Ad for Idea Lobby blogger Emily Badger
Sunday, February 12, 2012   |  Miller-McCune Homepage

in this issue

July-August 2010

The Real Science Gap

By
June 14, 2010

It’s not insufficient schooling or a shortage of scientists. It’s a lack of job opportunities. Americans need the reasonable hope that spending their youth preparing to do science will provide a satisfactory career.

In this issue

Too Much Testosterone?

Our readers wonder whether the primary blame for warfare rests with one hormone.

Bamboo Houses to the Rescue

Bamboo houses combat climate change, encourage economic growth and protect the poor from natural disaster. Why aren’t there more of them?

Snakeheads: the Asian Fish That Terrified Arkansas

How a government team called Operation Mongoose tried to get rid of the invasive northern snakehead by poisoning 400 miles of Arkansas waterways.

The Poverty Solution: Cash

A new book, “Just Give Money to the Poor,” says the poor will spend the cash wisely and boost the economy, too.

Prisoners of the States

A new book, “The Enemy In Our Hands,” looks at how America has treated — and mistreated — prisoners of war through history resonates in the age of terror.

How Congress Uses Twitter

In Congress, Republicans outnumber Democrats on Twitter 2 to 1, according to a diagram that looks at Tweets from both sides of the aisle.

Betting Against the Euro

Why euro-bashers could turn against the dollar, and how they might be stopped.

Which Countries Rank Highest in Adventure?

The Slovak Republic, Israel and the Czech Republic score high marks in the annual Adventure Tourism Development Index.

Can Tourism Be Sustainable?

With Machu Picchu literally sinking into the ground, Peru looks for authentic, eco-friendly ways to grow its travel sector.

‘House,’ ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Violate Codes of Conduct?

Researchers analyzing episodes of ABC’s “Grey’s Anatomy” and Fox’s “House” determine the hospital dramas are “rife” with incidents that violate professional codes of conduct.

Dead But Not Gone

To paraphrase Stalin, one dead body is a fact; a million dead bodies are a point of contention.

‘Courts and Kids’ Argues for Equal School Funding

State courts should stand firm on equal school funding and make sure legislators and governors show kids the money, a law scholar writes.

UCLA’s New School of Thought

A collaboration between UCLA and the Los Angeles school district aims for the kind of bilingual excellence that’s common in Europe.

Can Busing Desegregate Schools Legally?

Perhaps. A Minneapolis experiment offers voluntary busing of minority schoolchildren as a way to deal with segregated schools.

List of Neglected Tropical Diseases

Almost everyone in the world’s “bottom billion” has at least one of a dozen or so tropical diseases that mostly ignored by Western medicine and pharmaceutical companies.

The AIDS Funding Dilemma

In the “AIDS exceptionalism” debate, emotions run high, and the options are difficult: Shift some AIDS funding to other care, or find billions in new support.

Skateboarders Try Riskier Tricks for Women

Researchers find that skateboarders will take more risks with their tricks and boast higher testosterone levels when women are present.

Studies That Stretch to Infinity, and Beyond

As Pixar launches “Toy Story 3,” we look at research the innovative animation studio has inspired.

Counterinsurgency Training by ‘Virtual Human’

Using artificial intelligence and the graphics techniques behind “Avatar,” a USC institute creates “virtual humans” and interactive immersions that train American soldiers to win hearts and minds in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Value of Dead Bird Watching

University of Washington researcher Julia Parrish founded COASST, a nonprofit that allows hundreds of citizens to serve science by cataloging dead birds on West Coast beaches.




Archive



Health

Humayun Finding Medical Advances in Plain Sight

Mark Humayun taps the burgeoning field of bioelectronics to help the blind to see and the lame to walk.



Wonking Class Hero

Profile: Reddy Stayed Steady During Gulf Oil Spill

Marine chemist Christopher Reddy offered dispassionate and scientific analyses of the Gulf oil spill last year when others were losing their heads.



Profile

Viewing Illegal Immigration Through Desert Debris

In the litter scattered across the desert floor, professor Jason De León finds truths about the miserable business of illegal immigration.



News & Options

Street Makeovers Put New Spin on the Block

How community activists are taking city planning into their own hands and creating pedestrian-friendly blocks via pop-up urbanism.



