10 years after the Rana Plaza disaster – the industry's many moving pieces make it easy to cut corners
  30. The Supreme Court rules mifepristone can remain available – here's how 2 conflicting federal court decisions led to this point
  31. 'Stand your ground' laws empower armed citizens to defend property with violence – a simple mistake can get you shot, or killed
  32. Watch out for dangerous combinations of over-the-counter cold medicine and prescription drugs – two pharmacoepidemiology experts explain the risks
  33. Boy Scouts of America can now create $2.4 billion fund to pay claims for Scouts who survived abuse – a bankruptcy expert explains what's next
  34. What's going on when the Virgin Mary appears and statues weep? The answers aren't just about science or the supernatural
  35. Keeping NBA players on the court is no small 'feet'
  36. Raw materials, or sacred beings? Lithium extraction puts two worldviews into tension
  37. Fire danger in the high mountains is intensifying: That’s bad news for humans, treacherous for the environment
  38. Emergency contraception is often confused with abortion pills – here's how Plan B and other generic versions work to prevent pregnancy
  39. The US is about to blow up a fake warship in the South China Sea – but naval rivalry with Beijing is very real and growing
  40. US giving to Israeli nonprofits – how much Jews and Christians donate and where the money goes
  41. Sudan crisis explained: What's behind the latest fighting and how it fits nation's troubled past
  42. The complex relationship between Black gamers and Hogwarts Legacy
  43. Plans for religious charter school, though rejected for now, are already pushing church-state debates into new territory
  44. Anti-mifepristone court decisions rely on medical misinformation about abortion and questionable legal reasoning
  45. 'Effective altruism' has caught on with billionaire donors – but is the world's most headline-making one on board?
  46. Low-cost, high-quality public transportation will serve the public better than free rides
  47. Parents tend to choose their children's schools based on their own educational experience
  48. Social Security may be failing well over a million people with disabilities – and COVID-19 is making the problem worse
  49. Why is Tax Day on April 18 this year? And how did early spring become tax season, anyhow?
  50. Wooded grasslands flourished in Africa 21 million years ago – new research forces a rethink of ape evolution