‘How to create a neuroscience pipeline’
Biologist Erik Herzog, of Arts & Sciences, talks about efforts to get young people, from grade school on up, interested in neuroscience careers. He shares university efforts toward that end on “Hold That Thought.”
Poor Navigation Skills May Signal Alzheimer’s Disease
Denise Head, associate professor of psychological and brain sciences
Emotionally stable kids, teens got lots of love in the preschool years
Joan Luby, MD, the Samuel and Mae S. Ludwig Professor of Child Psychiatry
Poor Navigational Skills Could Be Early Sign of Alzheimer’s, Study Says
Denise Head, associate professor of psychological and brain sciences
Barmash edits book on the Exodus
Pamela Barmash, associate professor of Hebrew Bible and Biblical Hebrew in Arts & Sciences, is co-editor of a new interdisciplinary book of scholarly essays on “Exodus in the Jewish Experience: Echoes and Reverberations” (Lexington Books).
Amid growing effort to help ex-cons, a small but powerful step
Carrie Pettus-Davis, assistant professor, Brown School
With focus groups, researcher looks at race, trauma and mental health in north St. Louis
Darrell Hudson, assistant professor, Brown School
Curry injury latest blow to UA
Patrick Rishe, director, Sports Business Program
Pressure mounts as Missouri ‘religious freedom’ vote looms
Elizabeth Sepper, associate professor of law
Medicine’s Curiel publishes gene therapy book
David Curiel, MD, PhD, professor of radiation oncology at the School of Medicine, has just published the second edition of “Adenoviral Vectors for Gene Therapy.” The book explains gene-delivery vehicles based on the adenovirus, an emerging tool in treating disease.
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