Wired: Is psychedelic therapy bubble about to burst?
September 9, 2022
UC postdoctoral researcher Nese Devenot talks to Wired magazine about challenges facing psychedelic therapies.
September 9, 2022
UC postdoctoral researcher Nese Devenot talks to Wired magazine about challenges facing psychedelic therapies.
August 16, 2022
Psychedelics such as LSD, psilocybin and MDMA are gaining increasing attention in scientific and medical circles because of the potential they hold for treating anxiety disorders and emotional trauma. UC's Nese Devenot explains why psychedelics are seeing a research renaissance.
September 14, 2022
UC receives $1.6 million in federal funding from National Science Foundation.
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.
September 7, 2022
UC's Danielle Bessett cited in national media for her research on abortion care
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 22, 2023
UC's semiconductor project is among 24 the National Science Foundation is supporting with $45 million in grants.
March 25, 2024
UC's research on the ancient Maya in Tikal is featured in a new National Geographic series called "The Rise and Fall of the Maya."
January 20, 2023
As the anniversary of Roe v. Wade approaches on Jan. 22, experts weigh in on the continued abortion debate. Among those cited in an article in "The Conversation" are Elizabeth Lanphier, a UC a moral philosopher and bioethicist.
January 25, 2023
UC postdoctoral researcher Neşe Devenot tells Spectrum News that psychedelics can have therapeutic benefits, but she resists classifying them as medicine.