UCSF |
How a rare dementia transforms patients into artists
UCSF-led research reveals brain changes that promote visual creativity.
UC Berkeley |
Water from thin air: Hand-held water harvester powered by sunlight could combat water scarcity
Researchers have designed an extreme-weather proven, hand-held device that can extract and convert water molecules from the air into drinkable water using only ambient sunlight as its energy source.
UC Newsroom |
UC campuses best in nation for combining quality and affordability, Money says
Money magazine’s 2023 Best Colleges in America list finds all nine UC undergraduate campuses offer exceptional value.
UC Riverside |
Widely consumed vegetable oil leads to an unhealthy gut
Diets high in soybean oil decrease endocannabinoids in the gut and can lead to colitis, a new study finds.
UC San Francisco |
Why wait times in the emergency room are so long in California
The number of emergency departments has fallen, while demand for acute care has gone up.
California Magazine |
Dacher Keltner is awe-inspired, and you should be too
After the death of his brother, the Berkeley psychologist found new meaning in life.
UC Irvine |
Wake-up call
Researchers at UC Irvine’s Sleep and Cognition Lab dive deep in search of health-sleep links.
UC San Diego |
New genetic technology developed to halt malaria-spreading mosquitoes
The first-of-its-kind African mosquito suppression system would reduce child mortality and aid economic development.
UCLA |
What’s living beneath the waves in Southern California?
A UCLA study using environmental DNA provides the most comprehensive picture to date of wildlife in region’s surf zones.
UC Berkeley |
State funds development of first-of-its-kind police misconduct database
California allocated $6.87 million in its 2023-24 budget to UC Berkeley to develop the Police Records Access Project, a first-of-its-kind, state-wide database of police misconduct and use-of-force records.
UC San Diego |
One-two punch: Novel drug pairing could beat pancreatic cancer
UC San Diego researchers find a combination of drugs outperformed other treatments in human and mouse models of pancreatic cancer; now urge clinical trial.
UC Santa Barbara |
People in power who are guilt-prone are less likely to be corrupt
Although it may be a horrible feeling to experience, for society at large, the tendency toward guilt might have some benefits, new research shows.