Bats are large reservoirs for diseases, but they don't appear to get as sick as we do. University of Florida College of Veterinary Medicine professor breaks down the secret to this immune system quirk.| epi.ufl.edu
The perception among some police officers that fraud is a victimless offence can weaken investigations... Perception of fraud as a “victimless” offence can weaken police investigations, study shows appeared first on News.| News
Continental shelf seas – the shallow waters surrounding our coasts that provide most of the... Continental shelf seas revealed as powerful carbon sinks, but cutting global emissions remains critical to safeguard sea life appeared first on News.| News
The European Union’s legal ambiguity on the Western Sahara frozen conflict is an increasingly glaring... EU ambiguity on Western Sahara frozen conflict is a “glaring source” of vulnerability for Sahrawis, study shows appeared first on News.| News
Cross-sector collaboration can prepare the UK economy for future challenges, according to a new report.... More collaboration needed to prepare UK economy for future challenges, leaders urge appeared first on News.| News
One of Devon’s last great untapped sources of history will reveal some of its best-kept... Treasure trove of Devon history set to be unearthed in new book appeared first on News.| News
A new interdisciplinary research centre with a mission to investigate Artificial Intelligence has been launched... International experts on Artificial Intelligence gather for launch of new University research centre appeared first on News.| News
Companies that are more sensitive to temperature changes are consistently overvalued and deliver lower-than-expected returns.... Firms sensitive to rising temperatures deliver lower stock returns appeared first on News.| News
Current NHS policies designed to improve care for people taking multiple medicines may not be effective, according to new research. In England, more than one in seven people take five or more medicines daily, leading| News
Das ME/CFS Research Register bietet ab sofort auch einen Überblick über die ME/CFS-Forschungslandschaft in Norwegen und Island. Neben Deutschland, Österreich, der Schweiz und den Niederlanden wurden damit Forschungsprojekte, wissenschaftliche Publikationen und Veranstaltungen aus zwei weiteren europäischen Ländern in das Register aufgenommen. Ziel des Registers ist es, einen systematischen Überblick über die internationale ME/CFS-Forschungslandschaft zu geben …Update des ME/CFS Resea...| ME/CFS Research Foundation
Mehr als 65 international führende Wissenschaftler*innen und Mediziner*innen haben eine neue Deklaration unterzeichnet. Sie fordern ein global koordiniertes Vorgehen bei der Erforschung und Entwicklung von Medikamenten für ME/CFS (Myalgische Enzephalomyelitis/Chronisches Fatigue-Syndrom) und Long COVID. Die Deklaration wurde erstmals am 12. Mai auf der International ME/CFS Conference 2025 in Berlin von Prof. Dr. Carmen Scheibenbogen (Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin) vorgestellt...| ME/CFS Research Foundation
Das ME/CFS Research Register beinhaltet ab sofort eine Übersicht der ME/CFS-Forschungslandschaft in den Niederlanden und der Schweiz. Neben Deutschland und Österreich wurde das Register somit um zusätzliche Forschungsprojekte, Forschungsnetzwerke und wissenschaftliche Publikationen aus zwei weiteren Ländern erweitert. Außerdem bietet das Register neue Funktionen, darunter erweiterte Suchfilter und neue und verbesserte Übersichten der Forschungstypen und -bereiche. Ziel …Update des ME...| ME/CFS Research Foundation
Noch in diesem Jahr beginnen in Deutschland 21 neue Forschungsprojekte, davon sechs neue Forschungsverbünde (20 Teilvorhaben) sowie ein Einzelprojekt zur Erforschung der Krankheitsmechanismen von ME/CFS. Mit einer Förderung von rund 15 Millionen Euro durch das BMBF (Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung) sollen in den nächsten drei Jahren zentrale Thesen zur Entstehung der Erkrankung weiter erforscht …21 neue ME/CFS- Forschungsprojekte in Deutschland vom BMBF finanziert und angek...| ME/CFS Research Foundation
Dieses Update fasst den bisherigen Stand der ME/CFS-Forschung in Deutschland und Österreich auf Basis der Daten des ME/CFS Research Registers zusammen und wurde seit März 2024 schrittweise veröffentlicht, um Betroffenen, Angehörigen, Mediziner:innen, Forschenden und der allgemeinen Öffentlichkeit einen besseren Einblick in die Forschungslandschaft zu geben. Das ME/CFS Research Register listet erstmals alle Forschungsprojekte in den beiden Ländern …ME/CFS Forschungs-Update Deutschlan...| ME/CFS Research Foundation
Die ME/CFS Research Foundation stellt ab heute eine systematische Übersicht der Forschungslandschaft zur Krankheit ME/CFS (Myalgische Enzephalomyelitis / Chronisches Fatigue-Syndrom) öffentlich zur| ME/CFS Research Foundation
Congratulations to author team on their recent publication in Journal of Sport and Health Science. Finings indicate strength training throughout life may help promote lower pain levels and preserve mobility and physical activity in later years. Link to the full article will follow. Kiehl D, Thompson Z, Johnson A, Sibille KT, Vincent KV, Vincent HK…| Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation » College of Medic...
