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Should NSA and Cyber Command have separate leadership?

  • Written by Stuart Madnick, Professor of Information Technology and Engineering Systems, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
imageShould one person lead two different government agencies?U.S. government images

The National Security Agency is the nation’s digital spying organization. U.S. Cyber Command is a military unit focused on cyberwarfare. Does it make sense for one person to lead them both at the same time?

That has been the case since Cyber Command’s...

Read more: Should NSA and Cyber Command have separate leadership?

Tired of getting stuck with needles? Ask your doctor to just say 'once.'

  • Written by Christopher Moriates, Assistant Dean for Healthcare Value, Dell Medical School, University of Texas at Austin
imagePatient and doctor in hospital room.From www.shuttertock.com

There are few worse ways to awake a person than with a needle stick in the arm to draw blood. If you have ever spent the night in a hospital, chances are the first thing that happened in the morning was a vampiric nurse or lab technician, following doctor’s orders, standing over...

Read more: Tired of getting stuck with needles? Ask your doctor to just say 'once.'

Kaine vs. Pence: Two key moments from the debate

  • Written by Kyle C. Kopko, Associate Professor of Political Science, Elizabethtown College

Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine and Indiana Gov. Mike Pence took the debate stage Tuesday evening. As America was getting acquainted with the vice presidential candidates, we asked two scholars to pick a key quote from the evening and tell us why it was important.

Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University

“I tried to stand for the ancient...

Read more: Kaine vs. Pence: Two key moments from the debate

Before Nobels: Gifts to and from rich patrons were early science's currency

  • Written by Vera Keller, Associate Professor of History, University of Oregon
imageGalileo demonstrates a telescope to the doge of Venice. Giuseppe Bertini

While the Nobel Prizes are 115 years old, rewards for scientific achievement have been around much longer. As early as the 17th century, at the very origins of modern experimental science, promoters of science realized the need for some system of recognition and reward that...

Read more: Before Nobels: Gifts to and from rich patrons were early science's currency

What Twitter's streaming experiment means for the future of live TV

  • Written by Amanda Lotz, Professor of Communication Studies and Screen Arts & Cultures, University of Michigan
imageThe roll-out has been a bit clunky, but there's potential.'Bird' via www.shutterstock.com

Yet another way to watch television has emerged.

More than two million viewers watched some of the Thursday night NFL football game on Twitter each of the last three weeks, and several million more used it to watch the first presidential debate.

For those who...

Read more: What Twitter's streaming experiment means for the future of live TV

As Brazil tilts rightward, Lula's leftist legacy of lifting the poor is at risk

  • Written by Terry L. McCoy, Professor Emeritus of Latin American Studies and Political Science, University of Florida

The Brazilian senate’s impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff in August ended about 13 years of center-left government by the Workers Party (PT). Then in September, a federal judge dealt the party and its legacy an equally devastating blow when he indicted her predecessor and party icon, Luis Inacio “Lula” da Silva, on...

Read more: As Brazil tilts rightward, Lula's leftist legacy of lifting the poor is at risk

Why insurance companies control your medical care

  • Written by Christy Ford Chapin, Visiting scholar at Johns Hopkins University and Assistant Professor of History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

It’s that time of year again. Insurance companies that participate in the Affordable Care Act’s state health exchanges are signaling that prices will risedramatically this fall.

And if insurance costs aren’t enough of a crisis, researchers are highlighting deficiencies in health care quality, such as unnecessary tests and...

Read more: Why insurance companies control your medical care

Science is key to U.S. standing, but presidential candidates largely ignore it

  • Written by Bernadette Gray-Little, Chancellor, University of Kansas

Aside from Hillary Clinton’s brief mentions of the need to focus on developing technology and clean energy jobs and addressing climate change, science issues were absent from the first presidential debate.

Unfortunately, this is indicative of how things have gone throughout the 2016 campaign. Amid all the talk from our leading presidential...

