Skip to main content

UW In The News

  • The Daddy Longlegs Genome Was Sequenced, And Researchers Made A Daddy Shortlegs

    NPR | August 19, 2021

    “If you watch a daddy longlegs move, it will effectively walk on just three pairs of its legs,” said Guilherme Gainett, a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. The remaining pair of legs, he adds, wave around in the air, probing the arachnid’s surroundings.

  • Fight to Vote: Election data reveals the 2020 election was a remarkable success

    The Guardian | August 19, 2021

    “It is basically an indicator of the success of the election,” said Barry Burden, the director of the elections research center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “Election administrators managed to pull it off and support a record number of voters.”

  • Tommy Thompson explains why he got vaccinated – and why you should, too

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | August 18, 2021

    When I had an opportunity to become vaccinated against COVID-19 last spring, I didn’t hesitate. The vaccine clearly was the best way for me to protect myself and the people I care about from death or hospitalization due to COVID. I was also eager to do my part to help our society beat back this insidious disease.

  • Family of Anthony Huber, killed by Kyle Rittenhouse, files suit against city of Kenosha

    The Washington Post | August 18, 2021

    Steven Howard Wright, a law professor at the University of Wisconsin in Madison and co-director of the Wisconsin Innocence Project, said the challenge for plaintiffs will be to prove an active conspiracy between the city, law enforcement and White militia members. “They are swinging for the entire community, which will make it a lot harder to sell,” he said. Because there is not a specific “smoking gun” to prove the conspiracy, he said he expects plaintiffs’ attorneys to ask the court “for the widest degree of discovery” to show that both departments had significant race problems long before the Blake incident.

  • How to Get Smarter: Start With the Brain Itself

    WSJ | August 16, 2021

    “If we can make these things less and less invasive while making sure we are engaging the nerves, we can start to move beyond just doing this for people who have injury or ailments,” says Justin Williams, a Darpa-funded neuro-engineer at the University of Wisconsin-Madison who is studying how nerve stimulation can impact learning.

  • Chris Cuomo’s ethical troubles at CNN highlight rise of ‘info-tainment’

    The Guardian | August 16, 2021

    “I am shocked it’s gotten this far without him even receiving a suspension,” said Kathleen Bartzen Culver, director of the Center for Journalism Ethics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Journalism and Mass Communication.

  • It’s been a brutally hot summer. Experts say this is just a glimpse of the future.

    NBC News | August 16, 2021

    “Climate scientists were predicting exactly these kinds of things, that there would be an enhanced threat of these types of extreme events brought on by increased warming,” said Jonathan Martin, a professor of atmospheric science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “It’s very distressing. These are not encouraging signs for our immediate future.

  • Live Murder Hornet sighted in the US for the first time in 2021

    CNET | August 16, 2021

    James Crall, assistant professor of entymology at the University of Wisconsin, told the Harvard Gazette last year: “If they do become established, then the honeybees will experience strong evolutionary pressures over the next years as they adapt to this new ecological interaction.”

  • Metabolism in adulthood does not slow as commonly believed, study finds

    NBC News | August 13, 2021

    In a commentary published with the new study, Timothy Rhoads and Rozalyn Anderson, who work in geriatrics at the University of Wisconsin, said the findings also may have implications for the study of age-related diseases.

  • Moderna COVID-19 vaccine study for children under 12 starting at UW Health

    Wisconsin State Journal | August 13, 2021

    Aclinical trial of Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine in children under 12 will start enrolling participants at UW Health Friday, as researchers and regulators move closer to potentially authorizing shots for the only age group not yet eligible in the United States.

  • Bill Gates Pledges $1.5 Billion for Infrastructure Bill’s New Climate Projects

    Wall Street Journal | August 12, 2021

    Gregory Nemet, a University of Wisconsin professor who has written a book about recent innovation in solar power, said the policy shift will put pressure on government officials who will have to sort through complex market dynamics while managing demands from companies seeking profits and lawmakers pushing for home-state handouts.