Dr. Tanner, Dr. Sibille and colleagues’ recent article “More than chronic pain: behavioural and psychosocial protective factors predict lower brain age in adults with/at risk of knee osteoarthritis over two years” published in Brain Communications, was recently highlighted by the University of Florida Health news. Click here to read the news release titled “Healthy Habits can make your brain…| Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation » College of Medic...
Dr. Heather Vincent joined ACSM leaders Drs. Liz Joy and Kevin Vincent to discuss an ACSM priority area in Active Aging and Exercise is Medicine. The group symposium was titled ‘The Older I Get the Better I Was: Physiological Changes with Aging and how Exercise can Slow the Hands of Time’. Dr. Vincent spoke at…| Department of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation » College of Medic...
Monolithic Power Systems, manufacturer of small, highly energy efficient, easy-to-use industrial power management solutions, formally dedicated a named lab space in Benton Hall on Thursday, Oct. 2. The newly renovated lab space is designed to strengthen the department’s research and teaching capabilities in the area of power electronics, while enhancing opportunities for collaboration.| ECE Florida News
Dennis S. Kim, PhD, alongside co-PI Travis Anderson, PhD, from UF Chemical Engineering, have received a DARPA CRYSTAL grant to replace costly trial-and-error methods in wafer bonding with predictive modeling. The project tackles a critical manufacturing challenge: even advanced platforms like lithium niobate on insulator (LNOI) lack reliable models to predict optimal bonding conditions, limiting the scalable production of next-generation photonic, sensing, and electronic devices.| ECE Florida News
ECE researchers Hamed Dalir, PhD, and Elham Heidari, PhD, are collaborating with Relative Dynamics on a project recently funded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) which promises to expand the sensitivity of gravitational wave observatories such as LIGO and the planned space-based LISA mission, while also advancing applications in quantum magnetometry, fiber-optic gyroscopes, and biological imaging.| ECE Florida News
Congratulations to Dr. Tsai’s Lab on their recent publication! A Knock-in Zebrafish Reporter Line for Live Visualization of Endogenous Olig2 Protein Dynamics. Chang CT, Kawanishi T, Nandagopal S, Megason SG, Tsai TY. Zebrafish. 2025 Sep 24. doi: 10.1177/15458547251376166. PMID: 40991403 The post Tony Tsai’s New Publication appeared first on Developmental Biology.| Developmental Biology | Washington University in St. Louis
Congratulations to Dr. Ornitz’s Lab on their recent publication! Easily adaptable Fiji macro for mean linear intercept measurement of peripheral respiratory airspace. Patlin B, Yin Y, Li L, Ornitz DM. Dev Dyn. 2025 Sep 12. doi: 10.1002/dvdy.70078. PMID: 40937540 The post Dave Ornitz’s New Publication appeared first on Developmental Biology.| Developmental Biology | Washington University in St. Louis
Congratulations to Dr. Groves’s Lab on their recent publication! Control of sensory cell differentiation in the inner ear by extracellular signals and transcriptional regulators. Nelson JC, Hosamani IV, Groves AK. Curr Top Dev Biol. 2025;165:1-44. doi: 10.1016/bs.ctdb.2025.03.002. Epub 2025 Apr 3. PMID: 40973228 The post Andy Groves’s New Publication appeared first on Developmental Biology.| Developmental Biology | Washington University in St. Louis
Congratulations to Dr. Imai’s Lab on their recent publication! Aging reduces motivation through decreased Bdnf expression in the ventral tegmental area. Lei HC, Parker KE, Kuo CC, Yuede CM, McCall JG, Imai SI. Mol Psychiatry. 2025 Sep 16. doi: 10.1038/s41380-025-03253-0. PMID: 40954279 The post Shin Imai’s New Publication appeared first on Developmental Biology.| Developmental Biology | Washington University in St. Louis
Congratulations to Dr. Theunissen’s Lab on their recent publication! Raising the bar for human post-implantation embryo models Kong X, Theunissen T. Cell Stem Cell, Volume 32, Issue 10, P1479-1481, October 2, 2025 The post Thor Theunissen’s New Publication appeared first on Developmental Biology.| Developmental Biology | Washington University in St. Louis
