• collage with pieces featuring various drugs, among them a marijuana leaf, bong, cigarette, mushrooms.
    UB to host meeting of Alcohol and Drugs History Society
    6/24/24

    Organizer David Herzberg says knowing and sharing this history can help us from repeating patterns that have caused much harm.

  • A notebook and pen surrounded by guns and ammunition.
    Seeking root causes for mass shootings in perpetrators' statements
    6/21/24

    The UB-led study could be a first step in analyzing and understanding shooters' motivations.

  • Concept of overcoming educational disparities: a group of people hold up a ladder that another person ascends.
    Educational, career disparities among minoritized students
    6/18/24

    New UB research offers insights into the strategies that help students from underrepresented groups succeed academically and in their careers.

  • Esteban Quiceno with a spine skeleton.
    UB Neurosurgery one of few in U.S. to get prestigious grant
    6/18/24

    The grant from the Neurosurgery Research and Education Foundation supports Esteban Quiceno as the UB spine research fellow.

  • Soo-Kyung Lee and Jae Lee in the lab.
    Promising gene therapy for FOXG1 syndrome
    6/17/24

    A UB-led research team shows the treatment reverses brain abnormalities in mice, a step toward human clinical trials. 

  • A person crouching in a large puddle of water following an historic storm.
    A global view of climate-resilient buildings
    6/13/24

    An NSF-funded project gives graduate students with the UB RENEW Institute international research experience.

  • Distraught woman comforted by another woman.
    Study examines health implications of exposure to firearm violence
    6/12/24

    Exposure has a cumulative effect on the functional health of Black Americans, especially women, a UB social work researcher says.

  • Artificial Intelligence concept featuring a computer chip labeled "AI".
    UB hosts leading international AI conference
    6/12/24

    Attendees from around the world discuss cutting-edge research, with social media as the common theme.

  • Injecting shear-thinning hydrogels (STH) into the brain protects the stem cells and results in more successful therapy.
    New technique could protect stem cells
    6/10/24

    Using shear-thinning hydrogels instead of saline solution to inject stem cells into the brain could lead to new therapies for MS and other neurological diseases.

  • Collage of photos illustrating the housing and health risk connection.
    Webinar highlights crucial health-housing link
    6/6/24

    A UB faculty member and PhD student addressed challenges from the perspective of the Pan American Health Organization.

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