In the News

  1. February 15, 2021
    • Headshot of Reshma Jagsi

    Supporting women in the sciences can’t be as simple as making sure that everyone has a mentor who is a demographic match, says Reshma Jagsi, professor of radiation oncology. “If every woman needs a woman to be their mentor, and there’s only one senior woman in the department, she ends up having to be a mentor to half a dozen people,” said Jagsi, who advocates for “mentor networks.”

    WIRED
  2. February 15, 2021
    • Elizabeth Popp Berman

    “The pandemic emergency led Republicans as well as Democrats to support sending government checks directly to American households. … If this move makes it seem less inappropriate to send families checks, the politics may change around child allowances, too,” co-wrote Elizabeth Popp Berman, associate professor of organizational studies and sociology.

    The Washington Post
  3. February 15, 2021
    • Headshot of Delvon Mattingly

    “Racial ethnic health inequities in the U.S. have persisted long before the COVID-19 pandemic and they’ve become more evident than ever as we learn about the extent that COVID-19 disproportionately impacts minority groups,” said Delvon Mattingly, doctoral student in epidemiology, whose research found that 45 percent of Black coronavirus patients require overnight hospital stays — almost twice the percentage of white patients.

    WDET Radio
  4. February 12, 2021
    • Christine Nims

    Research by Christine Nims, a graduate student in earth and environmental sciences, and colleagues found that actual microbial life forms are much less likely to become safely fossilized in rocks compared with nonbiological structures that happen to mimic their shapes — minuscule objects masquerading as fossilized evidence of early life.

    Science News
  5. February 12, 2021
    • Image of Will Thomas

    “The trial can’t really affect him anyway, but it can still affect us. … The Senate will determine to what extent Trump was responsible. More than that, though, the trial will recognize, grieve, memorialize, reflect and judge. It will not only judge the man, but also the moment,” co-wrote Will Thomas, assistant professor of business law.

    The Hill
  6. February 12, 2021
    • Photo of Kenneth Lowande

    The high number of executive actions being signed by President Biden is less important than what they actually do, says Kenneth Lowande, assistant professor of political science: “Some of this is … because the previous administration had so many policies that were easy wins for President Biden to reverse. But for most of them, it will take months, if not years, to understand whether they were impactful.”

    CNN
  7. February 11, 2021
    • Headshot of Don Herzog

    “A judge should instruct a jury that what Fox does later to try to show they’re acting in good faith doesn’t settle the question of whether they were acting in good faith at some earlier time,” said Don Herzog, professor of law, regarding the cancelation of Lou Dobbs’ show on Fox Business after the talk show host was named in a multibillion lawsuit for spreading baseless theories of electoral fraud.

    The New York Times
  8. February 11, 2021
    • Photo of Kentaro Toyama

    “This is another case in which technology is expanding police capability without full public discussion about whether we want that. These are slippery slope types of technology,” said Kentaro Toyama, professor of information, on the fears of normalizing the use of drones and other increasingly enhanced surveillance systems by law enforcement.

    Slate
  9. February 11, 2021
    • Photo of Arnold Monto

    “Most of our problem now has dealt with who is to get the vaccine, whether people are jumping the queue, and none of this would be a problem if we had enough vaccine,” said Arnold Monto, professor of epidemiology and global public health, who believes the U.S. needs to move past trying to convince COVID-19 vaccine-hesitant people to take the shot, and instead get two doses into those who really want it.

    U.S. News & World Report
  10. February 10, 2021
    • Photo of Cheryl King

    “About half of the youth who die by suicide have never received any mental health services and some die on their first suicide attempt. We saw an urgent need to improve proactive, universal suicide screening of young people,” said Cheryl King, professor of psychiatry and psychology, whose research suggests that a universal screening tool can accurately determine an adolescent’s suicide risk.

    HealthITAnalytics