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We're all a little biased, even if we don't know it
One of the newest chew toys in the presidential campaign is “implicit bias,” a term Mike Pence repeatedly took exception to in the vice-presidential debate.
10/10/2016 -
Internet Blackouts Can Seriously Damage a Country’s Economy
Last year, the world economy lost at least $2.4 billion when governments intentionally shut down their countries’ networks.
10/10/2016 -
Left pressures Clinton for position on pipeline
Hillary Clinton is coming under increasing pressure from progressives to oppose the Dakota Access oil pipeline.
10/10/2016 -
Monnica Williams | White people don't understand the trauma of viral police-killing videos
"The trauma of exposure to these videos sits on top of layers of trauma that go all the way back to slavery. It is all one and the same," writes Monnica Williams for PBS.
10/10/2016 -
Are the Nobel prizes missing female scientists?
A total of 203 people have won the Nobel Prize in Physics, but only two were women.
10/10/2016 -
We asked, you answered: The presidential election is taking a toll on relationships
The end of the 2016 presidential election is five weeks away. But for some Washington couples, families and friends, Election Day can’t come soon enough.
10/10/2016 -
Voter indecision: Follow two local voters struggling to select a presidential candidate
This year's presidential race is one of the strangest we've seen in many years and many voters in Washington state are struggling with their selection.
10/10/2016 -
UW's David Thouless wins share of Nobel physics prize for weird science of superconductors
David Thouless, a British-born professor emeritus at the University of Washington, has been awarded half of this year’s Nobel physics prize.
10/05/2016 -
We’re All a Little Biased, Even if We Don’t Know It
One of the newest chew toys in the presidential campaign is “implicit bias,” a term Mike Pence repeatedly took exception to in the vice-presidential debate on Tuesday.
10/05/2016 | New York Times -
Bagels and buns: The research that won the 2016 Nobel Prize for Physics explained
This year, the Nobel Prize in Physics went to three men — all born in Britain, but working at U.S. universities.10/05/2016 | Tech Radar