  • Does mask wearing harm children’s development? Experts weigh in

    CNN | August 12, 2021

    “There are sensitive periods in early childhood development in which language development and emotional development are really rapidly developing for the first few years of life,” said Ashley Ruba, a postdoctoral researcher in the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Child Emotion Lab.

  • UW School of Medicine to begin enrolling children ages 6 months to 11 years for Moderna COVID-19 vaccine trial

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | August 12, 2021

    Vaccinating children as young as 6 months of age against COVID-19 may become the new front in the global pandemic fight, if the vaccines prove to be safe and effective.

    One such trial by the American pharmaceutical company Moderna will begin enrolling children 6 months through 11 years old on Friday at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. UW will be one of 75 to 100 sites in the U.S. and Canada for the trial, which has been named the KidCOVE study.

  • Fact check: 8 million ‘excess’ Biden votes weren’t counted in 2020

    USA Today | August 11, 2021

    “Keshel is promoting a bizarre and unfounded conspiracy about the 2020 election,” Barry Burden, director of the Elections Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said in an email.

  • Wisconsin to set fall wolf limit after runaway spring hunt

    AP | August 11, 2021

    The DNR’s most recent estimate of wolves in Wisconsin, during the winter of 2019-20, put the population at about 1,000. The department’s goal is 350 wolves statewide. But conservationists maintain the February hunt was devastating to the state’s wolf population since it was held during the animal’s mating season. A University of Wisconsin study released last month also estimated another 100 wolves were killed by poachers after the animals lost their endangered species protection.

  • Delta Forces Hospitals Across U.S. to Ration Scarce ICU Beds

    Bloomberg | August 10, 2021

    Truly stopping transmission would require about 90% vaccination, impossible to achieve, because children under 12 aren’t eligible for a shot, said Ajay Sethi, an associate professor of population health sciences at the University of Wisconsin.

  • Studying poverty through a child’s eyes

    Knowable Magazine | August 5, 2021

    Researchers studying how poverty and adversity affect children’s development often track how negative experiences — be they poverty itself or factors such as having an incarcerated parent — affect decision-making, stress levels or aspects of brain function. But Seth Pollak, a psychologist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, says that most of these efforts miss a crucial but long-overlooked component: children’s perceptions of their experiences.

    Pollak spoke with Knowable Magazine about the importance of studying individual differences in experience.

  • UW-Madison will require masks indoors regardless of vaccination status

    Wisconsin State Journal | August 4, 2021

    The mask mandate could mark the first major change in UW-Madison’s fall plans. The university previously allowed vaccinated people to forgo a face covering, a policy that began in early June, but a concerning increase in COVID-19 cases in recent weeks that experts attribute to the delta variant of the coronavirus caused campus officials to reassess.

  • New Division of the Arts director Chris Walker plans to support art and student activism

    The Capital Times | August 3, 2021

    Newly-appointed director of the Division of the Arts Chris Walker will introduce a multitude of new grants and programming that center on art and activism and broadening cultural horizons.

  • If They Say They Know, They Don’t Know: A principle for understanding which experts to trust, including the CDC.

    Slate | July 30, 2021

    Written by Jordan Ellenberg, a professor of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin and the author of Shape and How Not to Be Wrong.

  • Farmers markets are growing their role as essential sources of healthy food for rich and poor

    The Conversation | July 30, 2021

    Written by , Assistant Professor of Planning and Landscape Architecture, and , Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of Planning and Landscape Architecture, University of Wisconsin-Madison

  • A reason to be optimistic about our democracy: Students are flocking to public policy programs

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | July 29, 2021

     

    Written by Susan Yackee, director of the La Follette School of Public Affairs and a Collins-Bascom Professor of Public Affairs and Political Science at UW-Madison.

