Nexus Awards Program supports a diverse range of programming, research, and teaching at the Hopkins Bloomberg Center| The Hub
Nexus Awards Program supports diverse range of programming, research, and teaching at the Hopkins Bloomberg Center at 555 Pennsylvania Ave.| The Hub
The students and recent graduates will travel abroad to conduct research, pursue graduate degrees, and teach English| The Hub
Q+A| The Hub
Student experience| The Hub
In memoriam| The Hub
Sustainability| The Hub
Hopkins hosts energy summit for clean technology innovation| The Hub
Infant cognition| The Hub
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor| The Hub
Neuroscientist Amy Bastian, biomedical engineer Jennifer Elisseeff, astrophysicist Alex Szalay among 120 new members| The Hub
Mechanical engineering| The Hub
Mechanical engineering| The Hub
News from Johns Hopkins University, including health, technology, arts, student activities, research, innovation, campus events, and more.| The Hub
Astrophysics| The Hub
Faculty honors| The Hub
Fueled by federal funding, JHU researchers and scientists seek investors to back their ideas to bring discoveries to the market| The Hub
This novel approach could significantly reduce the need for invasive, often painful biopsies| The Hub
Hopkins cancer expert Liz Jaffee discusses what federal budget cuts might mean for patient care and future cures; NIH grant terminations affect some of the nation's most promising young scientists, including two Hopkins doctoral students| The Hub
Bernie was born with congenital glaucoma, a condition that requires urgent intervention. A team of pediatric ophthalmologists at Wilmer Eye Institute acted quickly to save her eyesight.| The Hub
Federal budget cuts have created "a climate of anxiety" among medical researchers, says Maximilian F. Konig, a rheumatologist at Johns Hopkins. But those who live with autoimmune diseases could suffer the greatest consequences.| The Hub
The Johns Hopkins-led OUtMATCH study, which enrolled clinical trial participants at 10 locations across the U.S., leads to the second-ever FDA-approved food allergy treatment| The Hub
Cuts to NIH funding for biostatistical research would erode the United States' competitive edge, hindering the health, economy, and overall security of the nation| The Hub
Bloomberg Distinguished Professor Christopher Cannon makes Chaucer's complete works available in a new scholarly-yet-accessible set| The Hub
Johns Hopkins' Inheritance Baltimore effort helps return a 19th-century embroidered sampler to a Black Baltimore church in time to celebrate its 200th anniversary| The Hub
Data gathered using software developed by Johns Hopkins University computer scientists will have 'huge implications' for understanding human health and evolution| The Hub
Chellappa, a Bloomberg Distinguished Professor in electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering, is among 106 new members and 18 international members selected| The Hub
Faculty honors| The Hub
Food stalls serving dishes from Egypt, China, Maryland, and beyond will open on Homewood campus this fall| The Hub
In memoriam| The Hub
In memoriam| The Hub
Experts at Johns Hopkins and across the country work together to better understand the behavior and characteristics of respiratory viruses, how our immune system responds to them, and how we can prevent serious illness| The Hub
The Bloomberg Student Center, which officially opens Oct. 16, is the first dedicated student center in the university's 150-year history| The Hub
Mason was a longtime member of the Johns Hopkins University and Medicine boards, made a major financial contribution for the construction of Mason Hall on JHU's Homewood campus| The Hub
In four experiments on pig tissues, the robot excelled at suturing two ends of intestine—one of the most intricate and delicate tasks in abdominal surgery| The Hub
The highly competitive projects bring together experts from a range of disciplines to explore promising topics of fundamental scientific importance| The Hub
Morava, a member of the Hopkins faculty for nearly four decades, remembered for his warmth, brilliance| The Hub
As Baltimore faces a federal deadline to identify and replace lead service lines, local researchers and community groups are stepping in to reach residents the city has struggled to engage| The Hub
Arts+culture| The Hub
Researchers like Richard Huganir are closing in on a cure for SYNGAP1-related disorders. But in the face of federal funding cuts, can they finish what they started?| The Hub
University joins lawsuit to halt NIH funding cuts, which jeopardize discoveries, treatments for a range of diseases and illnesses| The Hub
Grant recipients will use JHU's campuses to explore solutions for the university's new sustainability goals| The Hub
JHU's Special Collections amasses a trove of rare vintage romance comic books in all their pulpy, ridiculous, and charming splendor.| The Hub
New SNF Agora/YouGov poll shows Harris gains, Trump maintains, and the divide between 2020 election deniers and the rest of the electorate grows| The Hub
Community| The Hub
Wang has contributed to the discoveries of over a dozen exoplanets| The Hub
Four Hopkins undergraduates were selected for the prestigious Goldwater Scholarship| The Hub
Q+A| The Hub
Research in action| The Hub
A longitudinal study at Johns Hopkins that began in 1995 depends on the dedication of hundreds of people as well as NIH support| The Hub
Study led by a Johns Hopkins researcher shows that personalized, digital guidance helps parents teach healthier eating habits to their young children| The Hub
Rather than create its own military university like other branches of the armed forces, the Space Force opted to team up with SAIS to offer programs that combine a traditional military education with graduate-level courses in areas such as international relations, geopolitics, and diplomacy| The Hub
