In the News

  1. February 14, 2018

    “You train if you go on a hike or run a 5K race. But we never train our patients for their operations,” said Michael Englesbe, professor of surgery, commenting on research that suggests people, particularly older patients, should mentally and physically prepare to be on the operating table to save money and hasten recoveries.

    CNBC
  2. February 14, 2018

    Aviv Ovadya, chief technologist at the School of Information’s Center for Social Media Responsibility, cautions that technology that can be used to enhance and distort what is real is evolving faster than our ability to understand and control or mitigate it: “I’m from the free and open source culture — the goal isn’t to stop technology but ensure we’re in an equilibria that’s positive for people.”

    BuzzFeed News
  3. February 14, 2018

    Michael Rice, assistant professor of gastroenterology and internal medicine, was quoted in a story about the differences between food poisoning and the notovirus.

    Bustle
  4. February 13, 2018

    Nell Duke, professor of education, says schools have an obligation to provide a high-quality literacy education, but supporting literacy development cannot just fall to teachers: “District central administration also has important responsibilities, such as to ensure that every teacher has access to the tools that they need to support literacy development, including lots of appropriate books … but also high-quality, standards- and research-aligned professional development and curriculum materials.”

    The Detroit News
  5. February 13, 2018

    Harold Johnson, dean emeritus of the School of Social Work and professor emeritus of social work, and health behavior and health education, discussed what it was like for him to make history as the first African-American dean at U-M.

    Michigan Radio
  6. February 13, 2018

    “Sugary foods and refined carbohydrates cause a blood-sugar spike. And then three to four hours later, a blood-sugar crash. That cycle primes your brain and makes you want more of those foods,” said Ashley Gearhardt, assistant professor of psychology.

    The Washington Post
  7. February 12, 2018

    “Corporations, nonprofits, governments, universities and even preschools test, score and hire the ‘best.’ This all but guarantees not creating the best team. Ranking people by common criteria produces homogeneity,” said Scott Page, professor of complex systems, economics, and political science.

    Inc.
  8. February 12, 2018

    Comments by Sari van Anders, associate professor of psychology, and women’s studies, were featured in an article about the difference between the brains of women and men.

    Newsweek
  9. February 12, 2018

    “We’re at serious risk of re-creating the conditions that led to the last financial crisis. … (Now should be) a time to reflect on the need for strong guardrails in the system — not a time for taking those apart,” said Michael Barr, dean of the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy and professor of law, and public policy, who helped craft the 2010 Dodd-Frank Act, which ushered in a host of new limits on Wall Street.

    Bloomberg
  10. February 11, 2018

    President Mark Schlissel wrote a letter to the editor responding to a series of stories about U-M’s endowment, and to a related editorial. He said the articles “invent conclusions and peddle innuendo not supported by facts,” and that the editorial’s premise was “irresponsible, incomprehensible and false.”

    Detroit Free Press