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Indiana University

Lady justice

Immigrants with ‘Big Law’ attorneys more likely to avoid deportation

Researchers found that recessions and economic slowdowns are more probable when there is a higher likelihood that financial statements have been manipulated.

Startling Connection Found Between Financial Manipulation and Recessions

Graphs showing the average age at conception for men versus women over the past 250,000 years. Images courtesy of the Hahn Lab

Fathers consistently older than mothers throughout human history

Couple having fun

‘Singles in America’ study: More Midwesterners consider political issues in dating

Electric vehicle at charging station

Reaching electric vehicle goal unlikely without lower prices, better policy

Physicists at Indiana University and the University of Tennessee have cracked the code to making microchips smaller, and the key is helium.

Physicists work to shrink microchips with first one-dimensional helium model system

Microbe protects honey bees from poor nutrition, a significant cause of colony loss

End of strict COVID measures in China could result in 1.5 million deaths

Blow flies can be used to detect use of chemical weapons, other pollutants

People with higher rates of anxiety, depression — not loneliness — more likely to use ‘sextech’

Innovative silicone nanochip can reprogram biological tissue in living body

Stability is the new sexy: ‘Singles in America’ Kinsey study reveals major shifts in dating from COVID-19

IU biology professor Jay T. Lennon's lab found that bacteria can live for a long period of time despite facing starvation, which has implications for antibiotic resistance and the persistence of beneficial microbes in the environment. Photo courtesy of Jay T. Lennon, Department of Biology

Microbial study reveals extended lifespan of starved bacteria

Certain social, environmental factors found to increase a community’s COVID-19 risk

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