Advanced DNA sequencing technologies and a new model of stem cell research has enabled an international team to discover a new type of diabetes in babies. The University of Exeter Medical School worked with Université| News
The June 2023 heatwave in northern European seas was “unprecedented but not unexpected”, new research shows. During the heatwave, temperatures in the shallow seas around the UK (including the North Sea and Celtic Sea) reached| News
A pioneering new project that will harness cutting-edge technology to develop tools to predict and manage harmful algal blooms (HABS) before they grow has launched. South West Water is working in partnership with the University| News
A Chance Encounter On a bright and warm Friday morning, Gaurav decided to take a detour to the Amtrak station before going to his lab, where he works as a biomedical neuroscience researcher. “Are yo...| Mad In South Asia
Using the Rainfall Exclusion Experiment (REX) within the KBS LTER, researchers found that nematode communities are more stable in early successional landscapes than agricultural ones during drought. This study highlights the importance of plant diversity for resilient soil ecosystems under environmental change. As farmers adopt new strategies to cope with increasingly extreme weather events, suchRead More| KBS LTER
W.K. Kellogg Biological Station faculty member and part of the KBS LTER Executive Committee, Christine Sprunger, is one of 39 visionaries named to the 2025 Top Agri-food Pioneers, or TAP, list by the World Food Prize Foundation. Now in its second year, the TAP list honors individuals driving bold and innovative solutions to the most pressing challenges inRead More| KBS LTER
Deforestation has intensified global warming, but a new study out in Nature Communications Earth and Environment finds restoring forests and adopting sustainable land-use practices can reverse the damage while benefiting both people and nature. A new study published in Nature Communications Earth and Environment reveals that when land managers implement nature-based climate solutions, they can significantly counteract the climate-warmingRead More| KBS LTER
Researchers in Kadeem Gilbert’s lab are using experimental treatments within the KBS LTER to look at how leaves regulate their external pH conditions, which may impact how they interact with insect herbivores and microbes. For almost 40 years, researchers at the KBS LTER have studied interactions among plants, microbes, insects, management, and the environment toRead More| KBS LTER
Researchers leveraged the unique land management gradient available at the LTER to better understand how microbe diversity impacts nitrogen fixation rates in the soil. They looked at an understudied…| KBS LTER
Predation can be seen everywhere today, but it is much more difficult to detect for ancient ecosystems. The majority of attacks are recorded by trace fossils, a separate category of fossils showing animal behavior. These trace fossils are usually preserved within the remains of the prey. Common examples are bite marks on bones, drill holes in mollusk shells, and repair scars in mollusks. Ammonites, very common but now extinct cephalopod mollusks distantly related to modern-day Nautilus, were ...| Research & Collections
Crinoids or sea lilies are a member of the phylum Echinodermata, a group that also includes sea cucumbers, sea urchins, sea stars, and brittle stars. Most crinoids live on the bottom of the ocean where they filter the water for plankton and other particles to eat, whereas others swim in search for food. They are commonly found in Mississippian rocks in northern Alabama. As crinoids are also abundant in marine rocks elsewhere during the Mississippian, this subperiod is often referred [...]| Research & Collections
Photonics Research News| ECE Florida News
Why have there been so many recent outbreaks of food-borne illnesses? Food-safety experts are increasingly concerned about pathogens such as Salmonella, E. coli and Listeria.| epi.ufl.edu
Experts have called for the UK government to overhaul its decarbonisation strategy for small and medium-sized businesses. In a study published in the journal Energy Research and Social Science, they criticise current green initiatives for| News
Congratulations to Dr. Michaeline Jensen and Dr. Jessica Dollar! Along with Dr. Laurie Wiedman Gold of the Department of Kinesiology, Drs. Jensen and Dollar have been awarded a Chancellor’s Initiative for Transformative Research Award. This seed funding program was developed to support high-impact research with the potential to attract external... Continue reading...| Department of Psychology
