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New technique ramps up image delivery over the Web

May 31, 2001

With a little help from a pair of astronomers, the aggravation of waiting -- and waiting and waiting -- for high-resolution images to download to a computer could become a thing of the past. Read More

Potential for new superconducting material advances

May 30, 2001

Commercial potential is growing for magnesium-diboride, a recently discovered high-temperature superconducting metal, with new evidence that alloying enables the metal to carry very high electric current at a high magnetic field. Read More

Stinking beauty: Rare flower set to bloom at UW–Madison

May 29, 2001

One of the world's largest and most malodorous flowers is about to bloom on campus. Read More

Fast, cheap and portable – a new pathogen detection tool

May 24, 2001

Liquid crystals, the visual element in products like digital watches, computer monitors and mood rings, may help in the quest for early detection of disease-causing pathogens. Read More

The Dalai Lama and scientists unite to study meditation

May 23, 2001

In a rare convergence of spirituality and science, the Dalai Lama and a handful of Western neuroscientists met this week at the university to discuss ways in which they can collaborate to conduct research on meditation. Read More

UW study: Local spending, taxing under control

May 22, 2001

As Wisconsin legislators debate the balance between spending and taxes at the state level, a University of Wisconsin–Madison study has found no indication that… Read More

Dalai Lama visits brain imaging facility

May 21, 2001

The Dalai Lama's deep interest in scientific knowledge that intersects with the spiritual aspects of Buddhism brought him to campus this week to visit one of the world's foremost centers on emotion research. Read More

Agent shows promise for treating brain tumors

May 18, 2001

A chemical agent long used by physicians to get detailed pictures of cancer tumors may also have therapeutic value for a class of deadly brain tumors, according to a new study. Read More

Sollinger: Drug may reduce vascular rejection

May 16, 2001

A drug approved for non-Hodgkin's lymphoma shows success in treating transplant patients who experience vascular rejection, a difficult complication. Currently, no FDA drug has been approved to treat severe vascular rejection. Read More

Advances

May 15, 2001

(Advances gives a glimpse of the many significant research projects at the university. Tell us about your discoveries by e-mailing: wisweek@news.wisc.edu.)… Read More

Veterinary collection reveals information about eye disease

May 15, 2001

Richard Dubielzig has a collection of eyeballs. They're not exactly peering out at him from shelves, though. Read More

Sociologist chronicles the streets of Greenwich Village

May 15, 2001

For seven years, sociologist Mitchell Duneier spent nearly every summer and semester break living and working among the mostly homeless men who sell second-hand goods around Greenwich Village. His quest: to understand the dynamics of class, race and economics in America's inner cities. Read More

Study suggests new options for treating breast cancer

May 15, 2001

Close to half the women in the world diagnosed with breast cancer each year stand to gain from a combined additional treatment begun at the time of breast cancer surgery. Oophorectomy (removal of both ovaries) plus tamoxifen tablets taken for five years reduce the chance of cancer recurrence by almost 20 percent and increases the likelihood of survival by 11 percent in premenopausal Vietnamese and Chinese women. Read More

Study: Early intervention cuts crime, dropout rates

May 8, 2001

One of the nation's largest studies of public early-childhood education is tracking a "snowball effect" of positive outcomes, including new data showing significant declines in juvenile crime and dropout rates. Read More

Study finds therapist is key to mental health

May 7, 2001

The drive by HMOs to "medicalize" psychotherapy - insisting that practitioners look for a medical disorder such as clinical depression and then dispense a prescribed treatment - will ultimately suffocate psychotherapy through ignorance of how it works. Read More

Climate shift linked to rise of Himalayas, Tibetan Plateau

May 3, 2001

By probing ancient dust deposits in China and deep ocean sediments from the North Pacific and Indian Oceans, scientists have constructed the most detailed portrait to date of the effects on climate of the Himalaya Mountains and the great Tibetan Plateau. Read More

Advances

May 1, 2001

(Advances gives a glimpse of the many significant research projects at the university. Tell us about your discoveries by e-mailing: wisweek@news.wisc.edu.)… Read More

Keck lab ready to begin brain imaging studies

May 1, 2001

The $10 million W.M. Keck Laboratory for Functional Brain Imaging and Behavior opened this month, promising to give scientists better views of brain function that could reveal more about emotions, learning and mental disorders. Read More

Wisconsin academy launches water initiative

May 1, 2001

The Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters is launching a statewide initiative on water use and conservation to examine and analyze the current state and long-term sustainability of Wisconsin's waters. Read More

Research aims to reduce home fire damage

April 26, 2001

With the help of a National Science Foundation grant, civil and environmental engineering professor Steve Cramer recently embarked on a two-year project aimed at reducing the estimated 4,000 deaths, 17,000 injuries and $6 billion in property damage caused each year by fires in residential construction. Read More