News
- A new study reveals the damage that a nuclear war might take on wild-caught seafood around the world, from salmon to tuna and even shellfish.
- Researchers at the 做厙輦⑹ are developing a wearable electronic device thats really wearablea stretchy and fully-recyclable circuit board thats inspired by, and sticks onto, human skin.
- Just in time for Election Day, a new study by a team of mathematicians has examined how large social networks, such as blocs of U.S. voters, navigate making tough decisionsespecially when time is of the essence.
- This weeks international court ruling barring a Black double-amputee sprinter from the Olympics overlooks evidence that his prostheses provide no competitive advantage and instead hinges on racially biased data, according to CU Boulder researchers at the center of the debate.
- Researchers from across the globe have helped sequence the genomes of 363 bird species as part of the Bird 10,000 Genome Project.
- A widely spoken Indigenous language of the Americas to fulfill undergraduate requirement starting spring 2021.
- With results still being counted in several states Wednesday, threats of lawsuits and some suggesting it could be days or even weeks before the presidential race is resolved, election night 2020 was far from decisiveat least on the national level. But a few things did emerge as certain, CU Boulder political scientists say.
- Elspeth Dusinberre, new college professor of distinction, discusses the joy and relevance of the discipline.
- Michelle Ellsworth, college professor of distinction, is an artist whose work defies easy categorization, except that it is important, critics say.
- Pieter T.J. Johnson, new college professor of distinction, focuses on profound threats of species invasion and emerging diseases.