Brantmeier appointed to multinational language research advisory board
				Cindy Brantmeier, a professor of applied linguistics and global studies in Arts and Sciences, will serve on the advisory board for LANGUAGES, a language acquisition research study in England, Norway and France examining teachers’ instruction and students’ use of languages in classrooms.
			
		
					
			Wingfield elected president of American Sociological Association
				Adia Harvey Wingfield, in Arts & Sciences, has been elected the 116th president of the American Sociological Association. As president, she will be responsible for leading ASA’s overall strategic direction and policymaking.
			
		
					
			Book explores ChatGPT’s power to revolutionize research
				Artificial intelligence can turn from a mere tool into a full-fledged partner in the research process. A new book from a faculty member at the Brown School at Washington University in St. Louis serves as a guide to the future of research.
			
		
					
			Study: ‘Counter-stereotypical’ messaging can move needle on vaccinations
				A large-scale study led by Olin Business School researcher Brad Larsen to see if politically partisan cues can induce people to get COVID-19 vaccines found that, yes, they can.
			
		
					
			Pardo installed as Walter D. Coles Professor of Law
				Rafael Pardo, a bankruptcy and commercial law expert, was installed recently as the Walter D. Coles Professor of Law. 
			
		
					
			Siteman Cancer Center launches cancer screening initiative to address racial disparities
				Siteman Cancer Center at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and the School of Medicine is launching a prostate cancer screening initiative along with an educational campaign in the St. Louis region to address racial disparities in prostate cancer.
			
		
					
			David M. Becker, professor emeritus of law, 87
				David M. Becker, the Joseph H. Zumbalen Professor of the Law of Property Emeritus, died April 17 in St. Louis. He was 87.
			
		
					
			Motivations for taking the moral high ground
				Jessie Sun, an assistant professor of psychological and brain sciences in Arts & Sciences, examines what drives good deeds.
			
		
					
			Research finds fathers’ leave reduces sexist attitudes
				New research from Arts & Sciences is among the first to provide concrete evidence that paternity leave policies can lead to more gender-equal attitudes — especially among those directly impacted by the policy. 
			
		
					
			Codes of Modernity
Chinese Scripts in the Global Information Age
				In the late nineteenth century, Chinese reformers and revolutionaries believed that there was something fundamentally wrong with the Chinese writing system. The Chinese characters, they argued, were too cumbersome to learn, blocking the channels of communication, obstructing mass literacy, and impeding scientific progress. What had sustained a civilization for more than two millennia was suddenly […]
			
		
					
		
		
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