Loren Hough

A conversation with Loren Hough: Diversity, equity, access and inclusion for the Graduate School

Nov. 11, 2022

Dan Larremore one of Popular Science's Brilliant 10 for 2022

Dan Larremore named one of Popular Science's Brilliant 10 for 2022

Oct. 28, 2022

Universal inequality graph

Larremore and Clauset labs research on diversity in science featured in Nature news, publication

Sept. 21, 2022

Uplift Research Program meeting with students

Uplift Research Program receives funding through Packard Foundation, support from Ed Chuong

Aug. 9, 2022

Sawyer Lab develops new diagnostic, Sick Stick

BioFrontiers scientists developing COVID-19 test that knows you’re sick before you do

April 13, 2020

Joey Azofeifa

BioFrontiers Institute and IQ Biology alum, Joey Azofeifa (Arpeggio Bio), Raises $3.2 Million in Seed Funding and is Named to the 2020 Forbes 30 Under 30 List in Healthcare

Jan. 15, 2020

Arpeggio Bio, a preclinical company whose technology provides a mechanistic understanding of how drugs work, today announced that it has closed a $3.2 million seed financing round, which was oversubscribed by over $2 million. Funding will support the ongoing development of a nascent RNA drug screen. “We’re excited to have...

Devin and Gabriel Tauber

Biochemist brothers identify “RNA Chaperone”

Jan. 10, 2020

Stress granules comprised of RNA (red) and protein assemblies (green) formed in part through RNA-RNA interactions. A recent study from CU Boulder researchers shows that cells must actively work to keep sticky molecules, known as ribonucleic acid (RNA), apart, or they may form large assemblies that could cause problems for...

Bangalore

A Summer Internship Where Only the Cows Obey Traffic Signals

Nov. 13, 2019

IQ Biology graduate student, Taisa Kushner, talks about her summer as a Microsoft Research intern in Bangalore, India, working on a global mental health platform.

Yellow Fish

Copying tricks from the animal kingdom

Oct. 8, 2019

What can we learn from prairie voles, Burmese pythons, shortfin mollies, and naked mole rats? Researchers from across the world are studying unusual laboratory animals with astonishing traits in their quest to answer important questions in the fields of biomedicine and neuroscience.

Inside Hire Ed

Pedigree and Productivity

May 2, 2019

A 2015 study found that “social inequality” across a range of disciplines was so bad that just 25 percent of Ph.D. institutions produced 71 to 86 percent of tenured and tenure-track professors, depending on field. The effect was more extreme the farther up the chain the researchers looked, based on...

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