¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Tech Runway Debuts First Economic Impact Report
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Tech Runway has released the results of its first-ever economic impact report.
Honors College Student Presents at International Conference
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College senior Lauren Goldsworthy recently presented at the 18th International Conference on Marine Biology and Ecology (ICMBE) in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app to Host Science Olympiad
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Charles E. Schmidt College of Science will host its ninth annual southeast Florida regional competition for the Science Olympiad on Saturday, Feb. 13 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Study Shows 'A Word's Worth More Than a Thousand Pictures'
It's known that "a picture's worth a thousand words." But a new study begs to differ when it comes to young children and their influence on adults. But what's more important? How they look or what they say?
NIH Awards $2.8 Million to ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Researchers and Collaborators
Researchers will work to define the mechanisms governing how cells decide whether to become a mature cell or whether to die. Their work will shed light on how to make transplantable tissues to cure diseases.
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Harbor Branch to Host Public Forum on Lagoon Health
The theme of the public outreach day of the 2016 Indian River Lagoon Symposium is "Engaging the Public: It's Our Lagoon!"
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Schmidt College of Medicine Announces Interim Dean
Arthur J. Ross III, M.D., M.B.A., has joined ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Charles E. Schmidt College of Medicine as interim dean. Ross also will spearhead the national search for a permanent dean over the next several months.
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Harbor Branch to Help Relieve Poverty and Hunger
The saying, "Give a Man a Fish and You Feed Him for a Day. Teach a Man to Fish and You Feed Him for a Lifetime," aptly describes the partnership between ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app's Harbor Branch and Aquaculture without Frontiers.
¼ø»ÆÊ¦app Receives NIH Grant to Develop Esophageal Cancer Stent
A bioengineer at ¼ø»ÆÊ¦app will develop a novel biodegradable polymer stent that will be designed to prevent complications while at the same time serving as a drug delivery system for esophageal cancer therapy.
Study Shows Benefits of Regular Mammograms Extend to Elderly
A new study shows that black and white women ages 75 to 84 years who had an annual mammogram had lower 10-year breast cancer mortality than corresponding women who had biennial or no/irregular mammograms.