Category: Science and Technology

  • Spurred by 9/11, Willrich explored individual and collective rightsMay 11, 2012

    As with many Americans, the balance between individual and collective rights occupied Michael Willrich’s mind in the aftermath of Sept. 11 and the subsequent fears of bio-terrorism. His concerns led to an award-winning book, "Pox: An American History."

  • Neurobiologist becomes advisor to Hillary ClintonMay 8, 2012

    Frances Colón ’04, who studied developmental neurobiology in the Birren Lab, was recently named deputy science and technology advisor to Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton. Her primary role is promotion of science, technology and innovation dialogues.

  • Computing Symposium aims to expand diversityApril 26, 2012

    The fourth annual New England Undergraduate Computing Symposium took place last Saturday on campus, attracting over 100 computer science students and faculty from a dozen universities. Attendance and project submissions nearly doubled since last year.

  • Willrich receives Lawrence W. Levine Award for 'Pox: An American History'April 24, 2012

    Professor of History Michael Willrich has been selected by the Organization of American Historians to receive the 2012 Lawrence W. Levine Award, which is given annually for the best book in American cultural history.

  • Marder receives awards for neuroscience advancesApril 20, 2012

    Division of Science head Eve Marder '69 has been given the George A. Miller Prize in Cognitive Neuroscience from the Cognitive Neuroscience Society and the Karl Spencer Lashley Award in Neuroscience from the American Philosophical Society.

  • AAAS elects Turrigiano; brain research praisedApril 17, 2012

    Professor of Biology Gina G. Turrigiano has been elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences,which has been recognizing premier 'thinkers and doers' in American society since the 1780s. Turrigiano's work on brain function has created a framework for thinking about some brain disorders.

  • Grants reward innovations in software, life sciencesApril 11, 2012

    A total of $80,000 in grant money has been awarded to seven teams of students, fellows and faculty entrepreneurs who participated in the second annual Sprout Grant competition. Products to be developed range from a dirty-bomb detector to a mobile app that acts as a virtual business card.

  • New scholarship stresses importance of teacher learning and improvementApril 10, 2012
  • Pre-med track has a long, successful history April 9, 2012

    Brandeis students long have been interested in the field of medicine, from research to surgery. Many graduates who are now working in medical fields attribute their success to basic science research done at Brandeis.

  • DARPA grant exploring auto-translation of ChineseApril 5, 2012

    As the U.S. and China continue to increase interaction, the ability to communicate becomes more critical. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) recently awarded Brandeis a $2 million grant to help develop new translation technologies.

  • Greg Petsko is captivating in first event of Cafe ScienceApril 3, 2012

    The professor of biochemistry and chemistry captivated his audience during an off-campus lecture on 'Drugs for Neurologic Disorders' Monday. It was the first event of Cafe Science, a series of informal talks by some of the university’s premier science professors. Lectures are open to the greater Waltham community.

  • New Brandeis Cafe Science connects community with researchMarch 29, 2012
  • Christine Thomas experiments on NOVA March 29, 2012

    Fewer than one hundred naturally occurring elements make up everything in our world — from rocks to the living cells in our body. Researchers at NOVA, along with Christine Thomas, assistant professor of chemistry, explore the elements through hands-on experiments at 9 p.m. Wednesday, April 4, on PBS.

  • Students share enthusiasm for experiential learningMarch 27, 2012

    Whether they study cell architecture in a lab, identify and exhibit rare Roman glass or advocate for less fortunate in communities around the country, Brandeis students learn by doing. They shared their experiences of learning outside the classroom at the fourth annual Experiential Learning Symposium held in Levin Ballroom March 22.

  • Brandeis scientists win prestigious Gairdner prizeMarch 21, 2012

    Michael Rosbash, the Peter and Patricia Gruber Professor of Neuroscience and director of the Brandeis National Center for Behavioral Genomics, and Professor Emeritus of Biology Jeffrey C. Hall were given the Canada Gairdner Award for work on circadian rhythms that 'contributes significantly to improving the quality of human life.'

  • Rosbash named to new Gruber neuroscience chairMarch 14, 2012

    Peter and Patricia Gruber Foundation cites outstanding work by Professor Michael Rosbash, high quality of neuroscience research at Brandeis generally, and the leadership of President Fred Lawrence, in creating the chair, which will be named for Peter Gruber.

  • Video contest focuses on federally funded scientific research March 12, 2012
  • JBS class study reveals poor air quality in Boston nail salonsMarch 8, 2012

    Students in Professor Laura Goldin’s Environmental Health and Justice Program have uncovered problems with the air quality in nail salons in Boston and are working to inspire change. The course has ended, but the students haven't stopped working to help salon employees.

