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  • Defendants in sexual assault cases are just as likely to misremember the event as alleged victims—new study
    Psychologists have intensively studied the factors that make both eyewitnesses and victims more or less susceptible to memory distortion. But to date there has been no experimental evidence comparing memory suggestibility between the complainants and accused in sexual assault cases.... Read more
  • 'Prebunking' false claims can increase public trust in elections
    With control of Congress and a check on the Trump administration at issue in the 2026 midterm elections, the upcoming election cycle may again see claims of voter fraud. But warning voters beforehand that there may be false claims about the election, and providing them with information on election security... Read more
  • Exposing the propaganda of the Christchurch terrorist
    The Christchurch terrorist's so-called manifesto wasn't an honest account of his motives, but a calculated piece of propaganda designed to mislead the public, manipulate emotions and inspire further violence.... Read more
  • Universities could bolster democracy by fostering students' AI literacy
    The fears are familiar: Artificial intelligence is going to eat our jobs, make our students weak and lazy and possibly destroy democracy for good measure.... Read more
  • Being funny can help populist politicians create bonds and get voters on board
    Humor has become one of the most potent weapons in the populist politician's playbook. Comedic populists like Donald Trump, Boris Johnson, Nigel Farage and Argentinian president Javier Milei use ridicule, absurdity and sarcasm not just to entertain, but to deflect criticism, confuse opponents and present themselves as relatable outsiders. Their... Read more
  • Why countries trade with each other while fighting
    In World War II, Britain was fighting for its survival against German aerial bombardment. Yet Britain was importing dyes from Germany at the same time. This sounds curious, to put it mildly. How can two countries at war with each other also be trading goods?... Read more
  • Political polar opposites may be more alike than they think
    The brains of politically extreme individuals, whether left- or right-leaning, appear to respond to and process political information in surprisingly similar ways, according to research published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. The paper is titled "Politically extreme individuals exhibit similar neural processing despite ideological differences."... Read more
  • How AI can build bridges between nations, if diplomats use it wisely
    AI is already changing the way many of us work, but in the delicate art of diplomatic relations between nations, a former diplomat has warned colleagues to be careful using the tool.... Read more
  • Political parties mostly ignore existing economic inequality, large-scale analysis finds
    Growing dissatisfaction among the population, loss of trust in politics, increase in crime and violence: Economic inequality leads to a variety of social consequences. Nevertheless, the issue plays a much smaller role in the election manifestos of political parties both in Germany and in other countries than researchers had previously... Read more
  • Researcher builds blueprint to combat human trafficking
    University of Texas at Arlington researcher Kathleen Preble is expanding her human trafficking research from Missouri to Texas, aiming to create a blueprint other states can use to address this growing problem.... Read more
  • 'From outgroup hate to ingroup love': How political crises cause a shift in viral online content
    While previous research shows outrage and division drive engagement on social media, a new study of digital behavior during the 2024 US election finds that this effect flips during a major crisis—when "ingroup solidarity" becomes the engine of online virality.... Read more
  • Forget the warm fuzzies of finding common ground: To beat polarization, try changing your expectations
    More than 70% of voters in Colorado's Douglas County, conservative and progressive alike, voted "no" on home rule in June 2025. The ballot measure would have granted the county increased control over certain local matters such as building zoning, parking rules and sewer maintenance.... Read more
  • From public confession to private penance: How Catholic confession has evolved over centuries
    The 1953 Alfred Hitchcock film "I Confess," based on an earlier play, features a priest suspected of murder. He's innocent, and has even heard the murderer's confession—but cannot clear his own name.... Read more
  • Are women better lawmakers than men? A nuanced yes, researcher finds
    Women face an uphill battle to political election, and they continue to confront barriers to success afterward. But the type of legislature in their states can make a difference.... Read more
  • At a low point in US race relations, Black teachers are essential—and at risk
    Millions of U.S. students are returning this month to schools that are struggling with strained resources, immigration crackdowns and divisive culture war fights. Teachers are under intense pressure—and UC Berkeley scholar Travis J. Bristol says that stress often falls most heavily on Black teachers.... Read more
  • Pseudolaw is high theater, but no laughing matter for the courts
    The Australian legal system is grappling with a disruptive new movement that is not only tying up the courts, councils and police, but also posing an unprecedented threat to democracy.... Read more
  • Why people embrace conspiracy theories: It's about community, not gullibility
    Psychologists have long considered how a tendency towards irrational thinking or particular personality traits might predict people's interest in conspiracies. Yet these individual factors do not explain the group processes through which conspiracy theorists are extending their influence and impact.... Read more
