In the News
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December 9, 2022
Black founders of U.S. startups raise just one-third as much venture capital over the first five years as other comparable businesses, say Emmanuel Yimfor, assistant professor of finance, and colleagues: “Investors may provide less funding to Black startups because of bias. … One possible source is taste-based discrimination. According to this view, investors consciously dislike working with Black founders and expect Black founders to compensate” them by accepting less funding.
Bloomberg -
December 8, 2022
More than a third of kids injured by firearms receive a new mental health diagnosis in the following year, including stress disorders and drug or alcohol use, according to research by Peter Ehrlich, professor of pediatric surgery: “We know that trauma exposure … is a well-established risk factor for child mental health conditions, but until recently we knew very little about the mental health consequences following a firearm injury.”
U.S. News & World Report -
December 8, 2022
Previously banned white supremacists returning to Twitter have existing audiences, which makes them “more dangerous than a new person trying to come up with an audience,” since amplification on social media is largely a function of audience and reach, said Libby Hemphill, associate professor of information and digital studies. “Right now, the cost of being hateful doesn’t outweigh the benefits.”
Salon -
December 8, 2022
“However large the real figure of dead and wounded in Russia (may be) from the unprovoked invasion of Ukraine, tens of thousands of families are suffering and grieving,” Ronald Suny, professor emeritus of history and political science. “The losses and the disaffection are known to the government. It had hoped for a short, victorious war; instead, it got a war of attrition in which Russians are not doing well.”
Newsweek -
December 7, 2022
“There is definitely a systematic pink tax women are paying. Items all the way from children’s clothing to senior health care,” said Aradhna Krishna, professor of marketing, commenting on research that shows that goods marketed to females cost more than similar products marketed to men.
WXYZ/Detroit -
December 7, 2022
“We should stop cutting down forests. … If we allow time to let them get older they will develop the resistance to climate extremes,” said Tsun Fung Au, a postdoctoral fellow at the Institute for Global Change Biology, whose research found that trees more than 140 years old are better able to withstand the dry, hot weather that will become more likely as the climate continues to change.
The Detroit News -
December 7, 2022
“It is possible that homes will have their basements in contact with contaminated groundwater that is of sufficiently high concentrations to present an exposure and health risk,” said Rita Loch-Caruso, professor emerita of toxicology and environment, who believes a chemical plume caused by a solvent used at the former Gelman Sciences site could eventually cause vapors in some Ann Arbor basements.
Michigan Radio -
December 6, 2022
“The only way to join metal and plastic has been with adhesives or mechanical fasteners, which is too slow and expensive for anything but low-volume specialty vehicles,” said Pingsha Dong, professor of mechanical engineering, and naval architecture and marine engineering. “The processes we’re developing could change that and bring multimaterial vehicle structures and components from the realm of exotics into the mainstream.”
R&D World -
December 6, 2022
“You have older patients with much more progressive disease, and you’re trying to cobble together an anesthetic that you have half of the medication available to you. You have a third of the equipment available to you.” In a sense, “you’re MacGyver-ing … what you need,” said Bridget Pearce, assistant professor of anesthesiology, who notes that her work in El Salvador and Peru “really is like nourishing your soul.”
MLive -
December 6, 2022
“It’s a failure of humanity to have created these amazing materials which have improved our lives in many ways, but at the same time to be so shortsighted that we didn’t think about what to do with the waste,” said Anne McNeil, professor of chemistry, and macromolecular science and engineering, whose research team found a way to recycle one of the world’s most prevalent but toxic plastics by chemically breaking it down.
WDIV/Detroit