Scientists at Tsinghua University have developed a method to grow kidney tumours in the lab using cells from real patients, offering a potential new tool in the fight against renal cancer. Their research, published in the journal Biofabrication, outlines how 3D bioprinting technology can be used to replicate the unique characteristics of each patient’s tumour. The […]| IOP Publishing
Research News Robotics| ECE Florida News
The loss of the Research Triangle-based EPA Office of Research and Development would cost hundreds of jobs, hit local economic activity.| North Carolina Health News
Vanderbilt Business faculty are recognized for their research, teaching, and leadership. Explore accolades from Summer 2024-2025.| Vanderbilt Business School
A new study in the academic journal Machine Learning: Health discovers that ChatGPT can accelerate patient screening for clinical trials, showing promise in reducing delays and improving trial success rates. Researchers at UT Southwestern Medical Centre used ChatGPT to assess whether patients were eligible to take part in clinical trials and were able to identify […]| IOP Publishing
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Neurobiologists at Northwestern University and the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign found the brain’s internal GPS changes each time mice navigate a familiar, static environment.| News Bureau
UNC Greensboro graduate researcher Caitlin Stone, in the Clinical Psychology PhD program explains, “Misophonia is a condition where people feel an intense reaction to sounds.”| UNC Greensboro
Scientists weigh the pros and cons of using artificial intelligence in epidemiological models to predict pandemics.| epi.ufl.edu
A recent study reveals a new variant of an intestinal virus found in a daycare worker. The discovery was accidentally made due to a lab error, which initially led to the mistaken diagnosis of bacterial meningitis.| epi.ufl.edu
Childhood Sexual Abuse (CSA) can have persistent effects which could continue into the adult lives of survivors. Given its repetitive nature, CSA is classified as a form of complex trauma. It puts the...| Mad In South Asia
Gravitational Wave (GW) astronomers around the world have been very concerned after reading the draft budgets for the next financial year which have been put forward by NASA and the US National Science Foundation (NSF).| Astronotes
Despite clear risks, benzos and z-drugs remain widely prescribed to the elderly. New research explores what helps—and what doesn’t—when trying to stop.| Mad In America
Persistent antidepressant withdrawal is a debilitating experience, but little research exists about its prevalence and treatment.| Mad In America
Those using antidepressants long-term were more likely to experience withdrawal and to have severe withdrawal symptoms.| Mad In America
Researchers at the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Jodhpur have developed a new low-cost mobile tool to detect arsenic contamination in water sources, addressing a critical threat to human health and the environment. Published in IOP Publishing’s academic journal Nanotechnology the new tool offers a low-cost, onsite solution for monitoring water quality, especially useful in […]| IOP Publishing
Millions of people are trying multiple antidepressant drugs without success, and psychiatry labels them “treatment resistant.”| Mad In America
Many people tend to believe that mental health struggles is a “rich man’s disease.” The truth could not be any farther from this belief. Researchers Manuela Angelucci and Daniel Bennett provide ...| Mad In South Asia
War often forces people to move to other cities, countries, and continents in search of safety, food, and money. This displacement disturbs the routine life of people, separating them from their homes...| Mad In South Asia
Laura Kim, Ph.D., has been awarded a DARPA Young Faculty Award in support of her project “Room-Temperature Strong Coupling in Intercalated 2D Plasmonic Systems.” The $500,000, two-year project seeks to unlock quantum phenomena that have traditionally remained exclusive to cryogenic temperatures, bringing them into room-temperature environments by using layered nanoscale materials that confine light with extreme precision.| ECE Florida News