  • Study links low rainfall to increased conflict between African pastoralists and farmers
    Since 1990, more than 2.5 million people have died as a direct or indirect result of civil conflict in Africa. One of the causes of conflict, which increasingly involves clashes between predominantly Muslim herding and Christian farming communities, may well have been competition over agricultural resources, brought on by the... Read more
  • The 'Mississippi Bubble' and the complex history of Haiti
    Many things account for Haiti's modern troubles. A good perspective on them comes from going back in time to 1715 or so—and grappling with a far-flung narrative involving the French monarchy, a financial speculator named John Law, and a stock-market crash called the "Mississippi Bubble."... Read more
  • Unethical medical research under National Socialism: Researchers publish database for science and remembrance
    There were tens of thousands of human victims of coerced medical research under the German National Socialist regime. An important approach to processing these crimes involves raising awareness of the individual fates of those affected and thus giving them back their names and histories.... Read more
  • Punitive laws on substance use in pregnancy may do more harm than good
    U.S. states are increasingly adopting legislation to address substance use among pregnant and postpartum individuals. But a new study from Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health finds that punitive laws are largely ineffective and may actually harm those they aim to protect. These laws can undermine trust between patients... Read more
  • The case for trade-proofing Australia's new vape laws
    Australia has recently rolled out some of the world's toughest laws aimed at curbing the youth vaping epidemic. But new research published in Tobacco Control demonstrates these crucial public health measures could be vulnerable unless policymakers prepare to defend them on the world stage.... Read more
  • Study: When punishers profit, people are more likely to break the rules
    UC San Diego researchers show that paying enforcers to punish makes people less likely to cooperate with others, which has major implications for law-enforcement quotas, asset forfeiture, and for-profit prisons.... Read more
  • Laws are introduced globally to reduce 'psychological harm' online, but there's no clear definition of what it is
    Several pieces of legislation across the world are coming into effect this year to tackle harms experienced online, such as the UK's Online Safety Act and Australia's Online Safety Act. There are also new standards, regulations, acts and laws related to digital products (including smart devices such as voice assistants,... Read more
  • The accommodation crisis plaguing Cop30, Brazil's upcoming UN climate summit
    Cop30, the UN climate summit scheduled to take place this November in the Brazilian city of Belém, is embroiled in a controversy that has nothing to do with solving the planet's environmental problems. Currently occupying debate about the conference is what Brazil's press is calling the "hosting crisis."... Read more
  • California Jews experiencing heightened depression, anxiety since 2023 Hamas violence
    California Jews are reporting significantly greater symptoms of depression and anxiety since the Hamas attacks on Israeli civilians in October 2023, according to a University of California, Davis, study.... Read more
  • How the rise of Craigslist helped fuel America's political polarization
    A new study highlights how disruptions in classifieds impacted political coverage, creating opportunities for more extreme candidates.... Read more
  • Why has trust in news fallen? The answer is more complicated than we thought
    We live in an age of declining trust in public institutions: parliament, the health and education systems, courts and police have all suffered over the past decade, both in New Zealand and internationally.... Read more
  • New research shows WWII dominates Australians' knowledge of military history. But big gaps remain
    Eighty years ago this week, Japan surrendered after nearly four years of war in the Asia-Pacific. For Australia, this meant the end of not only the war in the Pacific, but also the Second World War that had begun six years earlier, in September 1939.... Read more
  • A new study shows that fear of deportation changes with age
    Fear of deportation among people in the United States without permanent legal status declines with age, according to a study recently published by a University of Oregon researcher.... Read more
  • Exactly what is in the Ivy League deals with the Trump administration, and how they compare
    The Trump administration and Harvard University are reportedly close to reaching a settlement that would require Harvard to pay US$500 million in exchange for the government releasing frozen federal funding and ending an investigation into antisemitism on campus.... Read more
  • Why being open about science can make people trust it less, and what to do about it
    When people trust science, they can make better decisions, follow helpful rules and work together on big problems like health, climate change and new technology. But if people stop trusting science, it's easier for false information to spread, and harder to solve those problems.... Read more
  • How a few adjustments can improve online political debates
    Online political debates are often characterized by sharp divisions, personal attacks and a low level of information. But a new study from the University of Copenhagen and King's College London shows that this does not have to be the case. By adjusting just a few elements in the way we... Read more
  • Youth violence prevention program shown to reduce arrests by up to 75%
