In the News

  1. February 5, 2025

    “Online platforms like Feeld demonstrate that when apps are designed with marginalized communities in mind, they not only create inclusive environments but also redefine how safer intimacy can be cultivated in a hybrid world,” said Apryl Williams, assistant professor of communication and media.

    HuffPost
  2. February 5, 2025
    • Marc Zimmerman

    Schools and parents should use all measures available to prevent school shootings, such as mental health counseling, proper storage of firearms, metal detectors and gun-detection AI technology, says Marc Zimmerman, professor of public health and psychology and co-director of the Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention. “I would argue that if you’re at that point where you’re preventing a gun from coming into school, you’ve already lost. You’ve already lost that child,” he said.

    CNN
  3. February 4, 2025
    • Todd Allen

    “If you can extract it similar to the way you might extract petroleum or natural gas from the ground, you can save yourself a lot of energy and costs because you don’t have to separate it,” said Todd Allen, co-director of MI Hydrogen and professor of nuclear engineering and radiological sciences, after federal research found that Michigan could have significant amounts of hydrogen gas underground — an untapped source for clean fuel.

    WCMU Radio
  4. February 4, 2025
    • Lilia Cortina

    “Universities gain a competitive edge through inclusive hiring practices. That’s because diverse groups are more creative and deliberative. They work harder and smarter. They are better at thinking through problems, seeing them from multiple angles and arriving at novel solutions. In short, diversity sparks innovation and excellence,” wrote Lilia Cortina, professor of psychology and of women’s and gender studies.

    Detroit Free Press
  5. February 4, 2025
    • Headshot of Norman Bishara

    Chief among the national security concerns of TikTok is the possibility that U.S. officials or lawmakers — many of whom have active accounts — could be compromised by an adversarial government. “It does seem potentially incongruent for some of the folks with the most sensitive data … to be least susceptible to foreign influence being on this platform,” said Norman Bishara, professor of business law and ethics. 

    UPI
  6. February 3, 2025
    • Briana Mezuk

    “Everything has to have a limit. There’s no creature on planet Earth that we know of that doesn’t die at some point. But there’s obviously substantial variation in life expectancy and healthy life expectancy. … How long can we live and be able to have the type of psychological, functional and social life that makes life worth living? What is that life expectancy?” said Briana Mezuk, professor of epidemiology.

    Popular Science
  7. February 3, 2025
    • Jason Corso

    “Openness raises all tides when it comes to AI development. They’ve enabled the broader AI community to study and verify their methodology and weave it into their work,” said Jason Corso, professor of robotics and of electrical engineering and computer science, on the open-source approach used by DeepSeek and other upstarts that freely distribute their technology for the public to use, share and modify.

    The Wall Street Journal
  8. February 3, 2025
    • Erica Jansen

    Diets that prioritize fruits, vegetables and whole grains tamp down inflammation, which is linked to sleep disturbances, says Erica Jansen, assistant professor of nutritional sciences. And when people are short on sleep, they tend to crave — and eat — less healthy options, which can create “this cycle of poor sleep leading to poor diet quality, which we think then feeds back onto poor sleep.”

    The New York Times
  9. January 31, 2025
    • Tim Utter

    “I don’t think the world will adopt it. It just seems like a not-well-thought-out, temporary, pointless thing,” said Tim Utter, director of the Social Sciences and Clark Library for Maps, Government Information and Data Services Team, about Donald Trump’s directive to rename the Gulf of Mexico, which first appeared on a world map around 1550.

    Detroit Free Press
  10. January 31, 2025
    • Photo of Carol Boyd

    “Can the adolescent who used cannabis more than 1,000 times between the ages of 15 and 20, but stopped using … demonstrate improved working memory 10 years later? That is my $64 question — where is the hope for the person with a chronic use disorder who wants their memory back?” said Carol Boyd, professor emerita of nursing and founding director of the Center for the Study of Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking and Health.

    CNN