'Drama of the American Working Family' Examined

User rating: not rated yet

Armed with a $3.6 million grant from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and a wide range of anthropological, linguistic and psychological research methods, a team of UCLA faculty is gearing up for a landmark study of a species under considerable stress: the middle-class, dual-income family.
The nine highly regarded UCLA researchers will devote the next three years to filming and documenting the everyday routines of 30 families residing in the greater Los Angeles area. The material then will be housed in the UCLA/Sloan Working Family Archive, where it can be studied in depth for years to come by researchers seeking to understand a sector of the American public that stands at a crossroads.


Full story »

All News summaries from General Science news
All News summaries for March 25, 2005

Technology users are failing to take adequate steps to protect their digital privacy

1 hour ago | User rating: not rated yet
In the face of technology that will soon be able not only to track an individual's movements but predict them too, people are far too relaxed about protecting their privacy, according to social psychologist Saadi Lahlou, ...

Fingerprint find in decade-old double murder probe

12 hours ago | User rating: not rated yet
A decade old US double murder probe has received a new breakthrough following investigations by a University of Leicester forensic scientist at Northamptonshire Police.

Thumbs up -- a tiny ancestral remnant lends developmental edge to humans

Sep 04, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
Subtle genetic changes that confer an evolutionary advantage upon a species, such as the dexterity characteristic of the human hand, while difficult to detect and even harder to reproduce in a model system, have nevertheless ...

Probing Question: Does talking to plants help them grow?

Sep 04, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
In a 1986 interview, England’s Prince Charles discussed his gardening habits, commenting "I just come and talk to the plants, really. Very important to talk to them; they respond."

Researchers map first plant-parasitic nematode genome sequence

Sep 04, 2008 | User rating: not rated yet
(PhysOrg.com) -- There are numerous plant-parasitic nematodes in the world, but only a handful are responsible for the largest part of an estimated $157 billion in agricultural damage globally every year. Nematodes are small ...