Oregon in the News

An average person seems more likely to believe an explanation about something psychological if it invokes the language of neuroscience.
In an interview, the UO philosophy professor says there is more work to be done to improve the nation's legal infrastructure.
Mayr was one of more than 70 neuroscience researchers who signed a letter last year objecting to some of the claims by brain-game creators.
Study led by UO economics student John Voorheis finds income inequality is likely changing the direction of state legislatures.
UO journalism professor finds low engagement on distant problems, but says the columnist's approach is promising.