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A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Penn In the News
A study led by Holly C. Elser of the Perelman School of Medicine finds that adults diagnosed with depression are more than twice as likely to get dementia later in life.
Penn In the News
Michael Mann of the School of Arts & Sciences is quoted on how steady warming and atmospheric changes are “supercharging” regular weather events, making them longer and more intense.
Penn In the News
Mitchell Lazar of the Perelman School of Medicine says distribution of fat plays a major role in determining how deleterious added weight is.
Penn In the News
The research of Chris Callison-Burch, Liam Dugan, and Daphne Ippolito of the School of Engineering and Applied Science is the subject of this article on a new challenge for internet users: how to tell whether something was written by a human or a machine.
Penn In the News
PIK Professor Herbert Hovenkamp says that Elon Musk has done one thing after another to anger his own user base.
Penn In the News
Lyle Ungar of the School of Engineering and Applied Science says that people in countries ranked highest for happiness may not report high levels of laughing but feel more generally satisfied.
Penn In the News
Barbara Kahn of the Wharton School says that the phasing out of COVID lockdowns led to a second wave of home projects: decorating.
Penn In the News
As business raise their prices during times of inflation, consumers become accustomed and thus more receptive to the hikes, says John Zhang of the Wharton School.
Penn In the News
David Asch of the Perelman School of Medicine worries about ChatGPT’s overly confident communication and the amplification of medical misinformation.
Penn In the News
Yoram Wind of the Wharton School says that Target’s Pride-themed merchandise campaign was trying to reach a growing LGBTQ market of customers and employees.