Christopher Ceccolini, assistant professor of psychology in clinical psychiatry, and Daniel Eden, assistant professor of clinical psychiatry, at Weill Cornell Medicine, discuss the impact of the volatile stock market on mental health.
“For the last 20 years, many employers’ practices appear to assume that having no college degree means you don’t have skills. Today, Opportunity@Work provides further evidence to refute that narrative,” says Erica Groshen, senior labor market advisor at ILR.
“From a consumer perspective, I don’t think people should be worried. It’s an inconvenience. But ultimately, we’re a very highly regulated industry, and it’s going to continue to be very carefully regulated and monitored,” says Nicole Martin, assistant research professor.
Ian Kysel, associate clinical professor of law, says “It’s appropriate for states to collaborate on how to respond to migration. But the first principle of that has to be to ensure that the rights of all migrants are protected.”
“Human creativity has allowed us to reach for the stars and find those exciting new worlds on our cosmic horizon, and imagination helps us envision what they could look like,” says Lisa Kaltenegger, associate professor of astronomy.
Robert Sternberg, professor of psychology, says “The greatest worry in these times of generative AI is not that it may compromise human creativity or intelligence, but that it already has.”
Ryan Chahrour, professor of economics, says the decline in the dollar's value suggests its safe-haven status "has at least temporarily disappeared" in favor of the Swiss franc, yen, and gold.