    A CU Boulder-led initiative to reduce youth violence in hard-hit Denver neighborhoods was associated with a 75% decline in arrests for murder, assault, robbery and other youth crimes in recent years, new research shows.... Read more
  • Experts urge policies that recognize women's vital role in development
    Researchers at the King Center on Global Development are addressing challenges such as gender-based violence and low labor participation, with the aim to inform supportive policy interventions.... Read more
  • 4 out of 5 US troops surveyed understand the duty to disobey illegal orders
    With his Aug. 11, 2025, announcement that he was sending the National Guard—along with federal law enforcement—into Washington, D.C. to fight crime, President Donald Trump edged U.S. troops closer to the kind of military-civilian confrontations that can cross ethical and legal lines.... Read more
  • Why people reclaim words meant to insult them—and how this has become a powerful tool for protest
    In 2013, a wave of protests began in Turkey in opposition to the planned demolition of Gezi Park in Istanbul. The protests soon evolved into mass anti-government demonstrations, and a landmark moment in the country's history of resistance.... Read more
  • Gerrymandering erodes confidence in democracy
    When politicians redraw congressional district maps to favor their party, they may secure short-term victories. But those wins can come at a steep price—a loss of public faith in elections and, ultimately, in democracy itself.... Read more
  • Half of US adults now use AI—but views on how to regulate the technology vary widely by state, new research shows
    Half of U.S. adults report using at least one "major AI tool," but public attitudes about artificial intelligence regulation remain divided nationwide, according to a new survey.... Read more
  • Even online, body language in court still matters
    In the spring of 2020, everything changed. Many people's lives moved online. Court trials were no exception.... Read more
  • Politicians are using social media to campaign. New research tells us what works and what doesn't
    By the time the next US election takes place in 2028, millennial and gen Z voters—who already watch over six hours of media content a day—will make up the majority of the electorate. As gen alpha (people born between 2010 and 2024) also comes of voting age, social media platforms... Read more
  • Newspaper boycott made people in UK city more left wing, study shows
    A study of the Liverpool boycott of The Sun newspaper following the Hillsborough disaster has found that the boycott shaped people's perceptions of political parties and made people more left wing.... Read more
  • Rebuild or relocate? Study finds residents and officials split on flood adaptation spending priorities
    As climate hazards escalate, communities facing repetitive disasters in high-risk areas must weigh the economic and social trade-offs of rebuilding versus relocating. A Risk Analysis study has found that residents and government officials may have different ideas about how public funds should be spent to adapt to extreme weather events... Read more
  • International community must reverse cuts to Rohingya humanitarian aid, study says
    The international community must reverse cuts to humanitarian aid for the Rohingya and work with Dhaka authorities to improve conditions in refugee camps, a new study says. The work is published in the journal Third World Quarterly.... Read more
  • Tariffs can improve U.S. economy, but global trade realities, retaliation, could offset gains
    The United States could achieve modest economic benefits by applying uniform tariffs on all trade partners, according to new research led by a University of California, Davis, economist. However, the complicated realities of supply chains, global trade and its downstream effects on people and businesses could offset economic gains and... Read more
  • In-group perceptions play outsized role in driving political extremism, according to study
    Reducing the rising tide of political extremism—and violence—in the United States and beyond may require a rethinking of how we understand the forces that drive polarization, according to a study from the University of Toronto.... Read more
  • History shows why FEMA is essential in disasters, and how losing independent agency status hurt its ability to function
    When the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency's urban search and rescue team resigned after the deadly July 4, 2025, Texas floods, he told colleagues he was frustrated with bureaucratic hurdles that had delayed the team's response to the disaster, according to media reports. The move highlighted an ongoing... Read more
  • Heroes, victims—and rarely collaborators: Study reveals Nazi era reinterpretation across EU
    Whether in Belgium, Poland, or Ukraine, when asked about their nation's role under Nazi occupation, many Europeans today primarily see their own population as victims—or as heroes. This is the key finding of a cross-national study led by Dr. Fiona Kazarovytska from the Department of Social and Legal Psychology at... Read more
  • With just a few messages, biased AI chatbots swayed people's political views
    If you've interacted with an artificial intelligence chatbot, you've likely realized that all AI models are biased. They were trained on enormous corpuses of unruly data and refined through human instructions and testing. Bias can seep in anywhere. Yet how a system's biases can affect users is less clear.... Read more
  • The hubris arc: How visionary politicians turn into authoritarians
    What turns a democratically elected leader into an authoritarian? The process is rarely abrupt. It unfolds gradually and is often justified as a necessary reform. It is framed as what the people wanted. All this makes it difficult for citizens to recognize what is happening until it's too late.... Read more

