William Grover, an associate professor of bioengineering, speaks with Inside Higher Ed for a story about how institutions are approaching scientific research during COVID-19.
Eddie Comeaux, an associate professor of higher education, discusses alternative means of testing students online using third-party proctoring platforms.
CalMatters speaks with Dylan Rodríguez, chair of the UCR Academic Senate and a professor of ethnic studies, about faculty members' reactions to the transition to online education.
Brandon Brown, an associate professor in the UCR School of Medicine, says alcohol-based cleaning products and those with diluted bleach can help kill coronavirus on transit surfaces.
Canada's Globe and Mail speaks with Dr. Gerald Maguire, chair of psychiatry and neuroscience in the UCR School of Medicine, about stuttering and potential treatments.
UCR School of Medicine Associate Professor Brandon Brown weighs in on the items those quarantined should consider stocking up on — but not hoard — including dry goods, soap, medication, and pet supplies.
In an op-ed, UCR political scientists Benjamin Newman, Jennifer Merolla, Sono Shah, Loren Collingwood, and Karthick Ramakrishnan write about how their research provides evidence of a "Trump effect."
Jennifer Merolla, a professor of political science, joins AirTalk host Larry Mantle and four other panelists for a conversation about California's primary results.
The co-founders of FarmSense include Eamonn Keogh, a UCR computer science professor, and Shailendra Singh, who received his doctorate in computer science from UCR.
Can you get coronavirus from pets? What about from a package? Brandon Brown, an associate professor in the UCR School of Medicine, answers all your burning questions.
The Los Angeles Times speaks with Richard T. Rodríguez, an associate professor of media and cultural studies, about the controversial novel by Jeanine Cummins and a 1980s predecessor.
In his weekly column, New York Times writer Thomas Edsall references UCR political science research on the effects of Donald Trump's racially inflammatory speech.
Wildfire photographer Noah Berger recounts "getting hosed" on the job, and his role in the new UCR Arts exhibition "Facing Fire: Art, Wildfire, and the End of Nature in the New West."
NPR affiliate Nevada Public Radio speaks with Hamidreza Nazaripouya, a research professor in UCR's Winston Chung Global Energy Center, about how power needs in the state might be met in the future.