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UCR in the News

If you’re a US researcher, now is the time to establish a plan B

Nature |
If you’re a US researcher, now is the time to establish a plan B, says UCR’s Brandon Brown. The scale of funding cuts in the United States means that countless scientists will lose their jobs. It would be naive not to start thinking about alternative career paths.
UCR in the News

These plants might actually be de-evolving

Boy Genius Review |
UCR's Adam Jozwiak leads a team of researchers who argue that despite how controversial it might sound, tomatoes in the Galápagos actually seem to be evolving backwards, not forwards.
UCR in the News

Scientists Are Just Beginning to Understand How Life Makes Clouds, and Their Discoveries May Drastically Improve Climate Science

Smithsonian Magazine |
According to UCR's Bob Allen, the climate mitigation potential of tree restoration may be larger than previously appreciated.
UCR in the News

Reinventing Online Engagement: AI and Deliberative Democracy

The Good Men Project |
UC Riverside professor Kevin Esterling, creator of Prytaneum, talks about an AI-powered webinar platform built to foster inclusive, deliberative public discourse. Inspired by ancient democratic principles, Prytaneum enables real-time audience participation and AI synthesis of diverse viewpoints—reshaping how civic engagement happens online.
UCR in the News

5 things to know about the Inland Empire’s workforce

The Press Enterprise |
The Press-Enterprise newspaper writes about a just-released workforce report from UCR's Inland Empire Labor and Community Center.
UCR in the News

Common parasite may be affecting your brain without symptoms

Earth.com |
Emma Wilson has found that a common parasite might have a bigger impact on brain function than we previously realized.
UCR in the News

UC Riverside starts construction of innovation hub

The Press Enterprise |
Center near campus on University Avenue will have labs, maker spaces, room for startups.  
UCR in the News

Nanoparticles are threatening the stability of plant cells

Earth.com |
But new research, led by UCR's Juan Pablo Giraldo, shows that once nanoparticles -- which are everywhere -- enter a plant cell, they can change in unexpected ways and interfere with the plant’s ability to photosynthesize.