Increasing Wood Usage: An Environmental Win-Win
To help reduce CO2 and emissions from fossil fuels, recent research suggests that more wood should be used in construction and burned for fuel.
To help reduce CO2 and emissions from fossil fuels, recent research suggests that more wood should be used in construction and burned for fuel.
Research on the Virgo Cluster dwarf galaxy IC4318 led by Yale astrophysicist Dr. Jeffery Kenney reveals several important processes in galaxy evolution.
Yale researchers’ recent study published in PLOS Pathogens will help us treat Dengue fever, a growing international public health issue.
Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis is one of mankind’s deadliest and most mysterious lung diseases. A new study led by Yale School of Medicine, however, is beginning to shed light on IPF’s previously uncharted territory.
James Rothman ’71, Professor of Cell Biology at Yale, has been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Yale has established the Michele Dufault Endowment fund to support women’s participation in the science, in honor of the Yale Physics and Astronomy senior who passed away in 2011.
2013 has been an exciting year for the Yale Scientific. As our year-in-review spread on page 12 of this issue can attest, every corner of
Contrary to popular belief, eye contact may do more harm than good when trying to persuade others to change their views. A new study in Psychological Science elucidates how people actually react to eye contact.
Scientists have discovered a physiological basis for ballet dancers’ ability to avoid the effects of dizziness.