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Mosquitoes are not repelled by vitamins and other oral supplements you might take

  • Written by Matan Shelomi, Associate Professor of Entomology, National Taiwan University
imageIt's only wishful thinking that you can ward off mosquitoes from within.frank600/iStock via Getty Images Plus

A longstanding medical myth suggests that taking vitamin B1, also known as thiamine, can make your body repel mosquitoes.

A “systemic repellent” that makes your whole body unappealing to biting insects certainly sounds good. Even...

Read more: Mosquitoes are not repelled by vitamins and other oral supplements you might take

Russian troops' poor performance and low morale may worsen during a winter of more discontent

  • Written by Liam Collins, Founding Director, Modern War Institute, United States Military Academy West Point
imageA man walks amid buildings damaged by Russian missiles in Ukraine on Nov. 28, 2022.Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

With Russian troops digging trenches to prepare for an expected winter standoff, it would be easy to conclude that fighting will slow in Ukraine until after the ground thaws in the spring.

But evidence from the Ukrainian...

Read more: Russian troops' poor performance and low morale may worsen during a winter of more discontent

Biden signs marriage equality bill into law – but the Respect for Marriage Act has a few key limitations

  • Written by Dorian Rhea Debussy, Lecturer of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, The Ohio State University
imageThe Respect for Marriage Act will reverse the 1996 law that defines marriage as one between heterosexual couples.Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images

President Joe Biden signed theRespect for Marriage Act on Dec. 13, 2022, protecting the federal right to same-gender marriage, which is often referred to as same-sex marriage.

The U.S. House of...

Read more: Biden signs marriage equality bill into law – but the Respect for Marriage Act has a few key...

Harnessing the brain's immune cells to stave off Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative diseases

  • Written by Kristine Zengeler, Ph.D. Candidate in Neuroscience, University of Virginia
imageMicroglia (colored green) play several essential roles in maintaining brain health and function. Gerry Shaw/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-NC-SA

Many neurodegenerative diseases, or conditions that result from the loss of function or death of brain cells, remain largely untreatable. Most available treatments target just one of the multiple processes that...

Read more: Harnessing the brain's immune cells to stave off Alzheimer's and other neurodegenerative diseases

Congress codifies marriage equality – but the Respect for Marriage Act has a few key limitations

  • Written by Dorian Rhea Debussy, Lecturer of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, The Ohio State University
imageThe Respect for Marriage Act will reverse the 1996 law that defines marriage as one between heterosexual couples.Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images

The U.S. House of Representatives approved the the Respect for Marriage Act – a law that codifies both interracial and same-gender marriage – on Dec. 8, 2022.

President Joe Biden is set to sign...

Read more: Congress codifies marriage equality – but the Respect for Marriage Act has a few key limitations

Asexual Latter-day Saints face an added dilemma: Finding their place in a tradition focused on marriage

  • Written by ben Brandley, Ph.D. Student of Communication, Arizona State University
imageA pride flag flies in front of the historic temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Salt Lake City, Utah.George Frey/Getty Images

It can be difficult to imagine two identities more conflicting than being queer and Mormon.

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, often called the LDS or Mormon church, teaches that heterose...

Read more: Asexual Latter-day Saints face an added dilemma: Finding their place in a tradition focused on...

Risers, founders, planners and fillers: 4 career paths to get to the top at nonprofits

  • Written by Christopher Justin Einolf, Associate Professor of Sociology, Northern Illinois University
imageIn most cases, these leaders don't chart their professional trajectories.FG Trade/ E+ via Getty Images

A nonprofit’s executive director has an important job to do. Typically, no one else contributes more to the organization’s success.

Evidence indicates that turnover among these top staffers is high and that nonprofit boards often have...

Read more: Risers, founders, planners and fillers: 4 career paths to get to the top at nonprofits

Cherokee Nation wants to send a delegate to the House – it's an idea older than Congress itself

  • Written by Julie Reed, Associate Professor in History, Penn State
imageAt the Cherokee Heritage Center in Park Hill, Oklahoma, life-size sculptures depict the walk of the Cherokees along the Trail of Tears.Department of Transportation/Federal Highway Administration

In 1835, the Cherokee Nation was promised a delegate in Congress as part of the same treaty – Treaty of New Echota – that led to the death of...

Read more: Cherokee Nation wants to send a delegate to the House – it's an idea older than Congress itself

How to deal with holiday stress, Danish-style

  • Written by Marie Helweg-Larsen, Professor of Psychology, the Glenn E. & Mary Line Todd Chair in the Social Sciences, Dickinson College
imageWith so many competing demands during the holidays, it's easy to take on more than you can handle.mphillips007/E+ via Getty Images

The holidays often involve jubilant gift exchanges, renewed connections with family and friends, and treasured traditions.

But the love and cheer can also be accompanied by a host of stressors – chaotic travel,...

