The Congress for New Urbanism is holding its national conference in Buffalo, and faculty members and students from UB’s School of Architecture and Planning are among those leading the conversation.
UB researchers have found that blockages in fruit fly brains form quickly and dissolve, a finding that could help treat neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Huntington's.
UB biochemist Richard Browne is discovering new clues to impaired fertility as a researcher on a National Institutes of Health-funded study examining fertility and the environment.
A UB study has found that technology and social media can raise the online profile of nonprofit organizations and increase their support bases and ability to generate donations.
New evidence suggests 'bad' behavior played out in a virtual environment can lead to players' increased sensitivity toward the moral codes they violated.
A study led by UB faculty member Andrew Talal is the first to trace in real-time how the drug telaprevir inhibits viral replication in the liver and how it clears hepatitis C virus from infected cells and plasma of infected patients.
Laurent Levy left UB in 1999 with a dream: to transform his postdoctoral research on nanomedicine into real-world products for patients battling cancer. Today, the scientist-turned-entrepreneur is zeroing in on that goal.
What innovations are needed to help people remain in their homes as they age? That question was at the center of the discussion during a workshop organized by UB’s Center for Excellence in Home Health and Well-Being through Adaptive Smart Environments (Home-BASE).