Friday, June 7, 2024
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Top stories
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For WashU MD/PhD student Sid Sivakumar, studying the brain is like constructing a crossword puzzle. Conveniently, he does both. He crafts puzzles for The New York Times, Washington Post — and now, the Record. Keep reading to try to solve his latest effort. |
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WashU researchers have combined artificial intelligence and mobile health data to better predict patients’ recovery from lumbar spine surgery. The techniques were developed at the university’s AI for Health Institute. |
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In the early days of conflict, when tension and fear are heightened, new research from political scientists in Arts & Sciences finds women politicians are less likely to engage with the public and, when they do, are more likely to take on more nurturing roles. |
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Paid leave and employee well-being are the focus of a three-part policy series on family-friendly business practices put together by the Brown School’s Clark-Fox Policy Institute. A family-friendly workplace benefits employees and businesses, director Gary Parker said. |
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Read more stories on The Source →
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Events
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10:30 a.m.–1:30 p.m. Monday, June 10 |
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9–10:30 a.m. Tuesday, June 11 |
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View more events →
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WashU in the News
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Inside higher ed
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Knoxville News Sentinel
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st. louis public radio
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See more WashU in the News →
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Campus and community news
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Notables Three physician-scientists at the School of Medicine have been newly elected to the Association of American Physicians. They are (from left) Patricia I. Dickson, MD, Dineo Khabele, MD, and Gregory D. Longmore, MD. |
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Notables Yashika Kapoor, a postdoctoral fellow in physics from Arts & Sciences, will attend the 73rd annual Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting in Germany. The event is a globally recognized forum for exchange between Nobel laureates and young scientists. |
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Research Wire Being a predator has its own costs, and that’s as true for amoebae as it is for lions or wolves. Graduate student P.M. Shreenidhi joined David Queller and other Art & Sciences researchers to study the predatory nature of a particular soil-dwelling amoeba. |
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Perspectives
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Michelle Oyen, director of WashU’s Center for Women’s Health Engineering, co-writes an article about studying, and improving, preterm birth outcomes by understanding the mechanics involved.
Yahoo News | The Conversation
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Read more Perspectives →
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Who Knew WashU? Question: Last weekend, Ryan Loutos became the first WashU graduate to play in a Major League Baseball game in 49 years. Who was the last one?
Answer: B) Dal Maxvill, who retired in 1975 after winning multiple World Series titles in a 14-year career, mostly as a member of the Cardinals. Both Maxvill and Loutos earned engineering degrees from WashU.
Congrats to this week’s winner, Nancy Myers, a staff scientist in surgical oncology, who will receive an “I Knew WashU” luggage tag!
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