In 'Something Between Us,' anthropologist Anand Pandian explores the walls that divide America| The Hub
The materials span Cardin's nearly 60 year legislative career, covering a range of topics and historical events| The Hub
Johns Hopkins political scientist Lilliana Mason explains how political violence is eroding American democracy| The Hub
Leaders in democratic development, public-minded AI, and civic life—including the institute's inaugural Artist in Residence—will join JHU for the next academic year| The Hub
Neuroscience| The Hub
Biochemistry| The Hub
Zhu, who received a master's from the Bloomberg School in 2023, was recognized along with two other Banner journalists for their 'compassionate investigative series' on the city's fentanyl epidemic| The Hub
HopOn Harm Reduction hands out free syringes, Narcan, and other supplies to decrease the dangers and stigmas surrounding drug use| The Hub
Jacqueline Hackett, who earned a MPH from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, serves as deputy chief of staff for the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy| The Hub
Public health experts from Johns Hopkins share their insights on the FDA's approval of over-the-counter Narcan, which puts the lifesaving medicine in everyone's reach| The Hub
Internal documents disclosed by court reveal Insys Therapeutics promoted cancer painkiller for off-label uses| The Hub
A new report authored by experts from the Bloomberg School of Public Health identify solutions to pressing public health concerns that are causing the average American life expectancy to fall| The Hub
Effective immediately, the change aligns with current federal public health guidelines| The Hub
Findings suggest physicians can feel confident prescribing treatment based on results from patient-reported, self-administered tests| The Hub
Johns Hopkins researcher Eileen Scully advocates for including sex as a biological variable in preclinical and clinical trials| The Hub
A new survey led by the Center for Indigenous Health seeks to gauge water access on Navajo Nation| The Hub
Commencement 2025| The Hub
Daniels: Proposed cap on reimbursement of indirect research costs would deal 'staggering blow to the nation's vital interest'| The Hub
3 Questions| Hub
Infectious disease| The Hub
COVID-19| The Hub
COVID-19| The Hub
Q+A| The Hub
Research matters| The Hub
Research matters| The Hub
Research in action| The Hub
Research matters| The Hub
Research Saves Lives storytelling highlights the lifesaving treatments and scientific breakthroughs made possible by federally funded research at Johns Hopkins University| The Hub
Johns Hopkins epidemiologist David Dowdy says vaccines and a preventive drug for RSV offer hope for a healthier fall and winter| The Hub
Detection of cancer before a clinical diagnosis could give patients and caregivers more time for intervention and may lead to better outcomes because tumors are more likely to be curable| The Hub
Study examines treatment options for those with operable non-small cell lung cancer, the leading cause of cancer deaths worldwide| The Hub
A genetic mutation and evolutionary trick fuels horses' exceptional athleticism, findings that may advance scientific understanding and treatments for inherited and age-related diseases in people| The Hub
A recent innovation from Johns Hopkins researchers enables deeper insights into gene function and disease-linked mutations| The Hub
Researchers have developed a scalable AI-based approach that makes use of genetic studies that include people of different ethnic backgrounds and could one day help address health disparities| The Hub
The findings, which upend classical thinking about animal cell differentiation, could shed light on mutations linked to human diseases| The Hub
Migeon, the sixth woman to reach the rank of professor at the School of Medicine, remembered for dedication to education, influential research| The Hub
A groundbreaking collaborative study led by Johns Hopkins researchers has uncovered novel insights into genetic determinants of health and generated data that could lead to a better understanding of racial health disparities| The Hub
He explores how flaws in the transcription and DNA repair pathways contribute to cancer predisposition, accelerated aging| The Hub
The findings by Johns Hopkins researchers show the potential of AI to dramatically increase the speed of scientific discovery| The Hub
With human retinas grown in a petri dish, researchers discover how humans generate specialized cells that enable us to see millions of colors| The Hub
Johns Hopkins scientists are the first to demonstrate that a wide range of organisms, even microbes, perform the same pattern of movements in order to sense their surroundings| The Hub
Paulson questioned assumptions throughout his career about the role and power of art, and how cultural developments changed how art was perceived| The Hub
The first woman to be named chair of the History Department, Ross's research focused on historical writing in the social sciences, revealing insights that transformed scholars' understanding of the past| The Hub
Barth, a JHU graduate who later taught at his alma mater for more than two decades, was known for his postmodernist, unpredictable fiction and his exacting, generous teaching| The Hub
McCarty was a central figure in advances in the understanding of photosynthesis and photosynthetic energy conversion| The Hub
Mott, a lecturer in the Center for Africana Studies and Department of History, joined JHU's faculty in 2008| The Hub
Goldthwaite devoted his career to the cultural, social, and political impacts of Renaissance Florence's economic activities| The Hub