WVXU: Uncovering truth behind art forgeries
October 18, 2022
WVXU and Cincinnati Edition highlight UC's collaboration with Cincinnati area museums to use science shed light on artwork.
October 18, 2022
WVXU and Cincinnati Edition highlight UC's collaboration with Cincinnati area museums to use science shed light on artwork.
December 8, 2022
WLWT highlights a novel partnership between chemists, geologists and art historians at UC and art museums that uses scientific tools to understand precious artworks.
September 11, 2020
Reader's Digest highlighted UC graduate George Rieveschl's invention of Benadryl in a list of the most trusted health brands.
March 22, 2022
UC assistant professor Ashley Ross demonstrated that coating electrodes in coffee grounds improved their sensitivity for neurochemistry measurements.
April 25, 2022
University of Cincinnati Venture Lab-backed startup Cinthesis is gaining interest from companies that are adding new products and want to go green, WVXU reported.
July 29, 2022
Medium highlights University of Cincinnati chemist Yu Shi's quantum simulations and quasichemical theory to create accurate models of the thermodynamic properties of molten salt.
September 19, 2022
UC chemistry professor Pietro Strobbia collaborated with the Cincinnati Art Museum to answer questions about a Tang dynasty sculpture using science.
July 18, 2024
UC Assistant Professor Briana Simms talks to PhRMA about using nanoparticles to deliver medicine.
February 15, 2023
What you post on social media can be in conflict with your employers standards, says UC social media expert Jeffrey Blevins. More and more often people are getting dinged, or worse, for posts that put their employers in a bad light. Blevins suggests a social media review/edit of content and more thought put into posts.
September 15, 2022
UC College of Arts and Sciences associate professor Amy Townsend-Small talks to the WFMP program Sustainability Now! and WOSU's the Ohio Statehouse about Kentucky's leaking oil and gas wells and a new federal initiative to cap them.