Tag Research
Chemical flame retardant found in salmon
University scientists have found high levels of a common chemical flame retardant in Lake Michigan salmon. Read More
Team places sensors on enormous iceberg
University researchers have placed Automatic Weather Stations on the massive Antarctic iceberg that broke away from the Ross Ice Shelf last March. Read More
New class of sensors fashioned from LEDs
The same technology behind the glowing lights reminding people to turn off VCRs and stereos is being applied to new treatments for hard-to-heal wounds and new super-efficient traffic lights. Now a group of UW–Madison scientists have shed light on a valuable new use for light-emitting diodes (LEDs) by demonstrating their usefulness as chemical sensors. Read More
UW, Third Wave forge research partnership
Third Wave Technologies, Inc. and UW–Madison announced today, Feb. 6, that they have entered into a collaboration that will encourage new research to identify and treat genetic origins of disease. Read More
What puts the brakes on madly spinning stars?
Keying off new observations, astronomers are turning to an old idea of what puts the brakes on young, rapidly rotating stars, some of which spin so fast that astronomers are amazed they simply don't fly apart. Read More
Prison work fuels professors’ passion for justice
The seeds of social justice were sown early in the lives of clinical associate professors of law Keith Findley and John Pray. Those seeds reaped a huge harvest earlier this month, when Texas convict Christopher Ochoa was exonerated for a rape and murder he did not commit. Read More
Advance makes voting machines easier to use
The Trace Research and Development Center will demonstrate easy-to-use voting machine design techniques Tuesday, Jan. 30, during a Capitol Hill event focused on electronic voting technology. Read More
Foundation supports chemical genomics center
A $1.5 million grant from the W.M. Keck Foundation will enable the university to establish a center of research for the study and application of chemical genomics, a dynamic new field combining chemistry and molecular biology. Read More
Genome project finds ‘triggers’ for E. coli illness
The newly completed genomic sequence of E. coli O157:H7 reveals how these potentially deadly bacteria are armed with a surprisingly wide range of genes that may trigger illness. Read More
Is Wisconsin facing a 1980s-style farm crisis?
Despite the lowest milk prices in two decades, state farmers probably won't see a repeat of the financial crisis of the mid-1980s - at least not this year, according to Bruce Jones, an economist at the College of Agricultural and Life Sciences. Unless milk prices improve, though, the state's farm economy could face big problems in coming years, he says. Read More
Studies of baby pigs address breathing problems
University research on baby pigs may soon help doctors improve the way they care for premature infants. Read More
National ergonomics study released
Biomedical engineering Professor Robert Radwin is an author of a new federal study showing the far-reaching impact of work-related musculoskeletal disorders, a national health problem resulting in lost work time for approximately 1 million people each year. Read More
Ph.D. training lacking in career preparation, study says
More than 40,000 students earn doctorate degrees each year from American universities, widely regarded as the best in the world in graduate education. But a new report released Tuesday, Jan. 16, says the training doctoral students receive is not what they want, nor does it prepare them for the jobs they take. Read More
Oldest crystal tells tale of hospitable early Earth
Reading the telltale chemical signature of a mineral sample determined to be the world's oldest known terrestrial material, scientists have reconstructed a portrait that suggests the early Earth, instead of being a roiling ocean of magma, was cool enough to have water, continents and conditions that could have supported life. Read More
Team discovers genetic basis of Alexander disease
Scientists have pinpointed the gene responsible for a rare and devastating childhood brain disorder called Alexander disease, solving a 50-year-old mystery regarding its cause. Read More
Astronomers land major satellite observing program
Astronomers from UW–Madison and several collaborating institutions have won a major contract with NASA to perform a detailed survey of the inner regions of the Milky Way using the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, a telescope that will be boosted into orbit around the sun in 2002. Read More
Study: Business climate strong
A study by the School of Business shows that executives give Wisconsin high marks as a place to do business. Read More