Read more: How to deal with holiday stress, Danish-style

For Indonesia's transgender community, faith can be a source of discrimination – but also tolerance and solace

  • Written by Sharyn Graham Davies, Director, Herb Feith Indonesian Engagement Centre, Monash University
imageAl-Fatah mosque founder Shinta Ratri with other transgender women.Donal Husni/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Shinta Ratri, an Indonesian transgender woman, taught transgender people at the Al-Fatah Islamic boarding school she founded in 2008 that God didn’t care if you were gay or transgender.

Located in Yogyakarta, in southern Java, the school...

Read more: For Indonesia's transgender community, faith can be a source of discrimination – but also...

More Articles ...

  1. Native Hawaiians believe volcanoes are alive and should be treated like people, with distinct rights and responsibilities
  2. Early and mail-in voting: Research shows they don't always bring in new voters
  3. What’s really driving ‘climate gentrification’ in Miami? It isn’t fear of sea-level rise
  4. Supreme Court signals sympathy with web designer opposed to same-sex marriage in free speech case
  5. Georgia runoff elections are exciting, but costly for voters and democracy
  6. How does a television set work?
  7. Shorter days affect the mood of millions of Americans – a nutritional neuroscientist offers tips on how to avoid the winter blues
  8. Pharma's expensive gaming of the drug patent system is successfully countered by the Medicines Patent Pool, which increases global access and rewards innovation
  9. Text-to-image AI: powerful, easy-to-use technology for making art – and fakes
  10. A judge in Texas is using a recent Supreme Court ruling to say domestic abusers can keep their guns
  11. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's pending promotion sheds new light on his overlooked fight for equal rights after the Civil War
  12. Orthodox Judaism can still be a difficult world for LGBTQ Jews – but in some groups, the tide is slowly turning
  13. This course takes college students out of this world – and teaches them what it takes to become space pioneers
  14. Weasels, not pandas, should be the poster animal for biodiversity loss
  15. The 4 biggest gift-giving mistakes, according to a consumer psychologist
  16. How fake foreign news fed political fervor and led to the American Revolution
  17. Jobs are up! Wages are up! So why am I as an economist so gloomy?
  18. Religious freedom and LGBTQ rights are clashing in schools and on campuses – and courts are deciding
  19. Nurses' attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccination for their children are highly influenced by partisanship, a new study finds
  20. Brain-computer interfaces could allow soldiers to control weapons with their thoughts and turn off their fear – but the ethics of neurotechnology lags behind the science
  21. Darknet markets generate millions in revenue selling stolen personal data, supply chain study finds
  22. Protecting 30% of Earth's surface for nature means thinking about connections near and far
  23. Student 'slave auctions' illustrate the existence of a hidden culture of domination and subjugation in US schools
  24. 3 ways cryptocurrency is changing the way colleges do business with students and donors
  25. Genocides persist, nearly 70 years after the Holocaust – but there are recognized ways to help prevent them
  26. Jiang Zemin propelled China's economic rise in the world, leaving his successors to deal with the massive inequality that followed
  27. EU plans to set up a new court to prosecute Russia's war on Ukraine – but there's a mixed record on holding leaders like Putin accountable for waging wars
  28. Twitter lifted its ban on COVID misinformation – research shows this is a grave risk to public health
  29. How parents can play a key role in the prevention and treatment of teen mental health problems
  30. Who's giving Americans spiritual care? As congregational attendance shrinks, it's often chaplains
  31. Satellites detect no real climate benefit from 10 years of forest carbon offsets in California
  32. Resounding success of 'Black Panther' franchise says little about the dubious state of Black film
  33. Healthy democracy requires trust -- these 3 things could start to restore voters' declining faith in US elections
  34. Protests in China are not rare -- but the current unrest is significant
  35. Ancient DNA from the teeth of 14th-century Ashkenazi Jews in Germany already included genetic variations common in modern Jews
  36. Oath Keepers convictions shed light on the limits of free speech – and the threat posed by militias
  37. Where Mauna Loa’s lava is coming from – and why Hawaii’s volcanoes are different from most
  38. Pregnancy is a genetic battlefield – how conflicts of interest pit mom's and dad's genes against each other
  39. What's a polycule? An expert on polyamory explains
  40. Beware of 'Shark Week': Scientists watched 202 episodes and found them filled with junk science, misinformation and white male 'experts' named Mike
  41. Sci-fi books for young readers often omit children of color from the future
  42. Black Twitter's expected demise would make it harder to publicize police brutality and discuss racism
  43. Fatherhood changes men's brains, according to before-and-after MRI scans
  44. More than 4 in 5 pregnancy-related deaths are preventable in the US, and mental health is the leading cause
  45. Even weak tropical cyclones have grown more intense worldwide – we tracked 30 years of them using currents
  46. A sampler of our most popular articles of 2022
  47. White landowners in Hawaii imported Russian workers in the early 1900s, to dilute the labor power of Asians in the islands
  48. Alabama’s execution problems are part of a long history of botched lethal injections
  49. 'Y'all,' that most Southern of Southernisms, is going mainstream – and it's about time
  50. Is China ready to lead on protecting nature? At the upcoming UN biodiversity conference, it will preside and set the tone