
Lara Aoi
As the arts and culture correspondent at Reporter, Lara Aoi brings a unique blend of literary finesse and profound insight to her pieces. Her reviews and features provide readers with a window into the world of music, literature, and visual arts.
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- Markets
3 reasons we use graphic novels to teach math and physics
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- 23, Aug, 2023
Post-pandemic, some educators are trying to reengage students with technology – like videos, computer gaming or artificial intelligence, just to name a few. But integrating these approaches in the classroom can be an uphill battle.
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- Life & Arts
3 ways AI is transforming music
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
Each fall, I begin my course on the intersection of music and artificial intelligence by asking my students if they’re concerned about AI’s role in composing or producing music.
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- Business
A carbon tax on investment income could be more fair
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
A year after the US Department of Justice blocked the merger of two of the world’s biggest publishers, a New York-based private equity investment firm, Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., has agreed to buy Simon & Schuster.
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- Business
ADB trims developing Asia growth outlook on China risk
- root
- 20, Sep, 2023
MANILA -- The Asian Development Bank lowered its growth forecast for developing Asia this year as high interest rates and the property crisis in China pose growing risks.
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- Tech
AI and new standards promise to make scientific data more useful by making it reusable and accessible
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
Every time a scientist runs an experiment, or a social scientist does a survey, or a humanities scholar analyzes a text, they generate data. Science runs on data – without it, we wouldn’t have the James Webb Space Telescope’s stunning images, disease-preventing vaccines or an evolutionary tree...
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- Economics
As BRICS cooperation accelerates, is it time for the US to develop a BRICS policy?
- root
- 23, Aug, 2023
When leaders of the BRICS group of large emerging economies – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – meet in Johannesburg for two days beginning on Aug. 22, 2023, foreign policymakers in Washington will no doubt be listening carefully.