ºÚÁÏÊÓÆµ

Stories tagged with: Research

Khairul Alam was a 2022 patent recipient.

OHIO recognizes faculty, student and alumni inventors, including 11 patent recipients

ºÚÁÏÊÓÆµ recognized dozens of faculty, student, staff and alumni researchers who submitted intellectual property disclosures and 11 projects that received patents in 2022.

Ashley Labodda with her poster presentation

Ashley Labodda examines desire and reason in the moral motivations for altruism

Ashley Labodda thought she was headed to medical school, until she found her way to ºÚÁÏÊÓÆµ. Now instead of asking patients about their symptoms, she's asking philosophical questions about human motivations and morals.

An attendee follows along in the Inventors Dinner program.

Three alumni win Konneker Medal for Commercialization and Entrepreneurship

Three OHIO alumni, the core of the leadership team at Engineered Profiles, were awarded the Konneker Medal for Commercialization and Entrepreneurship at the university's Inventors Dinner.

Adelaja Oriola Oriade

Graduate student spotlight: Ph.D. candidate Adelaja Oriola Oriade and his work on representation in Hollywood

Adelaja Oriola Oriade (Laja) is an international student from Nigeria working to get his Ph.D. in Mass Communication.

Three students work in a creek
Research & Impact

The efforts behind a greener ºÚÁÏÊÓÆµ

Every day, students, faculty and staff work to make ºÚÁÏÊÓÆµ a more climate-friendly place to live and learn. 

Edgar Gomez standing on college green

Edgar Gomez highlights the music of 19th century Mexico at student expo.

Edgar Gomez, a graduate student from Cholula, Puebla in Mexico, in the School of Music, highlights his research into the music of 19th century Mexico in the upcoming student expo.

Dr. Harvey Ballard, enrivonmental portrait

Harvey Ballard describes two new violet species in the northeastern United States, notes 'variants' still to be classified

Just as tiny violets spread their spring blanket of purple across the local landscape, Harvey Ballard's new monograph describes all the known types of violets in the northeastern United States and adjacent Canada.

Steve Miner, professor emeritus of history

Steve Miner kicks off History Graduate Conference with keynote on Russia-Ukraine conflict April 14-15

The History Graduate Conference kicks off with a keynote by Professor Emeritus Steve Miner on April 14 followed by a full day of panelists and speakers from around the nation on April 15.

Green Events Training - Wednesday, April 19, virtual via Teams, 4-5 p.m.

Greening OHIO Initiative increases sustainability for on-campus events

The Green Events Webinar on April 19, 2023 will provide information on the Green Events Guide and sustainability efforts at ºÚÁÏÊÓÆµ.

Artist gesturing in ceramics studio

Multi-dimensional and expressive ceramics to be showcased at Student Expo

For Christopher St. John, creative expression and ceramics are intricately linked.

Puri

OHIO diabetes researchers discover the potential of CIDEC protein to mitigate obesity-related cardiometabolic disease

A team of researchers from ºÚÁÏÊÓÆµâ€™s Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine recently discovered a novel role of human-CIDEC gene in improving metabolic dysfunction and cardiovascular health.

Claudia González-Vallejo, portrait

Claudia González-Vallejo brings her policy expertise to role as NSF program director

Psychology Professor Claudia González-Vallejo has been selected to serve as program director for the Decision, Risk, and Management Sciences Program at the National Science Foundation.

Shalon van Tine, portrait

History student Shalon van Tine uses Warren Zevon to explore the philosophy of humor

Shalon van Tine, a Ph.D. in History candidate studying cultural and intellectual history, authored a chapter in a forthcoming book about Warren Zevon and philosophy.

Eva Yazmin Santiago Santos (center) with APS scholars Christine Darve and Young-Kee Kim
Student Success

Physics students and alumnus win 5 awards, present their research at American Physical Society meeting

College of Arts and Sciences physics students and an alumnus took five major awards as they traveled with faculty to the American Physical Society March meeting this month in Las Vegas.

Kathleen Sullivan, portrait

Kathleen Sullivan's new book talks trash in the Gilded Age, with politics and corruption aplenty

The late 19th century was a time of rapid growth in American cities. Kathleen Sullivan writes in her new book that more people meant more waste, more trash, and more threats to human health.

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