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Canadian trucker protests show how the loudest voices in the room distort democracy

  • Written by Matthew Jordan, Associate Professor of Media Studies, Penn State
imageWhat happens when the voices of a few drown out the views of the many?Ed Jones/AFP via Getty Images

After Canadian truckers upset with vaccination mandates made their way to Ottawa, they parked their vehicles near Parliament and started making noise – lots of it – blasting their air horns day and night, disturbing the repose of citizens...

Read more: Canadian trucker protests show how the loudest voices in the room distort democracy

African wild dogs cope with human development using skills they rely on to compete with other carnivores

  • Written by Scott Creel, Professor of Conservation Biology & Ecology, Montana State University
imageWild dogs are usually with their pack mates.Scott Creel, CC BY-ND

Large carnivores in Africa are important from ecological, economic and cultural perspectives, but human activities put them at risk. Increasingly, lions, hyenas and African wild dogs are restricted to protected areas like national parks. Within these limited areas, they must compete...

Read more: African wild dogs cope with human development using skills they rely on to compete with other...

Why $73 million Sandy Hook settlement is unlikely to unleash a flood of lawsuits against gun-makers

  • Written by Timothy D. Lytton, Distinguished University Professor & Professor of Law, Georgia State University
imageSandy Hook families aimed to hold the makers of the guns used in the shooting responsible. AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Families of the victims of the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School reached a historic US$73 million settlement with gun-maker Remington Arms. The Feb. 15, 2022, deal marks the first time a firearms manufacturer has settled a...

Read more: Why $73 million Sandy Hook settlement is unlikely to unleash a flood of lawsuits against gun-makers

What drives sea level rise? US report warns of 1-foot rise within three decades and more frequent flooding

  • Written by Jianjun Yin, Associate Professor of Geoscience, University of Arizona
imageTidal flooding is creeping farther into coastal towns like Alexandria, Virginia.Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Sea levels are rising, and that will bring profound flood risks to large parts of the Gulf and Atlantic coasts over the next three decades.

A new report led by scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric...

Read more: What drives sea level rise? US report warns of 1-foot rise within three decades and more frequent...

Appeal in Sarah Palin's libel loss could set up Supreme Court test of decades-old media freedom rule

  • Written by Bill Kovarik, Professor of Communication, Radford University
imageSarah Palin speaks to the media. Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

To the numerous challenges facing the U.S. media in recent years, add a libel case against The New York Times – lost by Sarah Palin, but now seemingly headed to appeal and perhaps on to the highest court in the land.

On Feb. 15, 2022, a jury rejected Palin’s claim. As it...

Read more: Appeal in Sarah Palin's libel loss could set up Supreme Court test of decades-old media freedom rule

Old statues of Confederate generals are slowly disappearing – will monuments honoring people of color replace them?

  • Written by Frederick Gooding, Jr., Dr. Ronald E. Moore Professor of Humanities and African American Studies, Texas Christian University
imageThe monument 'Rumors of War' depicts a young African American in urban streetwear sitting atop a horse.Spencer Platt/Getty Images

With most of the legal challenges resolved after the violent Unite the Right rally, and the statue of Robert E. Lee removed from its lofty pedestal in downtown Charlottesville, Virginia, local lawmakers in December 2021...

Read more: Old statues of Confederate generals are slowly disappearing – will monuments honoring people of...

Toshio Mori endured internment camps and overcame discrimination to become the first Japanese American to publish a book of fiction

  • Written by Alessandro Meregaglia, Assistant Professor and Archivist, Boise State University
imageIn a 1949 photograph, Mori works in his family's nursery in San Leandro, Calif.Courtesy of Steven Y. Mori, CC BY-SA

Eighty years ago, on Feb. 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066, which led to more than 100,000 people of Japanese ancestry living in the western United States being moved into internment camps.

At the...

Read more: Toshio Mori endured internment camps and overcame discrimination to become the first Japanese...

How poisonous mercury gets from coal-fired power plants into the fish you eat

  • Written by Gabriel Filippelli, Chancellor's Professor of Earth Sciences and Executive Director, Indiana University Environmental Resilience Institute, IUPUI
imageCoal-fired power plants are a source of mercury that people can ingest by eating fish.Mark Wilson/Getty Images

People fishing along the banks of the White River as it winds through Indianapolis sometimes pass by ominous signs warning about eating the fish they catch.

One of the risks they have faced is mercury poisoning.

Mercury is a neurotoxic...

Read more: How poisonous mercury gets from coal-fired power plants into the fish you eat

Girls still fall behind boys in top scores for AP math exams

  • Written by Kadir Bahar, Assistant Professor of Educational Psychology, University of Georgia
imageGender gaps in achievement for AP math exams may lead to fewer women in STEM careers. Mint Images/Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

After decades of growth, the number of high school girls who take Advanced Placement math exams is now almost the same as the number for boys. In 1997, 83 girls...

