In the News

  1. January 10, 2025
    • Ian Lang

    “Neighborhood green spaces may draw children out of the house and give them an alternative space to engage in activities other than screen time,” said Ian Lang, research project manager at the School of Kinesiology, whose research shows that community programs aimed at reducing screen time work more effectively when kids have access to spaces such as parks, forests and lawns.

    Earth.com
  2. January 9, 2025
    • Headshot of Michelle Segar

    “Our approach to exercise and healthy eating is so dogmatic and based on all-or-nothing thinking. Yet when we step out of those two behaviors and we go into our parenting lives and our professional lives and our partnering lives, we don’t expect perfection, right?” said Michelle Segar, associate research scientist at the Institute for Research on Women and Gender.

    The Grio
  3. January 9, 2025

    “The same types of processes that result in volcanic eruptions are processes that form gold deposits,” said Adam Simon, professor of earth and environmental sciences, whose research confirms that sulfur forms strong chemical bonds with gold, allowing it to be transported up to the surface.

    The Washington Post
  4. January 9, 2025
    • Nirupama Rao

    “The hue and cry over the minimum wage is often disproportionate to the actual economic impact — in terms of how the economy broadly is impacted. Firms offset (minimum wage increases) with new revenues, but workers get substantially larger incomes,” said Nirupama Rao, assistant professor of business economics and public policy.

    CNN
  5. January 8, 2025
    • Emily Toth Martin

    “We’ve shown conclusively that COVID-19 infections are less severe and less frequent after infection or vaccination. That is why you see hospitalizations and deaths decreasing so dramatically,” said Emily Toth Martin, professor of epidemiology. But Adam Lauring, professor of microbiology and immunology and of ecology and evolutionary biology, cautions that the virus has not gone away and continues to mutate: “The virus is still out there. People still need to be aware.”

    Bridge Michigan
  6. January 8, 2025
    • Photo of Richard Miech

    Drug use among teens has continued to drop since the early years of the COVID-19 pandemic, says Richard Miech, research professor at the Institute for Social Research: “It’s hard to know if we’re seeing the start of something, or not. … (But) the pandemic stopped the cycle of new kids coming in and being recruited to drug use.”

    Voice of America
  7. January 8, 2025
    • Betsey Stevenson

    “The economy is the strongest economy compared to its peers globally and compared to itself in the 21st century. … Prime-age labor force participation and employment is quite close to its all-time high, inflation is down, asset prices are up, inflation-adjusted wages are up. … It’s tragically underrated because (Americans’) dislike of this strong economy risks the strong economy,” said Betsey Stevenson, professor of public policy and economics.

    Marketplace
  8. December 16, 2024
    • Johanna Mathieu

    “This is the fifth-best solution, but solutions one through four are not viable for a variety of different reasons. Five is feasible. So, let’s do it,” said Johanna Mathieu, associate professor of electrical engineering and computer science, who is helping the city of Ann Arbor create a sustainable energy utility, which may not be the most technically elegant model for energy infrastructure, but is the city’s best bet for quickly ramping up clean energy generation.

    Smart Cities Dive
  9. December 16, 2024
    • Yiyang Li

    “The memory of a computer is limited to 100 degrees Celsius. So, it’s not just that we engineered a cooler or we played some engineering trick. But we really rethought what are some of the physical processes that we can harness,” said Yiyang Li, assistant professor of materials science and engineering, whose team has developed computer storage technology to process data in high temperature environments.

    WEMU Radio
  10. December 16, 2024
    • Nicholas Bagley

    “A director who disagrees with CFPB’s mission is likely to deprioritize some of the things that a Biden administration might have made a priority,” said Nicholas Bagley, professor of law, on the prospect that Donald Trump could appoint a new head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau who shares Republicans’ disdain for the administrative state.

    Salon