Articles

  • Nov 1, 2024 | newswise.com | Dominguez Hills

    Newswise — In the final stretch of the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election, two CSUDH political science professors answer questions about what this historic moment means for voters, public discourse, and the health of our democracy. CSUDH is a non-partisan educational institution that does not endorse any political candidate or ballot initiative.

  • Nov 1, 2024 | newswise.com | Dominguez Hills

    Newswise — (Carson, CA) Three California State University, Dominguez Hills (CSUDH) faculty members are available to provide comment on the 2024 Presidential Election. Assistant Professor of Political Science Julien Labarre focuses on the health of the information environment, and how the media and political psychology contribute to pathologies of democracy like polarization, populism, and extremism. View Labarre’s expert profile.

  • Feb 15, 2024 | biorxiv.org | Ian Brennan |Sonal Singhal |Ziad Al Bkhetan |Dominguez Hills

    AbstractPhylogenetics has moved into the era of genomics, incorporating enormous volumes of data to study questions at both shallow and deep scales. With this increase in information, phylogeneticists need new tools and skills to manipulate and analyze these data. To facilitate these tasks and encourage reproducibility, the community is increasingly moving towards automated workflows.

  • Oct 24, 2023 | eventbrite.com | Dominguez Hills

    9th Annual South Bay Economic ForecastMaintaining the South Bay's Competitive Edge Thursday, October 26, 20233:00 pm to 5:30 pm - Economic Forecast Report & Speaker Panel5:30 pm to 6:30 pm - Complimentary Craft Beer and Wine ReceptionThe South Bay Economic Forecast offers a focused look at future developments that are potentially changing the South Bay economy, such as: How is the South Bay keeping its cutting edge? Has AI changed forever, the way we do business? Will high inflation ever end?

  • Jul 18, 2023 | academic.oup.com | Dominguez Hills

    ‘What did it mean to be blind in Tokugawa society?’ (p. 2). So asks Wei Yu Wayne Tan at the beginning of his informed and highly informative investigation of how blind people in early modern Japan (ca. 1600–1868) navigated losing or lacking sight, the accompanying politics of social status, and identity formation.

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