In the run-up to the 2020 election, people appear to have become savvier in spotting misinformation online: clicks onto unreliable websites have declined, according to a new Stanford study published April 13 in the journal Nature Human Behaviour.Acco
Stanford scholars find a smaller percentage of Americans visited unreliable websites in the run-up to the 2020 U.S. election than in 2016 – which suggests mitigation and education efforts to identify misinformation are working.
UWâMadison senior wins prestigious Knight-Hennessy Scholarship
In the rural area of Kenya where Cheryl Mulor grew up, many of the buildings are constructed from materials tied to the landscape, such as clay and grass.
It is these traditional, locally acquired resources that Mulor thinks about when she considers the career she would like to pursue.
âI respect these natural materials, and I respect that kind of construction,â says Mulor, a UWâMadison senior majoring in civil engineering. âThe company that I hope to own someday would make use of these resources to build more sustainable, long-lasting housing options for rural communities.â