Graphic Art

Do You Know Where Your Medicine Came From?

Here's look at where the stuff in your medicine cabinet was manufactured. Just don’t ask if these foreign-made drugs are safe, because in many cases, it’s impossible to say.

Bridging the Budget Gap With Stolen Lunch Money

Results of a survey from the American Association of School Administrators shows how K-12 school officials across the country made cuts to their schools' programs.



European Dispatch

Something’s Fishy About That Red Snapper

Preventing seafood fraud won’t be easy, but a new law has potential to stop fish poaching and laundering, which involves mislabeling fish in restaurants.

The Greening of Angela Merkel

German Chancellor (and physicist) Angela Merkel did a 180 on nuclear energy after Fukushima, setting off an "energy revolution" in the process.



Science

Why Robot Maids Won’t Do the Dishes

How hard is it to design a humanlike robot? Harvard's Steven Pinker highlights how simple human accomplishments represent formidable robotics challenges.

20,000 Robots Under the Sea

Jules Jaffe of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography is developing an army of underwater explorers that researchers hope will produce a fine-grained, real-time map of the movements of the sea.



Culture

The Science Behind TGIF

Economist John F. Helliwell has data that backs up why Americans are significantly happier on weekends and public holidays than during the workweek.

Study: Ethical People More Satisfied With Life

University of Missouri economist Harvey James finds a relationship between life satisfaction and low tolerance for unethical conduct.

Grandma’s Apple Pie Is Better Than Apple Pie

Researchers find that food products sell better when they're labeled with descriptive phrases that elicit warm family memories.



Miller-McCune Cover Story

California’s Medical Marijuana Morass

In Northern California, where the drug laws can change with the mile markers, a supplier of medical marijuana risks going one toke over the (county) line.

LAPD Cracks Cold Cases With Science, Grit

Since the LAPD's cold case unit began 10 years ago, detectives have used science to arrest serial killers and dozens of others who thought they had gotten away with murder.

Teacher Collaboration Gives Schools Better Results

The world’s best school systems depend on teacher collaboration, but the concept has not caught on in the U.S. We found schools where teamwork is making a difference.



Business & Economics

Can a Bad Economy Save Your Marriage?

Spouses who blame the economy for their woes, rather than pointing the finger at their partner, are more likely to be satisfied with their marriages.

How Foreclosures Feasted on Some Cities, Not Others

A look at foreclosures in two Southern California cities shows why some fared better than others in the housing crisis.

Old Money Caught in the Great Redistribution

How the recession transfers wealth from the old to the young.



Research in Summary

We’re Sorry: Not All Apologies Are Apologies

Politicians take note: Research shows the fine line between claiming regret and taking responsibility.

Studying Flags, Pins, Hope From 2008 Election

The Stars and Stripes are subliminal, class cleavages are overrated, and other academic analyses we should consider from the last election.

Showing Where Community Colleges Pass, Fail

As the fall semester begins, we look at some of the ways community colleges are meeting — or failing to meet — the needs of their students.



The Cocktail Napkin

Women Eye Dance Moves to Find Thrill Seekers

How to spot thrill-seeking men on the dance floor, "sweet" personalities in public, and bidding fever on eBay.

Does This Make My Antenna Look Big?

Researchers mix technology with fashion, analyze a pharaoh's skin condition, measure the smarts of Scrabble players, and more in this edition of Miller-McCune's "Cocktail Napkin."

As if Commercials Weren’t Bad Enough Already

Do we really need to smell the items featured in TV programming? A materials expert has created a function for your TV or portable device that can generate thousands of odors.



Education

No Debate: Kids Can Learn By Arguing

Columbia professor Deanna Kuhn says teachers should foster some debate to help kids learn the lost skill of thinking critically.

Teaching Religious Literacy in California’s Bible Belt

A Central California community has added a fourth "R" to the core curriculum in its public schools: Religion. Sociologist Emile Lester answers our questions about the experiment.

Bad Teachers Improving With Help From Peers

How one California school district turns bad teachers over to their peers to help them improve their skills and save their jobs.

What Would Diane Ravitch Say?

