How the U.S. government measures race has changed substantially since censuses began in 1790. Today, Americans differ on whether the government should ask about race.
Catching bugs and making little houses for them, obsessions with the door stopper and a fascination with elevators and how ...
Racial categories, which have been on every U.S. census, have changed from decade to decade, reflecting the politics and science of the times.
For decades, Americans have relied on exit polls to illuminate the story of what happened on election night. By gathering ...
At-home tests of the gut's microbiome are trending, but doctors say the technology is getting ahead of medical knowledge.
Arabidopsis thaliana was always an unlikely candidate for the limelight. But 25 years ago, the diminutive thale cress ...
Most Americans expect political violence to keep growing in the United States and believe that it is likely a political ...
At-home gut microbiome tests are trending, selling insights to the curious, empowerment to the chronically ill and a claimed ...
Microsoft is empowering academic researchers by providing AI-driven, secure, collaborative solutions that accelerate discoveries, foster innovation, a ...
Leaders from the University of Kentucky and Lipscomb University said cyber insurance is not a one-size-fits-all process, and ...
Initial GDP estimates rely on incomplete survey data—less than half from actual three-month surveys—with the rest from extrapolations. The Bureau of Economic Analysis refines these estimates at the ...
Confidence among North West mid-sized companies remains resolute, according to new research from accounting and business advisory firm BDO. More firms are rebalancing their operations to implement AI.