999 Results
1

When push comes to shove, what is a fight?

January 25, 2021

University of Cincinnati biologists come up with novel way for deciding how to categorize similar animal behaviors. The results could help streamline animal behavior research.

2

Halt cell recycling to treat cancer

February 8, 2021

University of Cincinnati researchers have shown that completely halting a cell recycling process in a very aggressive form of breast cancer may improve outcomes for patients one day.

3

UC engineering student wins 3D design contest

January 13, 2021

New 3D printers make it easier to design and create objects limited only by the user’s imaginations and digital skills. University of Cincinnati student Arshad Mohammed put both to the test, winning a national design contest sponsored by Cincinnati software and tech startup Physna.

4

Parents: 4 signs your child is an empath

February 1, 2021

If your child is emotionally or physically sensitive, they may be an empath. A UC expert discusses qualities of an empath and offers suggestions about parenting to best support your child and their big feelings.

5

Shift in caribou movements may be tied to human activity

January 22, 2021

Some caribou that trek hundreds of miles each year to give birth and find food shifted their historic migration routes after the 1970s, coinciding with construction of new roads and energy industry infrastructure, according to scientists with the University of Cincinnati.

6

Cincinnati Future: Data analytics for law enforcement

January 5, 2021

Peel9, a Cincinnati Business Courier 2020 Innovation-Technology award winner, is a 1819 Innovation Hub-supported records management and analytics company that serves the law enforcement community. Cincinnati Future had the opportunity to speak with CEO and co-founder Todd Levy about the company's origins and the tech behind it.

9

Cincinnati Enquirer: COVID-19 vaccines and patients with cancer

February 19, 2021

This week, more than 130 hospitals, research foundations, fundraising organizations and patient advocacy groups asked the Biden administration to put cancer patients first in the next stage of the rollout. The letter, which was signed by leaders at the UC Cancer Center, says research in the past year shows that COVID-19 patients with cancer have twice the death rate than those without cancer.