Sona Dimidjian, an associate professor of psychology at CU-Boulder and director of CU’s Clinical Research for Evidence-based Services and Training (CREST) Lab, is working to change that. With...
The University of Colorado and Harris Corporation have jointly announced a new master research agreement. The agreement solidifies the relationship between Harris and CU to advance their mutual...
If you have a stereotypical view of a research scientist, then you probably haven’t met Jennifer Hintzsche. The research associate at the University of Colorado School of Medicine at the Anschutz Medical Campus is serious about finding a cure for cancer, but she also knows how to have fun in life. She recently was chosen by middle-schoolers as their favorite scientist, and she described herself to those kids as “loud, smart and silly.”
If researchers were to find “life” that is unlike anything we currently recognize as a living organism, would the discovery be understood? It’s a question that has been debated for years and one that has intrigued Carol Cleland, a professor of philosophy at the University of Colorado Boulder.