Diane Ravitch, the former assistant U.S. secretary of education, tells Miller-McCune what she thinks about No Child Left Behind now.



Views Reviews and Interviews

Does Black History Need More Than a Month?

The documentary "More Than a Month" asks: Does Black History Month still inspire reflection, or just Nike sales?

PBS to Show ‘Where Soldiers Come From’

A PBS documentary follows a group of friends before, during, and after their time in Afghanistan.

‘If a Tree Falls’ Revisits the Earth Liberation Front

PBS looks at the radical environmentalists whose turn to terrorism discredited their quixotic campaign in "If a Tree Falls."

Teaching Kids to Love Nature (and Buy Less Stuff)

A new book, "The Failure of Environmental Education," says schools are failing to teach kids how to save the planet.



News and Options

U.S. Planting Seeds of Peace in Afghanistan

U.S. soldiers work to undo some of the damage done to Afghanistan's agricultural communities from decades of war.

Returning Warriors Go to Work, in the Fields

Facing high unemployment rates, returning U.S. veterans are finding work on the farm.

Tattoo Remorse Spawns New Business

Tattoo remorse is leading many of the painted masses to rethink their ink, which is fueling a burgeoning business: specialty tattoo removal shops.

Turning Cellphones Into Mobile Microscopes

Researchers across California are working to bring medical microscopes to our cellphones — and vastly improve field medicine.

Work-Life Balance Benefits Low-Wage Workers, Employers

A growing body of research reveals myriad benefits — for employers and employees alike — when company policies promoting work-life balance are offered to low-wage workers.

Beyond PTSD: Soldiers Have Injured Souls

Now that modern militaries accept that war creates psychological trauma, therapists wonder about its toll on the spirit.



Magazine Feature Story

Where Have All the Doctors Gone?

Communities with more primary care doctors enjoy better health, yet those physicians are a dying breed. Here is what some schools are doing to combat the looming shortage.

Was Lou Gehrig’s ALS Caused by Tap Water?

A toxic molecule found in pond scum may trigger neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS and Parkinson's. Could a group of scientists, led by a botanist, hold the key to a cure?

Placebo Effect Stronger Than We Thought?

Double-blind trials have long been considered the gold standard to determine drugs’ effectiveness. Do we need to rethink that assumption, given the power of the placebo effect?

Nixon’s Presidential Library: The Last Battle of Watergate

Who controls the Nixon Library? A dispute over how to tell the story of his presidency raises questions about the purpose, and legitimacy, of presidential libraries.

Alligator River Refuge Rolls Back From Rising Sea

As coastlines are battered by rising seas, staff at North Carolina’s Alligator River Wildlife Refuge look for ways to make an orderly retreat.

Vehicle-to-Grid: A New Spin on Car Payments

Buried in the high hopes for electric cars is the very real possibility that they can make money by powering and regulating the grid.

Post-Gadhafi: What’s Next for Libya’s Government?

As our correspondent in Libya has learned, rushing to the ballot box might be the biggest mistake there is.

The Physics of Terror

After studying four decades of terrorism, Aaron Clauset thinks he's found mathematical patterns that can help governments prevent and prepare for major terror attacks. The U.S. government seems to agree.

Rescuing the Rural Edge — It Takes a Village

New planning initiatives protect agriculture and nature, while still accommodating growth.

9/11 Memorial: Ground Zero as Dark Tourist Site

Visitors are expected to flock to the National September 11 Memorial and Museum when it opens, even as memories of that day fade away.

Chicago Charter Schools Aim to Lift Urban Education

The University of Chicago's Urban Education Institute runs charter schools and uses innovative practices to provide inner-city children a pathway to college.



Loading

follow us on:

join our newsletter:

magazine archive

most viewed

  1. Children’s Books Increasingly Ignore Natural World

  2. Casual Sex: Men, Women Not So Different After All

  3. Prop Planes: The Future of Eco-Friendly Aviation?

  4. Are Some Airlines Just Too Dangerous to Fly?

  5. Japan's Earthquake: Deciphering the Fury

  6. Pressure to Conform Can Inspire Creativity

  7. Five Orcas, Five Slaves or Five Persons?

  8. The Real Science Gap

  9. Learning to Read When a School System Falters

  10. Was Lou Gehrig's ALS Caused by Tap Water?

Featured Articles

January-February 2012

California’s Medical Marijuana Morass

In Northern California, where the drug laws can change with the mile markers, a supplier of medical marijuana risks going one toke over the (county) line.

