Renowned biologist Bonnie Bassler explores bacterial communication's potential to revolutionize medicine and enhance our understanding of microbial behavior.
Bacteria can make us sick or keep us alive. A leading scientist says they “talk” using chemical signals. Could silencing their conversations change how we treat deadly infections?
Faculty from across academic disciplines collaborated to deliver a lecture discussing engineering living materials (ELMs) and their potential to act as building materials. The lecture was held Feb. 11 ...
Emphasizing that the responsibility of academic institutions goes beyond research generation, Dr. Devina Vaidya, Director of ...
Associate Professor Mohammad Katouli reflects on choosing opportunity over certainty almost three decades ago to build a research program from scratch ...
Anyone who engages in serious dialogue with a Large Language Model (LLM) may get the impression they are interacting with an ...
Niagara University will host a residential STEM camp Aug. 2-8, 2026, offering hands-on research for students entering grades 10-12.
A professor of Microbiology at Babcock University, Ilisan-Remo, in Ogun State, Ayandiran Aina, has called for the adoption of eco-friendly, sustainable approaches to developing agricultural pesticides ...
Michael Pollan, the American journalist whose edict “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants” became an international fridge ...
As GLP-1 use rise, constipation remains a leading cause of discontinuation. Experts offer practical strategies for prevention and management.
A chance observation in Alexander Fleming's London lab in 1928 led to a medical revolution. Fleming noticed mold killing bacteria in a petri dish. This discovery, penicillin, was later developed into ...