Libraries surveying faculty on digital technologies’ impact
Penn State University Libraries is conducting a survey of all Penn State faculty about the impact of digital technologies on research, teaching and publishing.
The survey will be conducted from Tuesday, March 13, to Tuesday, April 10, in partnership with national research organization Ithaka S+R,…
Opioid epidemic to be topic of April 6 panel presentation
Pennsylvania has been hit hard by the opioid epidemic. Heroin and opioid overdose is now the leading cause of accidental death in the Commonwealth, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs. Few residents will be untouched by this crisis, and health care professionals…
Spicing it up: High school students may prefer seasoned veggies over plain
High school students prefer vegetables seasoned with herbs and spices, rather than plain veggies, according to Penn State researchers, who add this may lead to students liking and eating more vegetables, and result in less food waste in schools.
The researchers asked high school students to rate…
Researchers work together to improve communication-aiding technologies
Deciding which hand to use for communication-aiding technology is a cognitive task that can slow the user down, potentially inhibiting communication and performance, according to a Penn State study.
More than four million Americans who have such complex disabilities that they cannot meet their…
Summer Translational Science Fellowship providing real-world research training
Bethany Latten is a second-year medical student in the Penn State College of Medicine. Scott Graupensperger is a second-year graduate student completing a dual-title doctorate in kinesiology and clinical and translational science at Penn State University Park.…
Discovery Series to feature 'Innovations Training and iCorps @ NIH'
"Innovations Training and iCorps @ NIH: Planning and Funding the Future of Your Research" will be presented at the next Discover Seminar Series, part of the Research Quality Assurance Lunchtime Lecture Series at Penn State College of Medicine. The seminar will be held at noon in Lecture Room D at…
CTSI Community Engaged Research Core accepting Faculty Fellowship applications
This opportunity is open to all Penn State junior or mid-level faculty who want to advance their practice of community-engaged research. Community-engaged research is the active involvement and participation of community stakeholders. The degree of community involvement in research is determined…
Hormones may affect girls’ interests, but not their gender identity or playmates
Prenatal exposure to male hormones influences which activities girls are interested and engage in, but the effects of those hormones don’t extend to gender identity or who they socialize with, according to Penn State researchers.
The researchers explored how prenatal exposure to androgens —…
Moms who co-sleep beyond six months may feel more depressed, judged
Recent trends and popular advice telling moms not to sleep with their babies may make mothers who do choose to co-sleep with their infants more likely to feel depressed or judged, according to Penn State researchers.
After analyzing moms’ sleeping patterns and feelings about sleep for the first…
Why Social Science? - Because It is an Engine for Social Progress
By Darla Spence Coffey, PhD, MSW, President and Chief Executive Officer of the Council on Social Work Education & James Herbert Williams, PhD, MSW, MPA, Arizona Centennial Professor of Social Welfare Services at Arizona State University
The Council on Social Work Education (CSWE) is dedicated…
Black, Hispanics less likely to drink tap water, more likely to buy bottled
Black and Hispanic U.S. adults are half as likely as whites to drink tap water and more than twice as likely to drink bottled water, according to a recent Penn State analysis.
The findings also support past research that indicates that minorities and more vulnerable populations have a higher…
Andrew Sullivan on the opioid crisis
The Poison We Pick
This nation pioneered modern life. Now epic numbers of Americans are killing themselves with opioids to escape it.
By Andrew Sullivan for New York Magazine
It is a beautiful, hardy flower, Papaver somniferum, a poppy that grows up to four feet in height and arrives in a…
McCourtney Institute Mood of the Nation Poll examines public trust in the FBI
Months of attacks on the FBI are impacting the public’s perception of the Bureau’s 13,000 agents, according to newly-released findings from the McCourtney Institute for Democracy’s Mood of the Nation Poll.
Among Democrats, 67 percent trust the FBI to do what is right “most of the time” or “just…
Why the 2020 census shouldn’t ask about your citizenship status
By Jennifer Van Hook, Roy C. Buck Professor of Sociology and Demography, for The Conversation
“Is this person a citizen of the United States?”
In Dec. 2017, the Department of Justice formally proposed adding a citizenship question to the 2020 census. This question would ostensibly help to…
Webinar recording on environment and children's health
The University-Based Child and Family Policy Consortium, in collaboration with the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD), recently hosted a webinar on Environmental Influences on Children’s Health and Development. To watch a recording of the webinar, please click here to…
Brick to speak on data privacy within scientific research
Tim Brick, a Penn State professor of human development and family studies and part of SSRI's QuantDev group , will discuss “The MID/DLE Way: Privacy by Design for Science in Real Time” on March 1 from 1:30–3:00 p.m. The event will be held in 233A HUB-Robeson Center.
This talk is hosted by the…
Thomas publishes book on migrants aiding U.S. military in Iraq
Kevin Thomas, Population Research Institute affiliate and associate professor of sociology, demography, and African studies, recently published his book titled, "Contract Workers, Risk, and the War in Iraq". The publication explores why migrants risk traveling to Iraq despite the dangers of the…
Applications open for Community Engaged Research Core Faculty Fellowship Program
Penn State Clinical and Translational Science Institute‘s Community Engaged Research Core is now accepting applications for its 2018-19 Faculty Fellowship Program.
This opportunity is open to all Penn State junior or mid-level faculty who want to advance their practice of community-engaged research…
Morgan's research featured recently in NYT & WSJ
CEDR director and PRI affiliate Paul Morgan's research was recently reported on in both the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal and details why the research should be resulting in changes in federal-level educational policy.
Additionally, Morgan gave the Naomi Zigmond Plenary…
New partnerships take Quality Talk to classrooms in Taiwan, South Africa
After seeing success in K-12 classrooms in the United States, Quality Talk, an empirically supported instructional approach, now will help students in international classrooms achieve academic success.
Developed in 2002 by P. Karen Murphy, distinguished professor of education (educational…
Twitter resources available for Penn State researchers
The Computational and Spatial Analysis (CSA) Core of the Population and Social Science Research Institutes has built the infrastructure for collecting and managing Twitter data and has capacity in processing and analyzing the data for social science and population research. The Core has collected…
Penn State Harrisburg to host two discussions on the opioid epidemic
On Jan. 10, Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Wolf declared the opioid epidemic a statewide disaster in Pennsylvania. Penn State Harrisburg faculty are dedicated to understanding this crisis and combating addiction in the state. To that end, the college will host two discussions related to the current opioid…
Scientists determine standards for gauging cost, benefits of prevention programs
The Society for Prevention Research released a new set of standards to guide how researchers and public health officials estimate the costs, benefits and return on investment of health and social service prevention programs, based on the work by a taskforce co-chaired by a Penn State researcher.…
New research collaboratory aims to harness the power of data to improve health
Health care professionals have long theorized that medical conditions, like asthma or cancer, are a result of not only genetics but also environmental and lifestyle factors. These theories, however, have been difficult to prove conclusively without the ability to analyze large-scale population…
Frankenberg reviews report about school and residential segregation
Balancing Act: Schools, Neighborhoods, and Racial Imbalance, published by the Brookings Institution, takes up the important task of considering school and residential segregation by exploring the racial makeup of schools compared to their proximate neighborhoods.
Professors Genevieve Siegel-Hawley…