By William Cornwell, Associate Professor of Cardiology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Life-changing advances in cardiovascular medicine enabled Cheney to live a productive life well beyond what many heart patients experience. But prevention is the most effective tool of all.
(Full Story)
|
By Shiri Melumad, Assistant Professor of Marketing, University of Pennsylvania
Doing the mental work of connecting the dots across multiple web queries appears to help people understand the material better compared to an AI summary.
(Full Story)
|
By Michal Raucher, Assistant Professor of Jewish Studies, Rutgers University
A court decision allowing Israeli women to take the Chief Rabbinate’s exams is the latest sign of growing recognition for women’s religious learning within Orthodox Judaism.
(Full Story)
|
By Gerard Toal, Professor of Government and International Affairs, Virginia Tech Adis Maksić, Associate Professor of International Relations and European Studies, International Burch University
More than 100,000 people were killed in the Bosnian war. But the peace that ended it in 1995 sowed the seeds for ethnonationalism.
(Full Story)
|
By Morgan Underwood, Ph.D. Candidate in Earth, Environmental and Planetary Sciences, Rice University
Searching for life on other planets requires more than just measuring their distances from their stars. A future NASA telescope may help search for potentially habitable worlds.
(Full Story)
|
By Shannon Gibson, Professor of Environmental Studies, Political Science and International Relations, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Wealthy countries promised billions of dollars to help developing nations adapt to climate change, but the result rests on a shaky foundation of fuzzy accounting.
(Full Story)
|
By Rosemary Sheehan, Professor of Social Work, Monash University
The Victorian government has announced it will send social workers to 20 of the state’s schools to try to reduce violent youth crime.
(Full Story)
|
By Matilda Brindle, Postdoctoral researcher, University of Oxford
If I asked you to imagine your dream snog, chances are it wouldn’t be with a Neanderthal; burly and hirsute as they may be. However, my team’s new research suggests that these squat beefcakes might have been right up your ancestors’ street. In our new paper, colleagues and I investigated kissing in monkeys and apes, including modern humans and Neanderthals, to reconstruct its evolutionary history for the first time. Before we…
(Full Story)
|
By Janine Dixon, Director, Centre of Policy Studies, Victoria University
A horror stretch starting in 2020 saw an entire decade of real wage growth reversed in just three years. It’s a long way back up yet.
(Full Story)
|
By Human Rights Watch
(Beirut,) – Bahraini authorities have detained Ebrahim Sharif, a prominent political activist, for peaceful comments he made in Beirut, Human Rights Watch and the Bahrain Institute for Rights and Democracy (BIRD) said today.Yusuf al-Jamri, a blogger, said that the authorities detained Sharif, former secretary general of Bahrain’s National Democratic Action Society, due to comments he made in Beirut to LuaLuaTV calling for Arabs and Arab governments to support Palestinians. The Bahrain authorities should immediately release him and end their long-standing practice of detaining people for…
(Full Story)
|