News and views for the UB community
The Templeton Foundation is funding the innovative project that will show how diversity, disagreement and dynamism are crucial for an open society.
Membrane-less organelles, found inside human cells, have a variety of important biological functions, from gene regulation to stress response.
The NIH funding will be used to develop interventions to help young adults quit smoking and improve sleep among people with MS.
GSE’s Valerie Nesset has received a federal grant to find better ways librarians can provide programs and services to baby boomers.
A UB-led study found that MS patients on the vegetable-rich Wahls diet experienced less fatigue.
The study led by UB epidemiologist Meng Wang found the impact was roughly equivalent to smoking a pack of cigarettes a day for 29 years.
UB’s fourth annual Architectural Ceramic Assemblies Workshop explores the use of terra cotta in high-performance facade design.
UB psychiatrist Uriel Halbreich will lead discussions at the World Psychiatric Association Congress aimed at implementing the approach.
UB optics experts contributed to research on a new retroreflective material that could be used for nighttime color-changing road signs.
The idea behind the installation is to bring the sea — especially its plight due to pollution — closer to people’s minds.
Joyce Hwang and her team are looking to make the outdoor areas of a former Madrid slaughterhouse more habitable in the face of global climate change.