Read more: Girls still fall behind boys in top scores for AP math exams

Trust comes when you admit what you don’t know – lessons from child development research

  • Written by Tamar Kushnir, Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, Duke University
imageKids figure out who's trustworthy as they learn about the world.Sandro Di Carlo Darsa/PhotoAlto Agency RF Collections via Getty Images

Consider the following situation: Two experts give you advice about whether you should eat or avoid the fat in common cooking oils.

One of them tells you confidently that there are “good” or...

Read more: Trust comes when you admit what you don’t know – lessons from child development research

More Articles ...

  1. After the FDA issued warnings about antidepressants, youth suicides rose and mental health care dropped
  2. How recess helps students learn
  3. Why do people get diarrhea?
  4. Technology is revolutionizing how intelligence is gathered and analyzed – and opening a window onto Russian military activity around Ukraine
  5. First gene therapy for Tay-Sachs disease successfully given to two children
  6. What do students’ beliefs about God have to do with grades and going to college?
  7. Physics and psychology of cats – an (improbable) conversation
  8. How Sylvia Plath’s secret miscarriage transforms our understanding of her poetry
  9. How Russia hooked Europe on its oil and gas – and overcame US efforts to prevent energy dependence on Moscow
  10. What is the ‘social cost of carbon’? 2 energy experts explain after court ruling blocks Biden's changes
  11. Whether up in smoke or down the toilet, missing presidential records are a serious concern
  12. In research studies and in real life, placebos have a powerful healing effect on the body and mind
  13. Your sense of privacy evolved over millennia – that puts you at risk today but could improve technology tomorrow
  14. 4 ways to help STEM majors stay the course
  15. This god shoots love darts – but no, it's not Cupid
  16. Supreme Court's ruling on Alabama voting map could open the door to a new Wild West of state redistricting
  17. Puerto Rico has a plan to recover from bankruptcy — but the deal won't ease people's daily struggles
  18. The advantages of museum philanthropy that builds staff diversity rather than new wings and galleries
  19. What the mythical Cupid can teach us about the meaning of love and desire
  20. The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl – and in all other sports
  21. Heat waves hit the poor hardest – a new study calculates the rising impact on those least able to adapt to the warming climate
  22. How raising interest rates curbs inflation – and what could possibly go wrong
  23. What The Conversation talks about when it talks about football: 3 essential reads ahead of the Super Bowl
  24. How Joe Rogan became podcasting's Goliath
  25. The shameful stories of environmental injustices at Japanese American incarceration camps during WWII
  26. A brief history of the NFL, 'The Star-Spangled Banner,' the Super Bowl and their tangled saga of patriotism and dissent
  27. Inmates' hunger strikes take powerful stands against injustice
  28. In countries more biased against women, higher COVID-19 death rates for men might not tell an accurate story
  29. No-knock warrants, a relic of the 'war on drugs,' face renewed criticism after Minneapolis death
  30. What makes a fruit flavorful? Artificial intelligence can help optimize cultivars to match consumer preferences
  31. New research suggests modern humans lived in Europe 10,000 years earlier than previously thought, in Neanderthal territories
  32. Ski jump: Flying or falling with style?
  33. Partnering up can help you grow as an individual – here's the psychology of a romantic relationship that expands the self
  34. Pandemic-related school closings likely to have far-reaching effects on child well-being
  35. Disasters can wipe out affordable housing forever unless communities plan ahead – that loss hurts the economy
  36. Disasters can wipe out affordable housing for years unless communities plan ahead – the loss hurts the entire local economy
  37. Dogs can be trained to sniff out COVID-19 – a team of forensic researchers explain the science
  38. The Jan. 6 Capitol attacks offer a reminder – distrust in government has long been part of Republicans' playbook
  39. Japan's Shinto religion is going global and attracting online followers
  40. New evidence of discrimination against Black coaches in the NFL since 2018
  41. How Lourdes became a byword for hope
  42. The 50 biggest US donors gave or pledged nearly $28 billion in 2021 – Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates account for $15 billion of that total
  43. Olympic skiers and snowboarders are competing on 100% fake snow – the science of how it's made and how it affects performance
  44. What is 'legitimate political discourse,' and does it include the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol?
  45. Midlife isn't a crisis, but sleep, stress and happiness feel a little different after 35 – or whenever middle age actually begins
  46. Whoopi Goldberg awkwardly demonstrates how the idea of race varies by place and changes over time
  47. Why are some Roman Catholic saints called doctors of the church?
  48. Students are suspended less when their teacher has the same race or ethnicity
  49. The fastest population growth in the West's wildland fringes is in ecosystems most vulnerable to wildfires
  50. The fastest population growth in the West's wildland-urban interface is in areas most vulnerable to wildfires