Priests and faith healers are the first people that Indians living with mental health challenges reach out to. Given the belief of people in traditional faith healing, the government of Gujarat concep...| Mad In South Asia
The studies are of short duration and are riddled with methodological issues like unblinding and failure to assess withdrawal.| Mad In America
Mental health nursing has a key role to play in helping people discontinue the drugs, writes Timothy Wand.| Mad In America
Researchers: Fetal exposure to vilazodone hampers neurodevelopment and leads to "long-lasting neurodevelopmental impairments."| Mad In America
A large-scale study reveals that antidepressant use is linked to faster cognitive decline in dementia patients, raising concerns about their widespread prescription.| Mad In America
Using genetic analysis, a new study finds that antidepressants—not depression—are responsible for a significant rise in type 2 diabetes risk.| Mad In America
Armagh Observatory and Planetarium, together with former PhD student Venu Kalari and a team of international researchers, have identified young, pre-main sequence stars in the low-metallicity dwarf galaxy WLM, using the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST).| Astronotes
Countries across the world use more land for golf courses than wind or solar energy, according to a new study published in the academic journal Environmental Research Communications. While the land requirements of renewable energy projects are often criticized in public debates, this study highlights a striking contrast: vast areas are allocated to golf courses, […]| IOP Publishing
AI Photonics Research News| ECE Florida News
Global Early childhood development (ECD) has become a topic of interest for researchers and policy makers worldwide. This movement, which we call global ECD, claims to bring about economic and societa...| Mad In South Asia
Dr. Hamed Dalir| ECE Florida News
AI Quantum Research News| ECE Florida News
A new study underscores the value of integrating patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) in early psychosis through a cross-cultural examination. Published in Schizophrenia Research, this study is t...| Mad In South Asia
The Paul G. Gassman Distinguished Service Award has been bestowed upon Professor Lisa McElwee-White for her many significant contributions to the Division of Organic Chemistry (DOC) and the organic chemistry community. As a member of the DOC’s Executive Committee, she served as national Program Chair, Member-at-Large, and Chair. From 2006 to 2024 she, along with ... Read more| Chemistry
Researchers Sangeeta Yadav and Kumar Ravi Priya of Jindal Global University and Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur, conducted a study to understand how migrant workers in Delhi and Kanpur understan...| Mad In South Asia
story by Heather Krumholtz Congratulations to Whitney Laboratory, UF College of Chemistry graduate student Saje Green who was recently awarded a prestigious fellowship from The National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP)! The fellowship will support three of her graduate years at the Whitney Laboratory and the University of Florida. While at Whitney, Saje intends ... Read more The post LOESGEN LAB GRADUATE STUDENT AWARDED NSF GRFP FELLOWSHIP appeared first ...| Chemistry
Devices Micro and Nano Research News| ECE Florida News
What child doesn’t dream of learning to talk to animals? Or was that just me? As a little girl, I used to love imagining what my beloved pets might say to me if only I could understand their voices.| World Birds
Have you ever heard the story of the pottery class where the teacher asked half the class to spend all year making one perfect mug, and the other half to make a new mug every single day without…| World Birds
Climate change is a major topic right now in all sorts of circles. From changing weather patterns to changing geography, nobody is quite certain how the future will look as our planet’s temperature…| World Birds
On October 5, 1923, Edwin Hubble identified the first Cepheid variable in M31, the Andromeda Galaxy. This proved that the Andromeda nebula was not part of the Milky Way and paved the way for measuring the expansion of the Universe.| Astronotes