Here is how our graduate faculty, students and researchers are making headlines at the University at Buffalo.
A $2.1M NIH grant will allow Priya R. Banerjee to continue work on biomolecular condensates and their role in cancer and other diseases.
The Girls in STEM Together We Chem summer program aims to help high school students get comfortable in the lab and set them up for success.
Ryan Zhenqi Zhou applies geospatial data science and AI to address natural disasters, including the 2022 Buffalo blizzard.
Obtained by UB as part of a project to observe last year's total solar eclipse, the telescope will be used for education and outreach.
Nick Salgia is first author on the paper in Cancer Cell, one of the most respected journals in the field.
Petar Pajic will use the Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Biology to study the evolution of mucus and its role in pregnancy at Yale University.
A new molecule acts like a local, long-lasting anesthetic, providing robust pain relief for up to three weeks.
The partnership, which includes a workforce development program, will tap UB’s expertise in wireless networking, AI, autonomy and more.
New UB-led research indicates that while the residential segregation policy was outlawed decades ago, it still impacts women’s health today.
These proteins, which regulate the huntingtin protein’s movement in neurons, could be future drug targets.
Funding will support their work in neuroscience, cancer research, biomedical engineering and other fields.
The tests could have implications in the auto, tech and insurance industries.
Haiqing Lin and his team of researchers were recently awarded $1.5 million for a two-year-long project that is scheduled to begin on April 1.
Project addresses emergency management disparities between wealthy, low-income groups.
The funding, awarded to Neurovascular Diagnostics, comes from the National Institutes of Health.