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  • Study identifies political divides over green transport initiatives and how to bridge them
    Green transport initiatives such as bicycle lanes or creating spaces for electric vehicle charging points have become heated political battlegrounds in the United Kingdom, and British people respond to such proposals broadly in line with their political party preference and political orientation, new research from the University of Bath shows.... Read more
  • When politicians gain power, their language becomes garbled
    It's well known that governing parties often lose voters over time—the so-called cost of governing. But a new study from Frederik Hjorth, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Copenhagen, documents a lesser-known but potentially crucial side effect of being in government: politicians begin to speak less simply... Read more
  • Disabling images and videos on WhatsApp cut misinformation exposure during Brazilian election, study finds
    Elected officials, political analysts, and nonprofit organizations have for years spotlighted the spread of online election information in Western democracies—largely with a focus on media platforms popular in these nations, such as X and Facebook.... Read more
  • Nearly half of New Jerseyans say state is on wrong track, citing taxes, affordability and cost of living
    New Jerseyans continue to give a somewhat split assessment on the direction of the Garden State, and pocketbook issues top the list of residents' biggest concerns, according to the latest Rutgers-Eagleton Poll.... Read more
  • Using TikTok could be making you more politically polarized, new study finds
    People on TikTok tend to follow accounts that align with their own political beliefs, meaning the platform is creating political echo chambers among its users. These findings, from a study my collaborators, Yanlin Li and Homero Gil de Zúñiga, and I published in the academic journal New Media & Society,... Read more
  • Self-censorship and the 'spiral of silence': Why Americans are less likely to publicly voice their political opinions
    For decades, Americans' trust in one another has been on the decline, according to the most recent General Social Survey.... Read more
  • Seeing men as the 'default' may be tied to attitudes towards politicians and Black people
    In an international study, participants' attitudes toward certain social groups—namely, politicians and Black people—were more strongly related to their attitudes towards the men than the women of each group, suggesting that men are the "default" for attitudes towards these groups.... Read more
  • In UK study, the risk of certain types of crime, but not others, increase after dark
    A UK study of data on more than 30,000 crimes sheds new light on crime after dark, suggesting that the overall risk of crime rises when darkness falls, but that risk varies depending on type of crime and geographical area. Jim Uttley of the University of Sheffield, UK, and colleagues... Read more
  • States increasingly preempting local laws governing transgender rights
    The number of state laws preempting local policies governing transgender rights in the United States has been steadily increasing since 2019, according to newly updated research by the Center for Public Health Law Research at Temple University School of Law.... Read more
  • Strategic choices behind accounting standards unveiled in new study
    A new study by Dr. Heylel-li Biton of the Hebrew University Business School sheds light on a long-standing question in global finance: Why do foreign firms listed in the United States choose one accounting regime over another?... Read more
  • The war won't end Iran's nuclear program—it will drive it underground, following North Korea's model
    The United States' and Israel's strikes on Iran are concerning, and not just for the questionable legal justifications provided by both governments.... Read more
  • Overconfident conspiracy theorists: Many unaware their beliefs are on the fringe
    Overconfidence is a hallmark trait of people who believe in conspiracies, and they also significantly overestimate how much others agree with them, Cornell psychology researchers have found. The study indicates that belief in conspiracies may be less about a person's needs and motivations and more about their failure to recognize... Read more
  • Q&A: Why is politically motivated violence on the rise in the US?
    A gunman entered the homes of two Minnesota lawmakers on June 14, killing one representative and her spouse and wounding the second couple. The incidents—which coincided with a major military parade in Washington, D.C., and thousands of "No Kings" rallies across the nation—are the latest in a growing number of... Read more
  • Polite political punditry may be quietly silencing women on TV
    Civility isn't gender equality's friend in televised political discussions, where women typically speak less and are shown less respect than men, according to a new study of gendered conversational norms co-authored by a University of Massachusetts Amherst researcher.... Read more
  • Research links 2016 migration agreement to rise in central Mediterranean fatalities and route changes
    Migration agreements between "transit countries," such as Turkey or Libya, and Europe have in recent years become the norm as emergency measures to try to stop irregular migration.... Read more
  • Black women's beauty, fashion choices intertwined with Black history, politics
    Black women's beauty and fashion are complex, meaningful acts, deliberate strategies for engaging with the world that make bold statements about identity, political resistance and empowerment, Black women said in a recent study.... Read more
  • Shifting from quantity to quality in climate adaptation finance to create real impact
    The quantity of adaptation finance has been a controversial political issue, and a critical negotiating point for developing countries in international climate negotiations. At the United Nations climate conference (COP29) in Baku last year, developed countries agreed to provide more money for climate adaptation in emerging market and developing economies.... Read more
  • More and more people are missing from official census data
    Researchers are warning that millions of people around the world aren't being counted in census and survey data, leaving policymakers in the dark about the populations they govern.... Read more
  • Police in England and Wales to get more money—but increasing funding won't necessarily mean less crime
    Police spending will rise by a real-terms 2.3% per year between now and 2028–29, the government announced in its latest spending review, drawn from local council tax. The government says this will help its mission to put 13,000 neighborhood police on the streets, and "keep communities safe."... Read more
  • How discussion becomes discord: Three avoidable steps on the path to polarization
    Many of us have become immersed in debates with family about a contentious political issue, or found ourselves on the other side of a political divide than our friends. In these contentious times, it can be all too easy for courteous debate to devolve into polarized discord.... Read more
  • Study finds rival news sources may escalate misinformation to attract audiences
    When news sources aligned to a particular business or political ideology choose to share misinformation, it can trigger an "arms race" where their rivals start sharing their own misinformation to compete, according to an international research study.... Read more
  • Coal power plants were paid to close. Is it time to do the same for slaughterhouses?
    The food industry will go to great lengths (and spend a fortune) to lobby policymakers, confuse the public and politicize scientific findings. You can see the results in the UK's delay of a ban on junk food advertisers targeting children, or the orchestrated backlash to a report that recommended cutting... Read more
  • Study from student-led group exposes scope of laws targeting unhoused people in California
    A new report from UC Berkeley Law's student-led Homelessness Service Project (HSP), available on the SSRN preprint server, analyzes the impact of a crackdown on California's unhoused population since the U.S. Supreme Court's Grants Pass v. Johnson decision last summer.... Read more
  • How to make sure the new grooming gangs investigation is the last
    Louise Casey's recent report on grooming gangs and child sexual exploitation in the UK lays bare institutional failings. It highlights that, at present, victims cannot rely upon the criminal justice system—and that it has badly let them down in the past.... Read more
  • Why a US court allowed a dead man to deliver his own victim impact statement—via an AI avatar
