In the News

  1. December 2, 2024
    • Jennifer Garner

    Jennifer Garner, assistant professor of nutritional sciences, says it’s hard to disentangle some of prospective Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s more reasonable food-improvement goals with the false health claims he has spread: “I think there’s rightful concern based on other issues and how his approach to those issues might play in here.” 

    BBC
  2. December 2, 2024
    • Kevin Cokley

    “Black students understandably want DEI efforts to eradicate anti-Blackness, but as is the case with many intractable societal problems, the total eradication of deeply held attitudes requires more than DEI programming, which cannot realistically be expected to completely undo years of socialization,” wrote Kevin Cokley, professor of psychology and associate chair for diversity initiatives.

    Diverse: Issues In Higher Education
  3. November 26, 2024
    • Gabriel Ehrlich

    Gabriel Ehrlich, director of the Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics, expects the Federal Reserve to slowly cut interest rates now that inflation has cooled: “(Michigan has) an interest rate-sensitive economy with the auto industry, with manufacturing, so we think that’s going to help and we expect job growth to resume over the next couple of years.”

    Michigan Public
  4. November 26, 2024
    • Photo of Jenny Radesky

    “Some teens have actually said they regret getting a smartphone early. These kids didn’t realize they would have so many new distractions or social drama in their lives,” said Jenny Radesky, associate professor of pediatrics, who suggests that parents should discuss how their child plans to use their phone and if they are ready for the implications of this use. 

    WILX (Lansing)
  5. November 26, 2024
    • Robert Joseph Taylor

    Unmarried African American friends are more likely than white Americans to form family-like relationships, or surrogate families, where they take care of each other’s needs, says Robert Taylor, professor of social work: “In general, women are closer to their friends than men and there are some differences in terms of friendship contact.”

    WEMU Radio
  6. November 25, 2024
    • Eugenio Weigend Vargas

    “The high number of individuals that have experienced firearm violence in some capacity is alarming and something that should be considered when developing policies and having conversations around immigration,” said Eugenio Weigend Vargas, research fellow at the Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention. 

    Border Report
  7. November 25, 2024
    • Ashley Gearhardt

    Drinking Diet Coke signals the body that it wants sugar, but it brings no relief from that craving because no calories come in. “That combination of sweet taste plus caffeine is just something our brain has never really been equipped to handle. … Even if you’re not getting the calories your body expects, the uniqueness of getting that big burst of sweetness and the caffeine is stimulating in the gut,” said Ashley Gearhardt, professor of psychology.

    Inverse
  8. November 25, 2024
    • Photo of Dragan Huterer

    “Einstein’s theory of general relativity describes the motion of massive objects in a gravitational field that they create. … The discovery of the accelerating universe, however, led to suggestions that maybe general relativity needs to be modified,” said Dragan Huterer, professor of physics, who helped track how the structure of the cosmos has grown over the past 11 billion years and found that gravity acts as physicist Albert Einstein predicted it would in his groundbreaking 1915 theory of general relativity.

    Reuters
  9. November 22, 2024
    • Sharon Kardia

    “There are many different reasons why artificial intelligence is important to public health students. AI could help us do a better job of figuring out how we might get in front of the next pandemic, things that are as big or as societally important as that,” said Sharon Kardia, professor of epidemiology and associate dean for education at the School of Public Health.

    Second Wave Michigan
  10. November 22, 2024
    • Photo of Terri Friedline

    Research by Terri Friedline, professor of social work, and colleagues shows that the placement of banks, credit unions and alternative financial services is significantly influenced by changes in a neighborhood’s racial composition: “These insights challenge common misconceptions about the demand for high-cost financial services and underscore the broader impact of financial institutions on community dynamics.”

    DBusiness Magazine