  • Heller team helps fight prescription drug abuseMarch 5, 2012

    Prescription drug abuse is rising at alarming rates. To combat the problem, prescription monitoring programs are becoming more sophisticated, aiming to put the brakes on abusers and, in some cases, incorporate rehabilitation programs. Scientist Peter Kreiner explains how the programs work and what they hope to accomplish.

  • President: India mission far exceeded expectationsFeb. 17, 2012

    Exchanges of scholars, significant donations and possibilities for broadening Study Abroad opportunities are among results of the trip, which also included meetings with alumni, friends of the university and potential future Brandeisians.

  • Gates Foundation awards grant to tackle malariaFeb. 13, 2012

    Can an innovative wallpaper-like liner help reduce the number of cases of malaria, and if so, will it be cost effective? Professor Donald S. Shepard wants to know, and he has gotten the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to help. A grant, totaling nearly $500,000 over the next three years, will allow Shepard and collaborators to pursue their research.

  • Lawrence's India trip advances partnership Feb. 8, 2012

    Faculty and administrators of Brandeis University and India’s National Center for Biological Sciences have agreed to work toward creating a formal institutional partnership that could involve graduate students, undergraduates and post-docs.

  • Closer to understanding, averting drug resistanceJan. 30, 2012

    Bacterial resistance against antibiotics is growing exponentially. One reason is because drug resistant proteins are transporting “good” antibiotics out of the cells leaving them to mutate. Professor Dorothee Kern and collaborators looked at how one of these drug transporters works.

  • Grants help research go from laboratory to marketJan. 28, 2012

    Seed money from last year’s Virtual Incubator landed one group additional funding for its smartphone study aid. Another group's ALS therapy is now under license for commercial development. Do you have a big idea? Preliminary proposals are due by Friday, Feb. 10, 2012.

  • Simon, world-class relief worker, teacher, at milestone Jan. 27, 2012

    By any standard, the professor of international development is at the forefront of his field. He has created new academic and service programs, pioneered technology to bring the benefits of modern science to Third World countries and done relief work across broad swaths of Latin America, Africa and Asia.

  • Spring courses on climate, rebels, laughing matters Jan. 16, 2012

    Sabine von Mering wants to have a conversation about climate change; one that goes beyond whether it's happening. So the German language and literature professor is teaching a course this spring, “European Perspectives on Climate Change,” that offers a European perspective on the topic, told through literature and film.

  • A new twist on surface tensionJan. 9, 2012

    Researchers have engineered a new way of controlling surface tension, by creating reversible transitions of a flat two-dimensional membrane to a single dimension. It is part of an overall research mission to manipulate microscale structures of materials.

  • Faculty Focus: Michael Rosbash, biologistJan. 3, 2012

    Director of the Brandeis National Center for Behavioral Genomics, Rosbash was recently awarded the Louisa Gross Horowitz Prize from Columbia University for groundbreaking studies on the molecular basis of circadian rhythms.

  • Researchers explain granular material propertiesDec. 14, 2011

    What is it is that makes granular materials change from a flowing loose state to a “jammed,” or solid, state? In a study out this week in the Journal Nature, researchers at Brandeis explain how granular materials are transformed when force is applied at a particular angle, a process known as shearing.

  • Physicists say they are near epic Higgs boson discoveryDec. 13, 2011

    The Holy Grail of high-energy physics — the predicted but elusive Higgs boson — is almost within reach, and the Brandeis high-energy physics group, along with other particle physicists around the world collaborating on making the finding, is almost giddy with excitement.

  • Researchers discover drug-resistance mechanismDec. 9, 2011

    Antibiotics are used for everything from squelching strep throat to suppressing the immune system after an organ transplant. Understanding how some microbes resist high concentrations of antibiotics is important to designing new drugs and deciding how and when to prescribe existing drugs.

  • Addressing pain and disease on the flyDec. 6, 2011

    Studies of a protein that fruit flies use to sense heat and chemicals may someday provide solutions to human pain and the control of disease-spreading mosquitoes. Research from the Garrity lab was recently published in the journal Nature.

  • Nobelist MacKinnon '78 speaks at science retreatNov. 3, 2011

    The chemistry researcher's much anticipated talk was delivered on the subject of eukaryotic K+ channels, the molecules responsible for the movement of potassium ions into cells. More than 100 Brandeis scientists participated in the annual event.

  • Growing cohort of women in science calling Brandeis homeOct. 31, 2011

    Since its founding, the university has made a concerted effort to recruit and maintain female faculty in the sciences. 'It's a welcoming place,' says Division of Science Chair Eve Marder '68. 'Women feel comfortable when they come to interview.'

