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Our faculty, students, alumni, and staff are making a difference through their scholarship, teaching, and service. Learn more about their successes, publications, and impact.
Our faculty, students, alumni, and staff are making a difference through their scholarship, teaching, and service. Learn more about their successes, publications, and impact.
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How to Hook Reporters on Your Science Research
Journalists shared these 12 tips on how CUNY scientists can attract attention for and accurate coverage of their research, at a recent Graduate Center Science Communication Academy workshop.
Your Sleep Cycle Is More Complex Than You Think. Here’s Why
Our circadian rhythms involve more than just when we go to sleep and when we wake up. They also involve environmental cues like light and temperature.
Celebrating the Biology Program Class of 2020
The Biology program congratulates our 2020 Ph.D. graduates.
He is Addressing Addiction Through Neuroscience
Eric Garr (Ph.D. '19, Psychology), now a postdoc at Johns Hopkins, has personal reasons for making his animal behavior research relevant to human health.
Could Our Responses to Stressful Situations Be Biological?
A new study from scientists at the Advanced Science Research Center at The Graduate Center, CUNY provides new insights into the ways people respond to stressful situations.
Insights Into Multiple Sclerosis Could Lead to New Treatment
A new study may help scientists develop new treatments for multiple sclerosis.
NIH Awards $1.95 Million to Graduate Center Professor
Gholson Lyon, an adjunct professor in the CUNY Neuroscience Collaborative, is an expert on the genetic basis of rare diseases.
Impacts of Superstorm Sandy on Maternal Stress and Child Development
CUNY researchers receive media attention for highlighting the consequences of climate change related extreme weather on childhood mental health.
This Protein Acts Like a Traffic Cop in the Brain
ASRC scientists uncover the role of the protein PRMT5 in the survival and generation of the myelin-forming cells in the brain.