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Find coverage of Northeastern University in the press.
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What is the future for travel and migration in age of Covid-19?

“We human beings often have tried to forestall epidemics by shuttering, by drawing up the drawbridge, and there is no question that travel can spread some types of disease. But it’s also much harder than we imagine to contain,” said Wendy Parmet professor of law, public policy and urban affairs at Northeastern University.
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This ugly t-shirt makes you invisible to facial recognition tech

“The adversarial T-shirt works on the neural networks used for object detection,” explains Xue Lin, an assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Northeastern, and co-author of a recent paper on the subject. 
ABC News

How COVID-19 is exposing — and widening — cracks in the US health system

The interdependent relationship between health and housing creates a relentless cycle, according to Leo Beletsky, a professor of law and health sciences at Northeastern University.
Ars Technica

Alphabet’s Sidewalk Labs scraps its ambitious Toronto project

“The next time this is done by Sidewalk Labs or any big tech corporation that wants to reimagine the future of neighborhoods, it will be done in close communication with communities,” says Daniel O’Brien, who studies research and policy implications of “big data” at Northeastern University’s School of Public Policy.
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Our cities may never look the same again after the pandemic

If they do, the widely-publicized six-foot distancing guidelines could redefine the layout and spacing of new public facilities, according to Northeastern University’s Sara Jensen Carr, whose forthcoming book “The Topography of Wellness” considers how urban landscapes have been transformed by epidemics like cholera, tuberculosis and obesity.

Oh, Good, the Kids Are Fighting Again

“I think it’s really important to offer some hope that this is actually a good time to help kids have more positive stuff going on in their relationships,” said Laurie Kramer, Ph.D., a professor of applied psychology at Northeastern University in Boston and an expert on sibling relationships. “It is possible, and I don’t think that parents […]
Vox

Every conversation about reopening should be about testing

“This is supply chain 101. This is operations 101,” Nada Sanders, a supply chain management expert at Northeastern University, told me. “It’s so simple. And it’s just not happening.”
ABC News

COVID-19 is exposing cracks in the US health system, experts say

The interdependent relationship between health and housing creates a relentless cycle, according to Leo Beletsky, a professor of law and health sciences at Northeastern University.
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You’ll Probably Never Know If You Had the Coronavirus in January

 Alessandro Vespignani, a network scientist and public-health professor at Northeastern University, estimates that in each American city that later became a hot spot for COVID-19, perhaps 10 to 20 “local transmission events” occurred in January.
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Alphabet’s Sidewalk Labs Scraps Its Ambitious Toronto Project

“The next time this is done by any big tech corporation that wants to reimagine the future of neighborhoods, it will be done in close communication with communities.” DANIEL O’BRIEN, NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY
Business Insider

New evidence suggests the coronavirus was likely spreading in the US and France as early as December

A model from researchers at Northeastern University suggests that the coronavirus had started spreading in New York, San Francisco, Chicago, Boston, and Seattle by early February. Thousands of people were probably unknowingly contracting the disease, The New York Times reported.

In Defense of a Good Cry, and Other Options for ‘Losing It’

“Crying can be very cathartic because when you cry, you are taking deep breaths,” said Lisa Feldman Barrett, professor of psychology at Northeastern University and author of “How Emotions Are Made.” She added that those big gulps between sobs most likely increase activity in the parasympathetic nervous system, which helps to calm us down.