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UCR in the News

An app can change how you see yourself at work

MSN / Phys.org |
Thomas Sy, UCR psychology professor, demonstrates how an app he helped design can change a workers' mindset for good.
UCR in the News

New therapy with light-sensitive chemicals shows promise in treating breast cancer

UCR chemist Vincent Lavallo helps advance the science of light-activated cancer therapy, with 100% of tumors eradicated in mice.
UCR in the News

Pregnant women who consume menthol vapes may harm unborn babies

NBC Tri-Cities/Yakima |
Pregnant women should avoid menthol-flavored vapes, warns new UCR research.
UCR in the News

From Worlds That Look Like Cotton Candy to Others Covered in Volcanoes, These Are the Strangest and Most Captivating Exoplanets

Smithsonian Magazine |
Smithsonian features the work of UCR planetary astrophysicist Stephen Kane, who is using an array of instruments to detect other planets, some of which may harbor life—and others that most definitely don’t.
UCR in the News

Can parasitic weeds be tricked into dying? Scientists think so

Earth.com |
UCR plant biologists David Nelson and Julia Bailey-Serres may have found a way to eliminate plants that threaten global food security.
UCR in the News

A defining look at Southern California

The Los Angeles Times |
Susan Straight, UCR creative writing professor, writes about her friend and collaborator, Doug McCulloh of UCR Arts.
UCR in the News

8 Schools Innovating With Google AI — Here’s What They’re Doing

Forbes |
At UCR, students are utilizing NotebookLM, Google’s AI-powered research assistant, to assist with debates, stress-test their arguments and uncover potential flaws. Matthew Gunkel, UC Riverside’s chief information officer, explains how UCR is also using AI to automate HR tasks like job posting creation and improve tracking, speeding up these workflows.
UCR in the News

Megalodon may have been ‘even longer’ than we thought

Popular Science |
UCR biologists Tim Higham and Phil Sternes co-authored a paper showing the extinct mega-predator could have been about two school buses long, and that the newborn pups would have been as large as an adult great white shark.