Society, Law & Politics
- A 色戒成人直播 researcher has found that practice reduces racial bias in a first-person shooter simulation鈥攂ut the benefits only go so far.
- What made Tuesday鈥檚 verdict so unique, and will it lead to lasting change? In this Q&A, three 色戒成人直播聽experts in law; sociology,聽crime trends and policing;聽and Africana studies and criminology give their takes.
- Sandra Ristovska is undertaking the first rigorous publicly engaged research project to address the intricacies of 鈥渟eeing鈥 in court,聽systematically examining聽the use of video as evidence in state and federal court trials in criminal, immigration and American Indian law.聽
- Language is part of who we are and everything we do, but what we do has significantly changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Chase Raymond, associate professor of linguistics, sheds some light on how linguistics applies to our everyday lives and how the way we communicate adapts to new challenges.
- A nation-wide effort first launched in New Hampshire in 2009 is enlisting gun retailers in the fight against suicide. Researchers at 色戒成人直播 want to learn how it's working and what can be done to make it work even better.
- In the years after female faculty members have children, their productivity鈥撯搃n terms of papers published鈥撯揹rops 20 percent. Male faculty see no such decline. Researchers say different roles in parenting are likely to blame and the gap could have long-term impacts on higher education.
- Facial recognition technology is now embedded in everything from our phones and computers to surveillance systems at the mall and airport. But it tends to misidentify certain populations and can be used to discriminate. Microsoft Research Fellow Morgan Klaus Scheuerman wants to change that.
- Cities are not all the same, or at least their evolution isn鈥檛, according to new research from 色戒成人直播.
- Years ago, a 色戒成人直播 professor warned of violence fueled by viral lies from former president Donald J. Trump.
- Historian Vilja Hulden, who聽is conducting a sweeping analysis of congressional lobbying from 1877 onward, has landed a major fellowship that will support her research.