In the News

  1. April 29, 2024
    • Timothy Cernak
    • Aubree Gordon

    “If avian flu breaks out in humans, it could be a lot worse than COVID,” said Timothy Cernak, assistant professor of pharmacy and chemistry. “The good news is … we know a lot about how to make drugs and AI is really an awesome tool to accelerate that.” Aubree Gordon, professor of epidemiology, says while “the average American should not be overly concerned about their personal risk at this moment,” there ought to be scrutiny about whether U.S. public health agencies are doing enough to identify the true scope of avian influenza’s spread.

    Detroit Free Press
  2. April 29, 2024
    • Crystal James

    “They’re learning, they’re growing, they’re going to make mistakes. … They probably made a bad decision, but there are different ways you can handle it,” said U-M Police Chief Crystal James, whose focus is on teaching students, rather than arresting or ticketing them for an offense.

    MLive
  3. April 29, 2024
    • Betsey Stevenson

    “It’s easy to understand why the U.S. Chamber of Commerce is so upset about the Federal Trade Commission’s decision to ban noncompete agreements. The problem for businesses is not that they will lose trade secrets or valuable investments in workers to competitors. It’s that they just lost bargaining power to workers — and that’s exactly what the FTC intended,” wrote Betsey Stevenson, professor of public policy and economics.

    Bloomberg
  4. April 26, 2024
    • John McMorrough

    “They became sort of an enclave within the city; in the critical version, turned their back on the existing city and made a new city — something that’s been called interior urbanism,” said John McMorrough, professor of architecture, about megastructures like Detroit’s Renaissance Center, a city-within-a-city complex detached from its immediate surroundings.

    Crain's Detroit Business
  5. April 26, 2024
    • Jacqui Smith

    A study of Germans born over seven decades found the older they get, the later they think old age begins. While the results may not apply everywhere, says Jacqui Smith, professor of psychology, “What this study is adding is that it’s comparing different people who were born at different times who’ve clearly gone through many different historical changes in their life.”

    NBC News
  6. April 26, 2024
    • Susan Woolford

    If their children don’t like what everyone else is eating, 3 in 5 parents will make something else for them, according to a Mott Children’s Hospital poll. “This is concerning because typically the alternative options are not as healthy as what is being offered as the family meal,” said poll co-director Susan Woolford, associate professor of pediatrics and of health behavior and health education.

    CNN
  7. April 25, 2024
    • Headshot of Dean Yang

    Dollars from family members who work in the U.S. are a powerful economic engine for communities in El Salvador, said Dean Yang, professor of public policy and economics: “When you receive remittances from overseas, you spend it somehow. And that spending goes to other households in the community, other small businesses.” 

    Marketplace
  8. April 25, 2024
    • Ketra Armstrong

    A player in the WNBA can earn three to four times her base salary by playing overseas when the four-month U.S. season ends. “We have the best basketball players in the world. And they (other countries) show them how much they’re valued by giving them lucrative salaries,” said Ketra Armstrong, professor of sport management.

    NBC News
  9. April 25, 2024
    • Mihir Mehta

    “There appears to be significant profits being made from shadow trading. The people doing it have a sense of entitlement or maybe just think, ‘I’m invincible,’” said Mihir Mehta, assistant professor of accounting, on business executives who try to avoid traditional insider trading restrictions by buying shares in economically linked firms.

    The New York Times
  10. April 24, 2024
    • Nicholas Henriksen

    “Assumptions about people who speak Andalusian Spanish stem from a combination of historical socioeconomic disparities, regional stereotypes and lack of awareness about the dialect’s complexity,” said Nicholas Henriksen, associate professor of Spanish linguistics. “These stereotypes are perpetuated by media representations and societal biases, leading to a simplified and often unfair characterization of the area.”

    Research Features