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EDITOR’S PICKS:

  • Prehistoric basketweaving inspires new materials for stiff, resilient robots

    August 28, 2025
    Able to undergo repeated compressions without losing their shape, woven materials could form robots, exoskeletons, car parts, architectural components and more.This post was originally published on this site

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  • Commercial Refrigeration Repair

    July 17, 2025
    🧊 Commercial Refrigeration Repair: Keeping Your Business Cool and Compliant In industries where temperature control is critical, commercial refrigeration systems are the unsung heroes. From restaurants and supermarkets to medical labs and floral shops, these [...]
  • Safeguarding Freezers and Bottom Lines: Comprehensive Walk-In Freezer Repair in Focus

    June 23, 2025
    When nothing can thaw, and stock must remain frozen solid, walk-in freezers stand as silent sentinels of enterprise. Whether in grocery store backrooms, seafood markets, or pharmaceutical cold chains, walk-in freezer repair is a critical [...]

More Hot Topics:

  • Austria orders YouTube to give users access to their data

    August 29, 2025
    Austria’s data protection authority said Friday that it has ordered YouTube to comply with EU regulations and respond to requests by users for access to [...]
  • Google is training its AI tools on YouTube videos: These creators aren’t happy

    August 29, 2025
    Santa Ana, California-based entrepreneur Charlie Chang spent years posting finance videos on YouTube before he made a profit.This post was originally published on this site
  • Warehouse automation hasn’t made workers safer—it’s just reshuffled the risk, say researchers

    August 28, 2025
    Rapid advancements in robotics are changing the face of the world’s warehouses, as dangerous and physically taxing tasks are being reassigned en masse from humans [...]
  • Data visualization emerges a key driver of decision-making at organizational and community levels

    August 28, 2025
    Data visualization has emerged as a powerful tool for enabling data-driven decision-making across diverse domains, including business, medicine, and scientific research. However, no comprehensive analysis [...]
  • New energy industries thriving under China’s environmental pressures

    August 28, 2025
    The stringent environmental regulations in China could potentially be enhancing productivity in the new energy sector, research from Harbin University of Science and Technology and [...]

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