91¿ì»îÁÖ

Research & Science

Ideastream talks with 91¿ì»îÁÖ Professor Angela Neal-Barnett about the relationship between racial stress and infant mortality.

Race, Stress and its Impact on Infant Mortality Among Black Infants

Ideastream® talks with 91¿ì»îÁÖ Psychology Professor Angela Neal-Barnett about the relationship between racial stress in black women and ways to reduce the stress before it affects pregnancy.

Tags: College of Sciences and Humanities , Health , Featured Story , Faculty Research , Department of Psychological Sciences , Research & Science

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91¿ì»îÁÖ State spectators look to the sky during the solar eclipse.

91¿ì»îÁÖ State Students, Faculty and Staff View the Solar Eclipse

91¿ì»îÁÖ students, faculty and staff gather outside the 91¿ì»îÁÖ Student Center to view the solar eclipse.

Tags: Research & Science , Featured Story

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WKYC-TV talks with 91¿ì»îÁÖ State researchers about the Acting White Accusation.

Acting too White: 91¿ì»îÁÖ State Psychologist Explains How the Accusation Causes Anxiety

91¿ì»îÁÖ State Professor Angela Neal-Barnett shares her Acting White Accusation research with WKYC-TV and Anxiety.org.

 

Tags: Health , College of Sciences and Humanities , Featured Story , Department of Psychological Sciences , Research & Science

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91¿ì»îÁÖ State Receives Multiple Research Experiences for Undergraduates Grants From NSF

Several 91¿ì»îÁÖ professors in the College of Arts and Sciences have been selected to receive Research Experiences for Undergraduates (REU) grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF). REU grants are designed to provide faculty with funding to create research positions and experie…

Tags: Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry , Department of Mathematical Sciences , College of Sciences and Humanities , National Science Foundation , Grants , Advanced Materials and Liquid Crystal Institute , Department of Biological Sciences , Research & Science

91¿ì»îÁÖ Campus

Randy Roberts, a student working toward his associate’s degree in enology at 91¿ì»îÁÖ at Ashtabula, uses his previous degree in biology to help supplement his education.

91¿ì»îÁÖ State Student Mixes Science Degree with Wine Making for Unique Recipe for Success

Randy Roberts is combining his bachelor’s degree from 91¿ì»îÁÖ State with his experience in infectious diseases to take a fresh approach to wine making.

Tags: Research & Science

91¿ì»îÁÖ Campus

Eindhoven University of Technology researcher Anne Hélène Gélébart shows the walking device. This small device is the world’s first machine to convert light directly into walking, simply using one fixed light source. (Photo credit: Bart van Overbeeke)

World First: New Polymer Goes for a Walk When Illuminated

Scientists at Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands and 91¿ì»îÁÖ have developed a new material that can undulate and therefore propel itself forward under the influence of light.

Tags: Research & Science

World First: New Polymer Goes for a Walk When Illuminated

91¿ì»îÁÖ State Researchers Help Find Pathologic Hallmarks of Alzheimer’s Disease in Aged Chimpanzee Brains

Dementia affects one-third of all people older than 65 years in the United States. The most common cause of dementia is Alzheimer’s disease, a progressive, irreversible brain disease that results in impaired cognitive functioning and other behavioral changes. Humans are considered uniquely susc…

Tags: Department of Anthropology , College of Sciences and Humanities , Research & Science

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91¿ì»îÁÖ State Researcher Examines Vaccine Rejection and Hesitancy, Discusses Ways to More Actively Promote Vaccination

The center of a public health debate is whether parents should have their children vaccinated. Tara Smith, Ph.D., professor of epidemiology at 91¿ì»îÁÖ’s College of Public Health, challenges statements made by influential individuals who oppose the widespread use of vaccines, and she ca…

Tags: College of Public Health and Health Sciences , Research & Science

91¿ì»îÁÖ Campus

91¿ì»îÁÖ State professor Hanbin Mao (middle) co-authored a paper with graduate students Sagun Jonchhe (left) and Prakash Shrestha (right) on the genetic factors influencing the formation of cancer cells.

91¿ì»îÁÖ State Chemists Create Microscopic Environment to Study Cancer Cell Growth

According to the American Cancer Society, there will be an estimated 1,688,780 new cancer cases diagnosed and 600,920 cancer deaths in the U.S. in 2017. These numbers are stark and sobering, and worse yet, we still do not know exactly why cancer develops in its victims or how to stop it. An online publication in Nature Nanotechnology this week by 91¿ì»îÁÖ researchers and their colleagues at Kyoto University in Japan, however, may offer new understanding about what turns good cells bad.

Tags: Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry , College of Sciences and Humanities , Success Story , Research & Science

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91¿ì»îÁÖ students create an app to connect students to social events.

Students Break Down Barriers for Women Entering STEM Fields

It all started with an idea that is now blossoming into a business, even before three 91¿ì»îÁÖ students graduate. Kourtney Arnold, from 91¿ì»îÁÖ State’s College of Education, Health and Human Services, and Asia Frazier and Tiffany Coleman, from 91¿ì»îÁÖ State’s College of Communication and Info…

Tags: Featured Story , Research & Science

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