Students designed prototypes, then developed them to permit-ready construction documents for three tiny homes that will be built for people experiencing homelessness in Syracuse, New York.
It could reduce industry’s reliance on expensive platinum, which has hindered the growth of fuel cell electric vehicles, green power generation and more.
It’s complicated. Rather than simple splitting events, the species histories of polar and brown bears, like those of humans, hide convoluted stories of divergence and interbreeding, study finds.
Study is the first to examine law enforcement deaths from COVID-19 on a national level, demonstrating the widespread risk from COVID that officers face in their work.
NIDCR director Rena D’Souza will visit UB to deliver a report on the status of oral health in the U.S. and discuss the importance of equity, diversity and inclusion within the biomedical sciences.
‘Deodorant is, for many of us, an oft overlooked part of the way we present ourselves to the world,’ says historian Cari Casteel, whose interests include how scents connect with ideas about gender.
Study found a method to differentiate human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) to A9 dopamine neurons (A9 DA), which are lost in Parkinson’s disease.
UB/Oishei symposium June 28 for researchers and families of children with genetic diseases will celebrate Buffalo’s legacy as the birthplace of newborn screening.
Research on wastewater finds that a spike in acetaminophen — the active ingredient in medications like Tylenol — preceded a spike in viral RNA during one COVID-19 wave in Western New York.
A convergent mechanism may be responsible for how two top-ranked genetic risk factors for autism spectrum disorder/intellectual disability (ASD/ID) lead to these neurodevelopmental disorders.