In the News

  1. August 31, 2022
    • Headshot of Erik Gordon

    “They’re trying to protect the franchise. They do want money — but I think the bigger money is money they hope to get in the future based on this platform,” said Erik Gordon, clinical professor of business, on Moderna’s patent infringement lawsuit against Pfizer and BioNTech over COVID vaccine technology.

    Axios
  2. August 30, 2022
    • Photo of Abram Wagner

    Abram Wagner, research assistant professor of epidemiology, says requiring insurance for COVID-19 vaccination will likely have a detrimental impact on efforts to increase uptake and get people booster doses. “Even though the vaccine will be covered by insurance, it adds an extra layer of inconvenience to get the vaccine,” he said.

    Newsweek
  3. August 30, 2022
    • Headshot of Sara Aton

    Sara Aton, associate professor of molecular, cellular and developmental biology, says head and eye movements are so tightly coupled when mice (and humans) are awake that you wouldn’t expect them to suddenly disconnect during sleep. That they remain linked doesn’t tell us whether mice are perceiving a dream world, let alone gazing about it. “We simply can’t read that out from the brain,” she said.

    The Atlantic
  4. August 30, 2022
    • Gabriel Rauterberg

    “You’re layering intimate familial bonds over professional relationships,” said Gabriel Rauterberg, a corporate law professor, about an alleged arrangement between business magnate and investor Elon Musk and one of his top female executives. “There is always the worry that someone with greater power will use their professional power in ways that are inappropriate.”

    Reuters
  5. August 29, 2022
    • Headshot of Joseph Eisenberg

    There are a number of ways monkeypox could spread to the rodent population, and while none of the outcomes is certain, they’re all realistic possibilities. “Possible is enough for us to take it seriously because the possible can turn into a probable and we don’t want that to happen,” said Joseph Eisenberg, professor of epidemiology.

    Los Angeles Times
  6. August 29, 2022
    • Geneviève Zubrzycki

    “Similar to how Auschwitz has become a shorthand for the horrors of the Holocaust, years from now Bucha will be evoked as a symbol for the Ukrainian war,” said Geneviève Zubrzycki, professor of sociology and director of Weiser Center for Europe & Eurasia, about the Ukraine city that saw February and March battles between Ukrainian and Russian forces.

    Vanity Fair
  7. August 29, 2022
    • Elise Hodges

    U-M researchers are studying how well people with autism spectrum disorder can detect road hazards. “Many of them … would like to drive, but getting from wanting to drive and being able to drive are two different things,” said Elise Hodges, clinical associate professor of psychiatry.

    The Associated Press
  8. August 24, 2022
    • Photo of Scott Hershovitz

    “I wanted to convey that philosophy is not this thing that is over with, that was in the past and done by famous people who were mainly old white guys, … that philosophy is this living activity and that there are maybe more philosophers in the world now than there ever were,” said Scott Hershovitz, professor of philosophy and law.

    Times of Israel
  9. August 24, 2022
    • Headshot of Bridgette Carr

    “If we cared about human trafficking in the way you hear people talk about it, we should care a lot about vulnerability in our communities,” said Bridgette Carr, director of the Law School’s Human Trafficking Clinic. “Instead, people want to talk about dangerous perpetrators and people being snatched from parking lots and it’s just not the reality of trafficking.”

    Concentrate
  10. August 24, 2022
    • Marcus Collins

    “This is branding at its finest. Now, when consumers hear the words ‘banana republic,’ we no longer know the etymology of the phrase. It shows that branding has more power than education: When we hear the term, we don’t think about the historical reference, but the store,” said Marcus Collins, clinical assistant professor of marketing.

    Fast Company