November-December 2011

LAPD Cracks Cold Cases With Science, Grit

Since the LAPD’s cold case unit began 10 years ago, detectives have used science to arrest serial killers and dozens of others who thought they had gotten away with murder.

September-October 2011

Teacher Collaboration Gives Schools Better Results

The world’s best school systems depend on teacher collaboration, but the concept has not caught on in the U.S. We found schools where teamwork is making a difference.

July-August 2011

CSI: Wildlife — Solving Mysterious Animal Deaths

Carol Meteyer solves cases of mysterious wildlife death using advanced forensic skills to help prosecute people who kill animals in violation of federal law.

May-June 2011

Solar Showdown: Are New Solar Power Projects Anti-Environmental?

Big money, big energy and big environmentalism join forces to support big solar energy projects on federal land in the Southwest. But could these “green” projects actually be anti-environmental boondoggles in the making?

March-April 2011

How to Stop Suicide by Cop

A growing movement is training police officers not to kill citizens — even when they seem to be asking for it.

January-February 2011

The Bad Daddy Factor

Drinking, smoking, taking prescription meds or failing to eat a balanced diet can influence the health of men’s future children.

November-December 2010

Ocean Carbon Sequestration: The World’s Best Bad Idea

Putting carbon dioxide in the ocean is a terrible way to deal with climate change. Maybe we should do it.

September-October 2010

The Best Fiscal Stimulus: Trust

How the potent hormone of empathy, oxytocin, is shaking up the field of economics.

July-August 2010

The Real Science Gap

It’s not insufficient schooling or a shortage of scientists. It’s a lack of job opportunities. Americans need the reasonable hope that spending their youth preparing to do science will provide a satisfactory career.

May-June 2010

Make Birth Control, Not War

The human tendency toward war is based on biology, but the right family planning policies can redirect the world toward peace.

March-April 2010

A Mind of Crime

How brain-scanning technology is redefining criminal culpability.

January-February 2010

Can China Turn Cotton Green?

Producing ‘natural’ cotton clothing is a huge and filthy global business that, Chinese-commissioned research shows, will be extremely difficult to clean up.

November-December 2009

Finding Water from Outer Space

A globe-trotting geologist uses satellites and other remote-sensing platforms to find water under some of the world’s thirstiest places.

September-October 2009

The Ecstasy and the Agony

MDMA holds promise as part of a therapy that helps post-traumatic stress patients confront and extinguish their fears. But ecstasy’s recreational reputation has slowed research.

July-August 2009

Racism’s Hidden Toll

Does the stress of living in a white-dominated society make African Americans get sick and die younger than their white counterparts? Apparently, yes.

May-June 2009

Lessons From the Reverse Engineering of Nature

A Miller-McCune Research Essay by Columbia University professor Shahid Naeem on the importance of biodiversity and the true significance of the human species.

March-April 2009

Simply Rwandan

A nonprofit group is working to create the new Rwanda, made by orphans.

January-February 2009

Pssst. Mr. President.

Because it’s not just the economy, our experts offer some solutions to problems that were under-discussed during the campaign.

November-December 2008

First, Reduce Harm

Faced with a horrific drug problem, Vancouver is trying a radical experiment: Let junkies be junkies.

October 2008

The Court(s) and the Election

In light of Justice David Souter’s retirement plans and speculation that a female jurist will replace him, we’re revisiting this October 2008 story that details the effect women judges can have on a panel.

September 2008

Derailing the Boondoggle

A Danish professor promotes a cure for billion-dollar cost overruns in government megaprojects: Use past boondoggles as a baseline.

August 2008

Pax Americana Geriatrica

An unprecedented era of great-power aging makes it likely the 21st century will, again, be American.

June-July 2008

Should the Government Make Us Happy?

In Europe and elsewhere, governments are using ideas from the new science of well-being to try to make citizens more content. Will America follow their lead?

April-May 2008

Caution: NAFTA at Work

How Europe’s trade model could solve America’s immigration problem.