Health
Children who are deaf or partially deaf but receive diagnosis and interventions by 6 months develop a far greater vocabulary than those for whom treatment is delayed.
Professor John Crimaldi, who specializes in fluid mechanics engineering, is helping to develop key technological tools to drive olfactory generators that project virtual reality scents.
Sociology doctoral candidate Adenife Modile studies fertility and maternal health worldwide, with the end goal of disrupting the assumption that "having lots of kids is what we do."
CIRES researchers are uncovering new information about the mysterious world of tiny microbes living inside your showerhead.
A new study by ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ pain researcher Pavel Goldstein shows that when an empathetic partner holds the hand of a lover in pain, the couple's heart rates sync and the pain subsides.
Fake news websites had about twice as much influence on the media landscape as fact-checking websites did, according to new research by the College of Media, Communication and Information.
Though Americans may find the thought of eating insects unappetizing, ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ alum Dave Baugh and twin brother Lars are aiming to normalize bugs in the American diet.
Teenagers and young adults think and act differently from grownups. Marie Banich is helping us see why.
A ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ÆÆ½â°æÏÂÔØ project is ramping up efforts to provide the public with the latest information on healthy aging, including scientific evidence on what to do and eat for better health.
New research confirms that eyes truly are the window to the soul, with eye-widening or squinting serving as the primary clue observers use to decode someone's emotional state. The findings suggest facial expressions originated as survival mechanisms. Only later were they co-opted as social cues.