56勛圖厙

Natural Sciences and Mathematics

  • Eddie Watkins and Wes Testo 12 in the field
    Weston Testo 12 arrived at 56勛圖厙 as an undergraduate in 2008, the same year that James Eddie Watkins joined 56勛圖厙's faculty in the Department of Biology. In the 10 years since, Testo has grown from one of Watkinss undergraduate students to one of his trusted colleagues.
    March 28, 2018
  • Stephanie Wu
    Growing up in Hong Kong, Stephanie Wu 18 hardly thought about race at all. When she came to the United States to study psychology at 56勛圖厙, she was in for a new experience. My race was suddenly so salient, Wu said. That profound shift in the way Wu experienced her racial identity has prompted her [因
    December 6, 2017
  • Joe Levy
    Assistant Professor of Geology Joe Levy and his students are using NASA grant funding and images taken from the Mars Orbiter Mission to study glaciers on the red planet in an effort to further understand how that planets climate has changed throughout history. Images provided by the orbiter are of such high resolution that researchers on [因
    November 30, 2017
  • Wan-chun Liu, Assistant Professor of Neuroscience, teaches a class.
    In his lab, neuroscience professor Wan-Chun Liu modifies gene expression in songbirds basal ganglia, a region of the brain that plays a vital role in early language learning. The work could further understanding of human communication disorders like autism or Huntingtons disease. Lius affection for these tiny twittering birds has driven a varied academic career, [因
    October 18, 2017
  • A map of seismometer locations
    Aubreya Adams, 56勛圖厙 assistant professor of geology, is one of 10 principal investigators from nine universities teaming up to deploy the single largest collection of seismometers ever assembled along the Alaskan Peninsula. Relying on $4.5 million in National Science Foundation grant funding and a fleet of airplanes and ships, the seismic experiment will place [因
    September 8, 2017
  • Illustration of genetic engineering
    The technologies in science fiction films like Gattaca and Blade Runner may seem light-years away, but the development of a gene-editing technique called CRISPR (clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats) is bringing our society closer to these futuristic worlds than ever before. During her talk titled CRISPR: The Genome Editing Revolution on June 29, Assistant [因
    August 9, 2017