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Science & Research

Science & Research Roundup: April 9, 2014

A strong and ductile steel A group of University engineers have developed a new method of creating steel that makes it stronger while preserving its ductility, according to a University press release. The method, described in a paper published this month in the journal Nature Communications, was established ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

Lab explores implications of fungal sex

In a laboratory on the fifth floor of the Biomedical Center, a group of University researchers carefully observes sexual acts that have never before been witnessed by humans. Associate Professor of Biology Richard Bennett investigates the sexual cycle of Candida yeasts, a group of unicellular fungi ...


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Science & Research

Energy savings rise with campus competition

Last month, Brown students saved $4,448 and 34,216 kilowatt-hours — more than three times the energy saved in past years — by changing habits of energy consumption in the Brown EcoReps fourth annual energy-saving intra-campus competition, Brown Unplugged: Do It in the Dark. First-year residence ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

Speaker calls for global access to health care

“We are not the leaders of tomorrow, we are the leaders of now,” Samson Njolomole, external relations manager for Partners in Health, told his audience of about 50 Saturday. The talk, sponsored by Brown’s chapter of PIH, focused on bringing health care to Malawi, the country in southeast Africa ...


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Science & Research

Prof. pushes for release of Vioxx documents

New documents may be released concerning Vioxx, a prescription drug that has come under fire in the past few years for its correlation with negative health effects, after litigation efforts by David Egilman, clinical professor of family medicine.  A Kentucky court ruling last week granted Egilman ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

Science & Research Roundup: April 2, 2014

Grad students win competition for decoding brain activity Two graduate students, Ali Arslan GS and James Niemeyer GS, were named first- and second-place winners, respectively, of the Brown Institute for Brain Science’s inaugural brain computation competition March 20, according to a University press ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

BELL offers ‘experiential’ learning

While some high school students may spend their spring breaks sunning on a beach or sleeping late over family vacations, 30 high school students traveled to Kamuela and South Kona, Hawaii with the Brown Environmental Leadership Lab. Through BELL, founded in 2002, high school students are given the opportunity ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

Future space missions explored

Researchers and astronauts gathered to address the future of human space travel at the Microsymposium 55 conference held in Texas March 15 and 16. The conference featured speakers from the University, Russia’s Vernadsky Institute and the Brown-MIT NASA Solar System Exploration Research Virtual Institute. Conference ...


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Science & Research

Biology professor wins prestigious Catholic award

Professor of Biology Kenneth Miller ’70 P’02 will receive the 2014 Laetare Medal, widely regarded as the most prestigious honor for an American Catholic, the University of Notre Dame announced yesterday. The medal, given by Notre Dame and established in 1883, is awarded annually to one person “whose ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

Science & Research Roundup: March 19, 2014

Researchers explore solutions for shallow water energy harvesting A group of University researchers, led by Assistant Professor of Engineering Shreyas Mandre, has developed a hydrofoil water wing that may allow for the harvesting of tidal power in shallow conditions, according to a University press ...


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Science & Research

Partial cells could tell whole story

Intact blood cells may no longer be needed to understand the composition of human blood samples, according to a recent study led by William Accomando PhD’13, who is now a research fellow at the Harvard School of Public Health.  This research could eventually be used to help monitor HIV patients ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

PETA president discusses animal pain and suffering

Pictures of adorable animals filled Barus and Holley 166 Tuesday during a lecture delivered by Ingrid Newkirk, co-founder and president of the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. Newkirk spoke to an audience of nearly 50 during a lecture hosted by the Brown Vegetarian Society. Newkirk began ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

Study explores text message health service

Across the country, the mobile health movement — mHealth — seeks to provide medical attention to communities with restricted access to health care. But the desirability of some of these mobile health care tools remains unknown, spurring researchers to examine the prevention of adolescent mental ...


The Setonian
Science & Research

Cancer drug could help treat heart problems

A class of drugs originally developed to treat cancer may also help reduce the risk of death after a heart attack, a new study by University researchers suggests. Cardiologists at the Alpert Medical School administered different types of the cancer drugs — c-SRC inhibitors — to mice that had developed ...


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