  • Nahum Sonenberg to receive 41st Rosenstiel AwardOct. 26, 2011
  • Structure of Parkinson’s disease protein identifiedOct. 21, 2011

    The Petsko-Ringe, Pochapsky and Agar laboratories have produced and determined the structure of alpha-synuclein, a key protein associated with Parkinson’s disease. Information may someday be used to produce a new kind of treatment.

  • Hoffmann, recipient of 2010 Rosenstiel Award, wins 2011 NobelOct. 4, 2011

    This year's Nobel Laureates for physiology of medicine have revolutionized our understanding of the immune system by discovering key principles for its activation. One of the winners, Jules Hoffmann, was bestowed the 2010 Lewis S. Rosenstiel Award for Distinguished Work in Basic Medical Science.

  • Asian Food Network taps Prof. Hayes for documentarySept. 23, 2011

    China and India have joined overweight Americans in the obesity epidemic that’s sweeping across the world. This concern has prompted the folks at the Asian Food Channel to create a documentary investigating healthy diets.

  • Failure of brain's clock could play role in causing neuropsychiatric disordersSept. 19, 2011

    People who battle neuropsychiatric disorders can also have poorly regulated biological rhythms, which leads to altered sleep/wake cycles and hormonal rhythms. New research shows evidence that these circadian system symptoms, which have long been considered a result from the pathology, may also be involved in the cause of psychiatric disorders.

  • How much sleep's enough? Navy wants to knowSept. 7, 2011

    Brandeis' Ashton Graybiel Spatial Orientation Laboratory has long inquired into topics such as sensory motor adaptation and motion sickness, making the lab a hot spot as the Navy develops small combat ships with limited crew that must always be on top of their game.

  • Prof. Turrigiano wins HFSP Nakasone AwardSept. 6, 2011

    The Nakasone Award honors scientists who have undertaken frontier-moving research in biology, encompassing conceptual, experimental or technological breakthroughs. Turrigiano’s work in synaptic scaling is allowing scientists to further understand how the brain self-regulates and maintains balance.  

  • Researchers explain how railways in cells are builtSept. 1, 2011

    Every cell in the human body contains a complex system to transport critical material such as proteins and membrane vesicles from one point to another. Bruce Goode, professor of biology, and his team have come one step closer to understanding the elusive mechanics of this process.

  • Butterfly can't leaf it alone, so biologist lends a handAug. 15, 2011

    Field biologist Eric Olson has long been a crusader against invasive species. They can crowd out native species, and generally disrupt the natural order. But this summer Olson's been busy protecting a weed from Europe for the sake of a prized butterfly.

  • Marcus Long awarded new HHMI fellowshipAug. 4, 2011

    Research on a new strategy that aims to selectively tag and target proteins for destruction has won Marcus Long a Howard Hughes Medical Institute fellowship for international graduate students. A member of the Hedstrom Lab, Long says that the ability to target disease-causing proteins, in principle, could save lives.

  • Artificial cilia spur new thinking in nanotechnologyJuly 26, 2011

    Cilia, tiny hair-like structures that perform feats such as clearing microscopic debris from the lungs and determining the correct location of organs during development, move in mysterious ways. Brandeis researchers have created artificial cilia-like structures that offers a new approach for cilia study.

  • Graybiel Lab poised for next round of space explorationJuly 21, 2011

    Companies are currently taking reservations for suborbital flights on their spaceships, and payload specialists - astronauts needed to carry out research and commercial work- must be be trained. The Graybiel Lab is one of a handful of facilities in the country that can do this.

  • When it comes to eating, rats follow their nosesJuly 7, 2011

    Would your favorite dinner taste the same if you couldn’t smell it? Does a sense of smell require a sense of taste? Associate professor Don Katz set out to find some answers in his laboratory. The results reveal the complex connections between taste and smell.

  • Collaborative develops drug to help hemophiliacsJune 23, 2011

    Collaborative work by Brandeis researchers and doctors at Children's and Brigham and Women's hospitals may lead to development of long-acting clotting medications that free patients from frequent infusions and from worries that an internal bleed has gone unnoticed.

  • Scientists discover protein complex linked to memoryJune 22, 2011

    Forget where you put your keys or recalling names at a cocktail party? New research from the Lisman Laboratory points to a molecule that is central to the process by which memories are stored in the brain.

  • President and faculty traveling to Israel seeking to enhance historic tiesJune 12, 2011

    Lawrence and a small group of senior faculty and administrators will visit leading universities and research centers in an effort to stimulate collaborations and to raise the profile of Brandeis with Israelis interested in studying in the US.

  • Sprout Grant Program looks for the next big ideasJune 3, 2011

    Have the next innovation that could change the world? Fourteen Brandeis scientists think that they do, and recently pitched their work to a panel of industry experts to win part of a $50,000 grant created to grow their ideas which ranged from targeting mutated proteins in cancer to a mobile application for studying.

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