Faculty
- CU Boulder Professor Kristi Anseth has received one of the most prestigious recognitions in the life sciences: a L’Oreal-UNESCO For Women in Science award. Anseth, adistinguished professor and Tisone professorin the Department of
- The ALSAM Foundation, a generous long-time donor to the CU Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences (SSPPS), hasprovided $2M of funding for collaborative grants between the SSPPS and the BioFrontiers Institute. This donation
- The natural world has had billions of years of evolution to perfect systems, creating elegant solutions to tricky problems. CU BoulderAssistant Professor Orit Peleg’s work hopes to illuminate and explore those solutions with the long-term goal
- Since the end of World War II, few violent conflicts have erupted between major powers. Scholars have come to call this 73-year period “the long peace.” But is this stretch of relative calm truly unusual in modern human history – and evidence that
- Apaper posted onlinelast month has reignited a debate about one of the oldest, most startling claims in the modern era of network science: the proposition that most complex networks in the real world — from the World Wide Web to
- CU Boulder researchers have discovered the first known molecular evidence of obligate symbiosis in lichens, a distinctive co-evolutionary relationship that could shed new light on how and why some multicellular organisms consolidate their genomes in
- The National Academy of Inventors (NAI) named two CU Boulder faculty members to its class of fellows for 2017.Distinguished Professor Marvin Caruthers of CU Boulder’sDepartment of Chemistry and Biochemistrywas honored for his pioneering
- More than 23.5 million Americans suffer from autoimmune diseases like rheumatoid arthritis, scleroderma and lupus, in which an overzealous immune response leads to pain, inflammation, skin disorders and other chronic health problems. The conditions
- To the Editor:Today’s hyper-competitive environment makes it easy to forget that academe wasn’t always organized around measuring and rewarding merit. In fact, the simple idea that merit could be assessed from publications, and that scholarship
- The canonical story of faculty productivity goes like this: A researcher begins a tenure-track position, builds their research group, and publishes as much as possible to make their case for being awarded tenure. After getting tenure, increased