Here is how our graduate faculty, students and researchers are making headlines at the ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½.
Mark Gottdiener takes a new perspective, shifting to a regional approach to urbanism, rather than one that looks specifically at cities.
Linked to neurological disorders, repeat RNAs aggregate inside droplets but can be disassembled with an engineered piece of RNA.
Recent settlements are too low to protect consumers, and they don’t deter companies from risky behavior, Clayton Masterman argues.
FoamStream uses a combination of hot water and biodegradable foam to kill unwanted vegetation.
ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ researcher Viviana Monje and colleagues awarded $1.2 million grant to study how popular aquarium fish produces crystals.
The research reveals how targeting the KMT2D gene could help correct oral disorders and prevent craniofacial birth defects.
Research reveals how targeting gene could help correct oral disorders, prevent craniofacial birth defects.
Festus Adegbola’s work on the BioSCape project monitors — from the air — how plants and wildfires influence bird diversity.
Having community health workers on a research team can have a measurable impact on the success of a study.
Neuromorphic computing, which mimics architecture of brain, could support growing energy demands of AI.
A new textbook edited by UB faculty member Leonard Egede explores health care inequalities, their origins and how to address them.
A published paper reveals the pros and cons of digital planning in cases of hydrocephalic macrocephaly.
Funding boosts power of supercomputing center that is advancing AI for the public good.
In addition to being No. 1 in the state, UB ranks 33rd among all public institutions in the U.S.
Urologist and pilot Brian Rambarran volunteers his time flying across the U.S. to give dogs a second leash on life.