    In November 2021, in the city of Chandler, Arizona, Chris Pelkey was shot and killed by Gabriel Horcasitas in a road rage altercation.... Read more
  • How artificial delegates can help us act more socially—yet still fail to achieve collective goals
    Can artificial delegates—autonomous agents that make decisions on our behalf—help us reach better outcomes in situations where collective failure looms, such as climate change policymaking or the urgent response required during pandemics?... Read more
  • Study finds Republicans flagged for posting misleading tweets twice as often as Democrats on Community Notes
    New research from the Oxford Internet Institute at Oxford University, in partnership with researchers at Panthéon-Sorbonne and the MIT Sloan School of Management, reveals partisan differences in which posts get flagged as misleading by the social media platform X's Community Notes program. The study's findings show that misinformation is shared... Read more
  • AI perceived more negatively than climate science or science in general
    ChatGPT was released to the public in late 2022, and the promise and perils of artificial intelligence (AI) have loomed large in the public consciousness ever since. Because perceptions of a new technology like AI can help shape how the technology is developed and used, it is important to understand... Read more
  • Is ranked choice voting a good electoral system? New York City could be a test case, experts say
    New York City's mayoral election has become the race to watch because of its surprisingly competitive nature but also the electoral system that's helped it become so competitive: ranked choice voting.... Read more
  • Iran-Israel 'threshold war' has rewritten nuclear escalation rules
    Israel's conflict with Iran represents far more than another Middle Eastern crisis—it marks the emergence of a dangerous new chapter in nuclear rivalries that has the potential to reshape global proliferation risks for decades to come.... Read more
  • 'Dark' personality traits thrive in societies with corruption and inequality, global study shows
    A new global study shows that people in societies characterized by corruption, inequality, poverty, and violence are more likely to develop aversive, "dark" personality characteristics such as selfishness or spitefulness.... Read more
  • Integrated model explains violent extremism
    What makes a person willing to use violence?... Read more
  • Expert Q&A: Could artificial intelligence make war and peace decisions?
    NPR recently reported that the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Futures Lab is experimenting with tools such as DeepSeek and ChatGPT to explore how artificial intelligence could change—and improve—how foreign policy decisions are made.... Read more
  • Geographic bias in virus naming: Lessons from coronavirus show it's better to act early
    "China virus," the Chinese virus—at the start of the 2020 pandemic, this epithet was often encountered in the media. The use of geographically based labels to define the disease (COVID-19) and the virus causing it (SARS-CoV-2) had significant consequences on public opinion, fueling and amplifying—sometimes with very serious outcomes—prejudices against... Read more
  • Why coalitions with populists fail sooner: Study finds instability due to political style, not radical ideology
    Populist parties have long ceased to be a marginal phenomenon. They are now an established political force in many European countries and are fundamentally challenging the democratic system. These parties use harsh rhetoric against the "elite" and present themselves as the sole representatives of the "true will of the people."... Read more
  • Higher energy prices reduce support for climate policy, survey shows
    Households affected by high electricity prices during the energy crisis tend to be more negative toward climate policy. Research from the School of Business, Economics and Law at the University of Gothenburg shows that perceived unfairness reinforces misconceptions about fuel taxes.... Read more
  • Federal R&D funding boosts productivity for the whole economy. Making big cuts to such government spending unwise
    Large cuts to government-funded research and development can endanger American innovation—and the vital productivity gains it supports.... Read more
  • AI models show promise in evaluating complex forensic evidence in legal contexts
    An international research collaboration used AI as research participants and discovered that knowledge-enhanced large language models are able to critically assess forensic expert testimonies.... Read more
  • What's the potential effect of sanctions on Israeli ministers? Here's what my research shows
    Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway and the UK this week announced sanctions against two members of the Israeli cabinet: National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.... Read more
  • Remember when corporate America steered clear of politics on social media?
    There was a time when corporate America was not very online. Most companies used social media for promoting products and services or engaging with consumers in a friendly fashion. Political posts on a company Twitter account were rare.... Read more
  • New study challenges assumptions linking racial attitudes and political identity in U.S. cities
    Nearly 40% of U.S. cities analyzed in a study in NPJ Complexity diverge from the common narrative that Republican-dominated areas have high levels of implicit racial bias while Democratic strongholds are more tolerant.... Read more
  • Higher levels of trust in people and institutions linked to greater well-being
    People with higher levels of trust—in both others and institutions—report higher levels of subjective well-being, an important indicator of quality of life and predictor of health and longevity, than those with lower levels of trust, according to research published in Psychological Bulletin.... Read more
  • Assessing the current state of polycrises and systemic risk research
    The COVID-19 pandemic, Russia's war on Ukraine, geopolitical tensions, climate change and other events highlight our growing exposure to complex, interconnected, and intertwining risks. In view of this development, the focus of risk research has shifted towards the comprehensive analysis of interconnected and mutually interactive risk sources and crises.... Read more
  • Partial peace deals may facilitate comprehensive accords, offering roadmap for policymakers
    Over the past two decades, conflicts in more than 40 countries, including El Salvador, Northern Ireland, Senegal and the Philippines, have ended in comprehensive peace agreements. But these broader accords don't happen all at once.... Read more
  • Couples with opposing political views face higher risk of separation, study finds
    A recent study by researchers at the University of Padua and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) has revealed that political differences between partners can significantly increase the risk of separation. Using long-term data from UK couples, the researchers found that those with different party preferences were substantially... Read more
  • Voters share a unified view of politicians who punish corporate free speech
    A new study by Northwestern University asks whether voters approve of politicians who use the power of their office to retaliate against corporate political speech criticizing the politician's actions.... Read more
  • Antagonism to transgender rights is tied to the authoritarian desire for social conformity
    Since becoming president, Donald Trump has aggressively sought to fulfill his campaign promise to reverse the Biden administration's protection of transgender Americans.... Read more
  • Data reveal sharp increase in conflicts and wars
    The number of armed conflicts in the world reached a historic high in 2024. This is shown by new data from the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP) at Uppsala University. Despite a marginal decrease in total fatalities, targeted violence against civilians increased significantly.... Read more
  • How cable news has increasingly diverged from broadcast news
    Walter Cronkite was often cited as "the most trusted man in America" as he delivered the news on CBS in the 1960s and '70s—a time when fewer news options created a "shared reality" that scholars argue fostered civic engagement, empathy, and shared national identity. The situation looks quite different in... Read more
  • Fake news and real cannibalism: A cautionary tale from the Dutch Golden Age
    The Dutch Golden Age, beginning in 1588, is known for the art of Rembrandt, the invention of the microscope, and the spice trade of the Dutch East India Company. It ended a little under a century later in a frenzy of body parts and mob justice.... Read more

