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A shimmery sea blob may have just upended evolutionary history
A squishy little sea creature fished out of the Salish Sea may be rewriting our history of how animal life first evolved. -
UW student briefs lawmakers on global land use, touts undergrad research
A geographer and a biologist at the University of Washington have teamed up to examine the connections between consumers and goods that come from agriculture and forest production. -
Campus Pulse: News from UW research community
UW study finds that high doses of selenium and vitamin E can increase prostate cancer risk; UW researcher finds that social workers can help patients recover from mild traumatic brain injuries; New approach of collaborative care decreases symptoms of depression in women -
Habitable planets may not look exactly like Earth
To understand the role that M-dwarf stars play in the hunt for habitable exoplanets, NPR talks with experts including Vikki Meadows, director of the astrobiology program. -
Benjamin Hall, Eric D'Asaro elected to National Academy of Sciences
Benjamin Hall, professor emeritus of genome sciences and biology, and Eric D'Asaro, a senior principal oceanographer at the UW's Applied Physics Laboratory and professor of oceanography, are among the 84 new members and 21 foreign associates elected as fellows the National Academy of Sciences. -
Lab Course Features Cutting-Edge Research
Biology Professor Jay Parrish offers students in BIOL 413 access to his research lab, where they design and conduct their own genetics experiments.
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Biology alum wins UW's highest honor
Biology alumnus Art Levinson is the 2014 recipient of the UW Alumnus Summa Laude Dignatus, the highest honor given to an alumnus by UW. -
Unique floating lab showcases 'aliens of the sea'
The Washington Post profiles research that aims to to decode the genomic blueprints of fragile marine life. Billie Swalla, professor of biology, is quoted. -
Blue-Footed Booby Threatened in the Galapagos
UW conservation scientist and Galapagos expert Dee Boersma comments on the decline in breeding among birds known for their happy feet. -
Fruit flies and fighter jets
Fruit flies and fighter jets use similar nimble tactics when under attack. Watch a slow motion video to see how they do it. -
Decline of natural history troubling for science, society
Support for natural history - the study of organisms, how and where they live and how they interact with their environment - appears to be in steep decline in developed countries, according to Joshua Tewksbury, a University of Washington professor and WWF International scientist. -
Virtual reality game for stroke patients wins UW competition
Four University of Washington students who developed a virtual reality game that provides real-time feedback for patients undergoing stroke therapy came away victorious at a neural engineering competition on Friday. -
Tech Sandbox competition in photos
The Seattle Times Picture This blog features photographs from the Tech Sandbox competition at the Center for Sensorimotor Neural Engineering. -
Husky Goalkeeper Named Top Student
President's Medalist Megan Kufeld is both an athlete and a scholar."I want people to realize that it is possible to be both," she says.
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Fruit flies - fermented-fruit connoisseurs - are relentless party crashers
That fruit fly appearing moments after you poured that first glass of cabernet, has just used a poppy-seed-sized brain to conduct a finely-choreographed search and arrive in time for happy hour.