In The News: College of Liberal Arts

Medical Press

Players of the competitive eSports video game League of Legends showed no change in testosterone during game play, UNLV researchers have found.

Latestly

Turns out, testosterone levels remain unchanged in male while playing eSports esports video game League. According to a first-of-its-kind University of Nevada, Las Vegas study, players of the competitive eSports video games show no change in testosterone, a type of naturally occurring steroid hormones.

Hindustan Times

Turns out, testosterone levels remain unchanged in males while playing eSports video game League.

Eurekalert

Players of the competitive esports video game League of Legends showed no change in testosterone during game play, UNLV researchers have found.

Business Standard

Turns out, testosterone levels remain unchanged in male while playing eSports esports video game League.

ANI News

Turns out, testosterone levels remain unchanged in male while playing eSports esports video game League.

ABV Live

Turns out, testosterone levels remain unchanged in male while playing eSports esports video game League.

KSNV-TV: News 3

Chill. We’re not talking about the candidates.

KNPR News

Nevada has had a few cases head to the U.S. Supreme Court over the years. There was once was a sheriff who requested a passenger list from William Crendall – who said no. And that was the spark that led to Nevada’s first Supreme Court case.

Las Vegas Weekly

Modern life is crazy stressful. It often feels like you’re trapped inside a 24-hour barrage of bad news, political hijinks and social media-induced envy. There may be no way to fix the world outside your front door, but the world inside can be a haven of your own creation. Here’s how.

Las Vegas Weekly

This August, Atlanta-born, Brooklyn-based author Tayari Jones arrived in Las Vegas. She’s here as a Black Mountain Institute Shearing Fellow, which means she’s spending the academic year working on her next book. Right now, Jones is on a six-week, 35-event book tour. She spoke with Las Vegas Weekly from her stop in Boston. She returns to UNLV in March.

The Seattle Times

On Jan. 27, the state of Washington gave adults a third sex option on birth certificates — an “X” to indicate neither male nor female — without medical documentation. As gender scholars, we applaud this. It’s a big deal for the state to say that we don’t simply have males and females. Just adding one more category is a good start but doesn’t solve the problem of how we use these categories.