Tag Research
A climate scientist applies computer models to his life
At the university, Jonathan Foley makes computer models to study what might happen if the human economy continues to emit greenhouse gases. Like hundreds of other climate scientists, he is deeply worried about global warming. Unlike most scientists, he carries that worry into his personal life. Read More
Fruits of inspiration: Recent WARF patents
During the past 75 years, WARF has built a reputation on some high-powered patents. Here's a sampling of a promising new generation of patents, in various stages of development by WARF. Read More
Checking tree stands improves hunter safety
As hunters head for the woods this fall, UW Hospital officials remind them: Tree stands can be a valuable tool for deer hunters, but they have the potential to cause a serious accident. Read More
Drug shows promise in fighting brain tumors
Early results from an ongoing cancer drug study shows that a new agent, Xcytrin , demonstrates a high response rate and is well-tolerated in patients with brain metastases - brain tumors that originate from cancer in another part of the body. Read More
Final fall enrollment exceeds 40,600
The university has enrolled 40,610 students this fall, a 1.2 percent increase from the 40,109 students enrolled in fall 1998. The total… Read More
Biodiversity as insurance in the face of change
It has been a truism, long held by scientists, environmentalists and others, that biological diversity and the intricate, interdependent web of biological relationships it… Read More
Barbara Ehrenreich visits campus
Noted writer, essayist and wit Barbara Ehrenreich will lecture on campus Oct. 18 and 21. Ehrenreich will talk about “Carnival, Revolutions and… Read More
Grant funds research on disability access
UW-Madison's Trace Research and Development Center has received $3.37 million for a project to make standard telecommunications systems more accessible for people who are older or disabled. Read More
Study: Bargaining doesn’t inhibit grad education
Collective bargaining with graduate assistants doesn't interfere with the faculty's ability to instruct and advise those students, says the first national empirical study of collective bargaining's effects on faculty-student relationships. Read More
Madison Dynamo Project seeks to recreate Earth’s magnetic field in the laboratory
The finishing touches are being applied to a UW–Madison experiment that will attempt to recreate -- in a 1-meter-wide stainless steel sphere -- the same conditions that give rise to the self-perpetuating magnetic fields that exist in the Earth and virtually all other celestial objects from stars to galaxies. Read More
Sketch artist
If a tree falls… Mason Sachs, a junior art major, spends an afternoon sketching the view from Bascom Hill to the Capitol. Read More
Researchers to study summer power failures
After a rash of power failures this summer caused headaches for millions of customers in some of the nation's major cities, two UW–Madison engineers at the Power Systems Research Engineering Center have joined a national effort to shed light on blackouts. Read More
Smoking relapse targeted in $9.9 million study
Using an array of technology that will include hand-held computers and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, research teams at the UW Medical School will launch a comprehensive assault on one of the most persistent problems in smoking cessation: relapse. Read More
Biodiversity as insurance in the face of change
A group of scientists from UW–Madison, writing in the Friday, Oct. 15, edition of the journal Science, suggests that biological diversity may be less important for an ecosystem's health than how individual animals, plants or microbes respond to environmental change. Read More
Alumni donate $3.6 million to applied security analysis center
The finance alumni of the School of Business have raised more than $3.6 million to name a center in honor of a former professor. The Stephen L. Hawk Center for Applied Security Analysis, being dedicated on Friday, Oct. 15, will include the business school's nationally known applied security analysis program. Read More
Participants sought for macular degeneration study
The Department of Ophthalmology is recruiting patients to participate in a five-year clinical trial to determine whether laser treatment can decrease vision loss for older individuals at risk of developing severe age-related macular degeneration. Read More