ReportWire

Tag: Tel Aviv University

  • Pro-Israel Arab-Israeli activist Yoseph Haddad weighs Knesset run, poll tests strength

    [ad_1]

    Pro-Israel activist and IDF veteran Yoseph Haddad is contemplating a political party for Israel’s next Knesset elections, with recent polls showing strong support, especially from Jewish voters.

    Yoseph Haddad, an Arab-Israeli pro-Israel advocacy activist and IDF veteran who has become a prominent media and social media voice in recent years, is considering establishing a new political party ahead of Israel’s next Knesset election, according to a new survey published on Wednesday.

    The poll, conducted by the Midgam Institute under Mano Geva and commissioned by people close to Haddad, projected that a Haddad-led list would cross the electoral threshold and win four seats if elections were held today.

    According to the poll, the four seats were drawn from voters across the political map, including from Likud, Otzma Yehudit, and supporters of former prime minister Naftali Bennett.

    In the same polling scenario, Benny Gantz’s Blue and White and Bezalel Smotrich’s Religious Zionist Party fell below the threshold.

    The survey found higher support for Haddad in the Jewish sector than in the Arab sector, with 73% support among Jewish respondents and 12% among Arab respondents. The report did not publish full methodological details such as sample size, field dates, or margin of error.

    Yoseph Haddad plays in a soccer match in Shefayim, commemorating the 12 Israeli-Druze children killed by a Hezbollah rocket in Majdal Shams, wearing a shirt denouncing former Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah, who was killed by the IDF, in a picture taken August 25, 2025; illustrative. (credit: FLASH90)

    The Midgam polling also referenced a separate scenario involving Brig.-Gen. (ret.) Ofer Winter, saying a party led by him polled at 2% and would remain below the threshold.

    Haddad, who has described his work as focused on Israeli public diplomacy and Arab-Jewish relations inside Israel, has said he volunteered for combat service and was seriously wounded during the 2006 Second Lebanon War. He later founded Together Vouch for Each Other, which he has described as an effort to bridge gaps between Arab citizens and wider Israeli society.

    Haddad currently in Munich to speak at anti-Iranian regime rally

    According to a statement by Haddad, he is currently on an advocacy trip in Munich and is expected to speak at a rally backing the people of Iran and calling for the regime’s overthrow.

    A representative for Haddad said he is “busy acting and fighting for the State of Israel in every arena in which he can influence,” adding that “all options are on the table.”

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Bar-Ilan becomes Israel’s second largest research university, surpassing HUJI

    [ad_1]

    Over the past seven years, Bar-Ilan has seen a 30% increase in total student enrollment, marking the highest growth rate among the country’s major research universities.

    Bar-Ilan University has climbed to second place among Israel’s research universities, surpassing the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and now trailing only Tel Aviv University, according to a new Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS) 2025 Higher Education Report.

    The shift marks a major redistribution within Israel’s academic landscape. Over the past seven years, Bar-Ilan has seen a 30% increase in total student enrollment, marking the highest growth rate among the country’s major research universities.

    The data highlighted a strengthening of the university’s research capabilities, with nearly half of the recent enrollment surge occurring in graduate and doctoral programs. The university has seen growth across key areas, including engineering, medicine, nanotechnology, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, and the exact sciences.

    Photo of Bar-Ilan University campus, March, 2025. (credit: COURTESY BAR ILAN)

    Is strategy the secret tool behind Bar-Ilan’s success?

    The university pointed to a long-term strategic plan aimed at broadening accessibility and investing heavily in cutting-edge research infrastructure as the catalysts for this success.

    “Through a deep, broad, and consistent strategic process, Bar-Ilan University has achieved an unprecedented milestone of becoming the second largest university in Israel, influencing the lives of hundreds of thousands of young Israelis from all walks of life,” said Prof. Arie Zaban, president of Bar-Ilan University.

    The strategic shift has included the introduction of new academic offerings, such as new engineering tracks and a six-year medical program. Furthermore, the university has fostered interdisciplinary collaboration to connect scientific research directly with practical needs in areas like health care and technology.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Political orientation could be predicted by differences in brain activation and synchronization

    Political orientation could be predicted by differences in brain activation and synchronization

    [ad_1]

    Newswise — A first-of-its-kind study scanned the brains of dozens of politically involved participants while they watched campaign-ads and speeches by parties from both ends of the political spectrum, just before one of the last rounds of elections. The participants, half right-wing and half left-wing, were scanned using magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), a method that measures brain activation. Surprisingly, it was found that political-dependent differences in the brain response emerged already in early brain regions, such as regions involved in vision and hearing, and in fact the response in these regions was enough to predict an individual’s political views.

    The researchers note that right-wing participants had synchronized brain response (meaning their brain worked in a similar manner) while they watched the right-wing stimuli, whereas left-wing participants had synchronized brain response (meaning their brain worked in a similar manner) while they watched the left-wing stimuli. This was true for regions within the sensory, motor, and somatosensory cortices, which are responsible for vision, hearing, and movement.

    The study was led by Noa Katabi, a research student in the lab of Dr. Yaara Yeshurun in the School of Psychological Sciences and the Sagol School of Neuroscience. The study was published in the Journal of Neuroscience.

    During the study, participants watched video-clips, including a neutral (in terms of political characteristics) video-clip and different political campaign-ads and political speeches by politicians from both blocs, Right and Left. The researchers were surprised to discover widespread partisanship-dependent brain activation and synchronization when Right-wing individuals watched the videos of their political bloc, or when Left-wing individuals watched the videos of left-wing politician.

    Interestingly, the researchers found that such partisanship-dependent differences in brain synchronization was not limited to “higher” areas of the brain, associated with interpretation and abstract thinking, as was previously found. Rather, these differences occurred already in regions responsible for sight, hearing and even touch.

    Dr. Yeshurun: “The research clearly showed that the more the subjects were politically aligned with a certain group, the more their brain response was synchronized, including in motor and somatosensory areas, that is, those areas of the brain that are active when we move or feel things with our senses. In fact, just by the brain’s response in these primary sensory areas we could tell if a certain individual was left or wight wing. Intriguingly, it was not necessary to examine the activity in “higher” brain areas – areas that are involved in understanding why a certain character did something, or what that character thinks and feels – in order to predict participants’ political views, it could even be done by examining an area of the brain that is responsible for seeing or hearing.” The researchers think that this surprising finding is due to the fact that the participants they chose were politically involved, and also due to the timing of the experiment – a few weeks before the elections, when the political atmosphere in Israel was very present and emotional.

    Dr. Yeshurun adds: “This is the first study to show political-dependent brain activity in early sensory and motor areas, and it can be said that at the most basic brain level, rightists and leftists in Israel literally (and not just metaphorically) don’t see and hear the same things. I think that if we try to understand how people who hold opposite political views to ours experience the world, we might be able to conduct a slightly more effective public discussion that can hopefully attenuate the current political polarization.”

    [ad_2]

    Tel Aviv University

    Source link