• Illustration of the concept of brain develpment.
    Faulty genomic pathway linked to schizophrenia
    3/1/17

    UB research could lead to treatments for pregnant mothers at risk for bearing children with the disease.

  • Illustration of three drones flying together.
    Swarms of drones would map oil spills
    3/1/17

    Inspired by bird and insect behavior, a UB engineer has created software designed to enable teams of common UAVs to work together.



  • Scott (right) and Zach Vader inside their Amherst, New York, factory. Credit: Douglas Levere.
    Lt. Gov. Hochul tours Vader Systems shop and lauds inventors
    2/28/17

    Father and son team are building liquid metal 3-D printer for manufacturing.

  • Young woman looks upset as a young man stands in the background with his arms folded.
    Power imbalance costs women more
    2/28/17

    Results of a UB study on young adult relationships counter the claim that gender equality has been reached.

  • skulls in an archelogical site.
    New insights into migration pattern
    2/27/17

    A study by a UB anthropologist suggests that ancient humans arrived in South America in multiple waves.

  • START-UP NY logo.
    Eighteen new companies approved for START-UP NY through UB
    2/27/17

    Eight of the companies are 2016 winners of 43North.

  • a full ashtray, pills, and a glass of booze.
    RIA announces spring seminar series
    2/27/17

    National experts will discuss such topics as alcohol and suicide, the neuroscience behind addiction, and opioid addiction and treatment.

  • Sheet music.
    Hitting the right note on musical scales
    2/27/17

    A UB-led study suggests that musical scales may have developed to accommodate vocal limitations.

  • Brain scan.
    Transforming brain diagnosis, treatment
    2/24/17

    UB faculty member Robert S. Miletich predicts that nuclear imaging can transform the field of neuroscience as it did cardiology.

  • Coding sequence on a computer.
    Software aims to ‘clean’ messy data
    2/20/17

    A UB-led research team is creating software to “clean” large datasets, making it easier for scientists and the public to use big data.

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