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  • Self-healing electronic material uses graphene and polymer blend to mimic skin

    June 25, 2025
    Researchers at DTU have developed a new kind of electronic material that behaves almost exactly like human skin. The substance could be useful in soft robotics, medicine, and health care.This post was originally published on [...]

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  • 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 [...]
  • What To Do If You Have a Warrant for Your Arrest

    March 4, 2025
    Finding out that there’s an active warrant out for your arrest can be quite overwhelming. Whether it’s a misunderstanding, an oversight, or something more serious, knowing what to do next is paramount. The first step [...]

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  • More refunds are being sent to Fortnite players ‘tricked’ into unwanted purchases. How you can apply

    June 26, 2025
    The U.S. Federal Trade Commission is sending out the latest round of refunds to consumers it says were “tricked” into purchases they didn’t want from [...]
  • Reports of coming layoffs swirl at Microsoft as workers worry they’re next

    June 26, 2025
    Microsoft employees aren’t getting much time to take a breath between layoff rounds as thousands could be let go in early July, according to news [...]
  • Blocking exports and raising tariffs is a bad defense against industrial cyber espionage, study shows

    June 25, 2025
    The United States is trying to decouple its economy from rivals like China. Efforts toward this include policymakers raising tariffs on Chinese goods, blocking exports [...]
  • US judge backs using copyrighted books to train AI

    June 24, 2025
    A US federal judge has sided with Anthropic regarding training its artificial intelligence models on copyrighted books without authors’ permission, a decision with the potential [...]
  • UK antitrust watchdog says Google may have to offer rival search options

    June 24, 2025
    Google could be forced to let British users choose whether to use rival search services, the country’s antitrust watchdog said Tuesday as it proposed using [...]

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