Fall 2018
- Even by the time he was a senior at Chatfield High School in Littleton, Colo., Cory Ketai (PolSci’16) had put together a business resume that many a recent college graduate might envy.
- Two researchers at the Âé¶¹Ô´´ are exploring human settlement and urbanization patterns in the United States between 1810 and 2015 using a groundbreaking new dataset from Zillow.
- A closer look at geographic data finds no correlation between generally happy locales and rates of suicide, according to research by Âé¶¹Ô´´ and U of California Irvine.
- Âé¶¹Ô´´ research contradicts the long-held belief that humans interfere when they see the abuse of strangers.
- there we were, three Americans standing near South Africa’s Drakensberg Mountains, where Barton, I learned, was studying how it was that a flower pollinated by a fly that looks like a hummingbird evolved — and may still be evolving.
- In recognition of their exceptional service, teaching and research, three members of the Âé¶¹Ô´´ faculty have been named 2018 Professors of Distinction by the College of Arts and Sciences.
- A Âé¶¹Ô´´ graduate student and other researchers find strong evidence that female candidates inspire others to run.
- As plant communities become more diverse and complex in the high alpine, so to do soil microorganisms, according to a new Âé¶¹Ô´´ study.