Read more: Science is key to U.S. standing, but presidential candidates largely ignore it

The irony of the Anthropocene: People dominate a planet beyond our control

  • Written by Nicholas C. Kawa, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, The Ohio State University
imageWe've left our mark on the planet in many ways.NASA, CC BY

It’s becoming increasingly commonplace to suggest that humans now dominate the planet. Earlier this year the Anthropocene Working Group officially proposed that we live in a new geological epoch, one characterized by humanity’s far-reaching impacts on Earth.

Many researchers see...

Read more: The irony of the Anthropocene: People dominate a planet beyond our control

Why the Kaine vs. Pence vice presidential debate matters

  • Written by Kyle C. Kopko, Associate Professor of Political Science, Elizabethtown College

Tim Kaine and Mike Pence both have been described as boring.

Many Americans still don’t know who they are, and they share their parties’ tickets with two of the most controversial and unpopular presidential candidates in modern political history. So, it’s a safe bet that their first and only debate on Tuesday night will not draw...

Read more: Why the Kaine vs. Pence vice presidential debate matters

More Articles ...

  1. Is changing one's race a sign of mental health problems?
  2. What it means to be black in the American educational system
  3. We're failing to solve the world's 'wicked problems.' Here's a better approach
  4. Can Trump create millions of jobs? Don't bet on it
  5. Why Bruce Springsteen's depression revelation matters
  6. Why did Yahoo take so long to disclose its massive security breach?
  7. How to vote for president when you don't like the candidates
  8. Want to understand your child’s test scores? Here’s what to ignore
  9. How trade and immigration are colliding with our two-party system
  10. The curious origin of the double-conk theory for curing amnesia
  11. Déjà vu: Positive train control could have prevented Hoboken accident as officials run out of track on excuses
  12. Putin’s cyber play: What are all these Russian hackers up to?
  13. Why the pundits are wrong about Hillary Clinton dominating the debate
  14. Why dementia burden may be less than feared
  15. The psychology behind why clowns creep us out
  16. Making college affordable: Eight essential reads
  17. The U.S. economy is in desperate need of a strong dose of fiscal penicillin
  18. Climate change and the presidential race: Lessons from the Reagan years
  19. Underwater robots help scientists see where marine larvae go and how they get there
  20. If you want to publish a truly subversive novel, have a main character who's fat
  21. Alexander Hamilton and the new Supreme Court term
  22. Feed a virus but starve bacteria? When you're sick, it may really matter
  23. Why America needs the virtues of humility
  24. What drives lone offenders?
  25. Group work gets kids more engaged in STEM
  26. When did Che Guevara become CEO? The roots of the new corporate activism
  27. Four quotes from the first Clinton-Trump debate, explained
  28. Will driving your own car become the socially unacceptable public health risk smoking is today?
  29. Addicted to oil: US gasoline consumption is higher than ever
  30. Removing gender bias from algorithms
  31. Why a Zika vaccine is a long way off
  32. Trump, Clinton and the future of global democracy
  33. What's behind America's insistence on instilling grit in kids?
  34. Will Colombia's peace deal get the people's vote?
  35. How the Jim Crow internet is pushing back against Black Lives Matter
  36. Trump and Clinton debate strategies that can make anyone a better public speaker
  37. Five key debate moments that altered the course of a presidential race
  38. Public universities are under threat – not just by outside reformers
  39. Can public transit and ride-share companies get along?
  40. How do antibiotic-resistant bacteria get into the environment?
  41. Is Philippine President Duterte a threat to the peace in Southeast Asia?
  42. Feds: We can read all your email, and you'll never know
  43. The NFL joins the data revolution in sports
  44. Refugees, migration addressed in first-time UN summit: What was accomplished?
  45. Scientist at work: Tracking melt water under the Greenland ice sheet
  46. Here's how to raise a child to be sympathetic
  47. Was the Fed right to delay raising interest rates? Two scholars react
  48. Police shootings and race in America: Five essential reads
  49. How corporate America can curb income inequality and make more money too
  50. Why isn’t science better? Look at career incentives