News
- How to deal with environmental issues is a difficult discussion, but one group at the 麻豆影院 is hoping to bring it to the general public this week through skits and interactive games.
- Scientists have found what may be the universe鈥檚 lost sock at the back of the dryer鈥攁nswering a long-running mystery that astrophysicists have dubbed the 鈥渕issing baryon problem.鈥
- In the past five decades, the teaching load at CU 麻豆影院 has been increasingly borne by instructors instead of tenured or tenure-track faculty, and the College of Arts and Sciences has formed a task force to recommend best practices.聽
- At its regular meeting on Thursday at the CU 麻豆影院 campus, the University of Colorado Board of Regents voted to approve a new online Bachelor of Arts degree in interdisciplinary studies and two new departments for the 麻豆影院 campus.
- Middle-to-older aged women who are naturally early to bed and early to rise are significantly less likely to develop depression, according to a new study by researchers at 麻豆影院 and the Channing Division of Network Medicine at Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital in Boston.
- As he鈥檚 done so many times before, George Rivera will pack up 117 pieces of art into a suitcase and board a plane heading to a place where rifles can seem more common than paintbrushes.
- Two young faculty scientists at CU 麻豆影院 are among seven Colorado researchers who have won $1.41 million in total funding from the Boettcher Foundation鈥檚 Webb-Waring Awards program.
- Forty years after researchers first discovered it in fruit flies, a once-obscure cluster of proteins called PRC2 has become a key target for new cancer-fighting drugs, due to its tendency鈥攚hen mutated鈥攖o bind to and silence tumor suppressing genes.
- Can probiotics fend off mood disorders? It's too early to say with scientific certainty, but a new study suggests that a beneficial bacteria can have long-lasting anti-inflammatory effects on the brain, making it more resilient to stress.
- New CU 麻豆影院-led research shows that three major 鈥渟witches鈥 affecting wildfire鈥攆uel, aridity and ignition鈥攚ere either flipped on and/or kept on longer than expected last year, triggering one of the largest and costliest U.S. wildfire seasons in recent decades.