
Return-to-Office Demands Don’t Benefit Employees or Businesses
Donald Trump has joined big firms in demanding workers end remote work. But the evidence suggests that hurts both workers and the work
Return-to-Office Demands Don’t Benefit Employees or Businesses
Donald Trump has joined big firms in demanding workers end remote work. But the evidence suggests that hurts both workers and the work
Does Fact-Checking Work? Here’s What the Science Says
Communication and misinformation researchers reveal the value of fact-checking, where perceived biases come from and what Meta’s decision could mean
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Two Simple Reforms Can Make H-1B Visas Great Again
Although warring MAGA factions seem locked in a foreign worker battle with no middle ground, two straightforward changes would provide global talent while minimizing domestic job losses
The Real Reason People Don’t Trust in Science Has Nothing to Do with Scientists
“Propaganda works” is the real upshot of a survey showing lingering postpandemic distrust of science
Americans Are Moody, and Pollsters Should Pay Attention
The full potential of public opinion polling lies in its ability to illuminate deeper societal trends beyond electoral forecasts
The Public Distrusts Scientists’ Morals, Not Their Science
Reaction to a recent Pew survey on the public’s trust in science shows that the scientific community is not ready to address the real problem
AI Will Turn Our Lives into The Truman Show
Large language models can create muddled, misinformed multiverses
A Science Breakthrough Too Good to Be True? It Probably Isn’t
The more exciting, transformative and revolutionary a science result appears, especially if it comes out of nowhere, the more likely it is to be dead wrong. So approach science headlines with a healthy amount of skepticism and patience
Here’s Why Abortion Largely Won on Election Day—But Not on the Top of the Ticket
Voters supported abortion rights measures while electing antiabortion candidates in the 2024 election. The split reflects a complicated abortion landscape post-Dobbs
Grumpy Voters Want Better Stories—Not Statistics
A social scientist looks at the portrait of U.S. voters, and voting, in the aftermath of the 2024 presidential election that put Trump into the White House
AI Analysis of Body Camera Videos Offers a Data-Driven Approach to Police Reform
Examining body camera videos at scale reveals racial differences in how police treat drivers during traffic stops—and what corrective programs really work
The Myth that Musicians Die at 27 Shows How Superstitions Are Made
Famous people who die at age 27, such as Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and Amy Winehouse, get even more famous because of the mythology surrounding that number—an example of how modern folklore emerges