  • How Olympians Are Fighting to Put Athletes’ Mental Health First

    Time | July 23, 2021

    “Five years ago, mental health among elite athletes was not a very often-discussed topic,” says Dr. Claudia Reardon, professor of psychiatry at the University of Wisconsin. If there was any focus on athletes’ mental health, it centered around performance and ways to optimize results on the field. “Most of the emphasis when it came to mental health was around sports psychology and performance, and offering resources to help you perform at your highest level,” says Ross. “Occasionally in the health history [questionnaire] there might be some questions about mental health but they were sort of hidden, and weren’t prominent.”

  • Bill O’Reilly accuser’s appearance on ‘The View’ stopped by order

    AP | July 22, 2021

    That’s a potential conflict of interest, raising the question of whether Falzone’s experience with Fox would affect her independence, said Kathleen Bartzen Culver, director of the Center for Journalism Ethics at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She said it would be wrong to suggest Falzone can’t write about these issues, but it’s questionable for her to write about them when it concerns Fox.

  • Small farms vanish every day in America’s dairyland: ‘There ain’t no future in dairy’

    The Guardian | July 21, 2021

    Mark Stephenson, the director of dairy policy analysis at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said the industry definitely has a lot of challenges but is nowhere near extinction.“We’ve produced record amounts of milk in the last year or two. It’s being consumed. Most of it domestically, but increasingly with exports,” said Stephenson.

  • Hardy Microbes Hint at Possibilities for Extraterrestrial Life

    Scientific Americane | July 21, 2021

    Extremophile research was pioneered by the late Thomas Brock, a microbiologist at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. He found, against all expectations, that certain hardy microbes could thrive in geothermal springs hot enough to poach an egg. The microbiologist’s curiosity led to the isolation of a molecule—from a heat-loving bacterium—that is now used in labs across the world to amplify and sequence DNA. Brock passed away in April, but his legacy lives on.

  • U.S. companies that paid little or no income taxes support taxpayer-funded infrastructure deals

    The Washington Post | July 21, 2021

    Fabio Gaertner, an associate professor of accounting at the University of Wisconsin at Madison, was also not surprised by the corporate behavior.

  • LGBTQ patients face bias at the doctor’s office. Here’s how a first-of-its-kind fellowship at UW medical school aims to change that.

    Milwaukee Journal Sentinel | July 20, 2021

    The University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health will be the first site to host a new national fellowship that aims to make the doctor’s office more supportive of LGBTQ patients.

  • UW to start LGBTQ+ fellowship program for doctors

    Wisconsin State Journal | July 20, 2021

    The UW School of Medicine and Public Health has been selected as the first site of the National LGBTQ+ Fellowship Program to train early-career doctors to understand and respond to the needs of LGBTQ+ patients.

  • Post-Covid, office wear and other clothing get a rethink as we all try to remember how to dress

    NBC News | July 19, 2021

    “I expect to see lots of color,” agreed Gail Brassard, who taught costume design at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. “Covid was such a life-changing event — like war or an economic crash — that its effects will be profound on all visuals and especially in the arts.”

Featured Experts

Kathleen Glass: Food safety

Food is an integral part of Thanksgiving. And who doesn't love leftovers? But after how long should you leave those… More

Cecelia Klingele: Body-worn cameras by police

Madison Police Chief Shon Barnes is requesting that the city fund widespread use of body cameras for officers in the… More

Stanley Temple: Fall phenology

The days have finally started getting cooler and we all know winter awaits. Stanley Temple, an expert on birds, wildlife, endangered… More

Jonathan Temte: The seasonal flu shot

Family medicine professor Jonathan Temte is available to discuss this year's updated seasonal flu shot and flu prevention and control.  More

Noelle LoConte: Pancreatic Cancer Awareness Month

Pancreatic cancer is one of the most difficult cancers to prevent, diagnose or treat. Earlier this month, music legend Quincy… More

Alvin Thomas: Movember and Men's Health Month

You might see more facial hair this month as Movember goes into full effect, drawing awareness toward men's health. Alvin… More

Dominique Brossard: Vaccine hesitancy

With a new administration poised to take power in January, a change in policy regarding vaccines may also be on the way.… More

Experts Guide