News

Three Seas Offers Immersion in Marine Environment

For undergraduate students, the opportunity to work side-by-side with leading faculty researchers can be a life-changing experience. So what is it like for students to spend day in and day out, living and working with top researchers for months at a time? Ask any of the participants of the Three Seas Program at Northeastern. Now […]
February 22, 2010

Human Behavior is 93% Predictable, Research Shows

Human behavior is 93 percent predictable, a group of leading Northeastern University network scientists recently found. Distinguished Professor of Physics Albert-László Barabási and his team studied the mobility patterns of anonymous cell-phone users and concluded that, despite the common perception that our actions are random and unpredictable, human mobility follows surprisingly regular patterns. The team’s […]
February 19, 2010

Breakthrough Technology for Testing Alzheimer's and Parkinson's Drugs

In a breakthrough development for early drug research, Northeastern University scientists are now able to test, in real time, the impact of new drugs being developed to treat neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s. A patented new imaging technology developed by Northeastern’s Center for Translational NeuroImaging (CTNI) enables researchers to produce highly accurate data without resorting to […]
February 17, 2010

Advancing Global Learning

Phyllis Strauss, who is researching DNA repair in mice, and Nicole Rafter, an author, researcher and instructor in biological theories of crime, and crime films and society, have received highly competitive Fulbright Scholarships for 2009–2010, according to the Council for International Exchange of Scholars, which administers the program. Currently fulfilling her four-month Fulbright grant in […]
January 11, 2010

Nanotechnology Collaboration Aimed at Curing Cancers

Researchers at Northeastern’s Electronic Materials Research Institute (eMRI) are collaborating with two Harvard Medical School researchers to develop a nanotechnology-based “smart implant” to treat cancer. The device could improve the efficiency of radiation and drug-based treatments for lung, pancreatic and prostate cancers. Professor and physics department chair Srinivas Sridhar, director of the eMRI, is leading […]
December 21, 2009

Physics Rules Network Dynamics

Facebook, Google, and other expansive Internet sites share important characteristics with complex biological systems, says physicist Ginestra Bianconi—both contain a vast number and variety of linkages that can be better understood through network theory. In particular, Bianconi’s latest research focuses on modeling the evolution and dynamics of networks in different contexts: from the Internet to […]
December 11, 2009

Northeastern Microbiologist Wins Funding To Solve A Mystery

Professor of Biology Slava Epstein has won a prestigious million-dollar grant to do something scientists in the last hundred years have been unable to do: grow oral- disease causing organisms in a laboratory. Epstein is the single Northeastern University recipient of a National Institutes of Health (NIH) Challenge Grant. The NIH received more than 20,000 […]
November 16, 2009

Northeastern Professor Granted $5.5 Million by NIH

Northeastern biologist Kim Lewis has received a $5.5 million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to investigate why antibiotics are not effective for certain infectious diseases. The five-year project, part of the NIH Director’s Transformative Program (T-R01), will focus on three types of disease-producing bacteria to determine how dormant subpopulations of these microorganisms […]
September 24, 2009

Robotic Bee-Havior

A Northeastern University neurobiologist will bring his expertise in animal robotics to a five-year, $10 million National Science Foundation (NSF) Expeditions research project to develop robobees that mimic the communal feeding behavior of bee colonies. Biology professor Joseph Ayers will collaborate with a team of researchers from Harvard University to develop micro flying robots with […]
September 08, 2009

Discovery Connection

An initiative developed by members of Northeastern’s mathematics and science faculty that will promote interest in those subjects among college and high-school students by connecting them to research has garnered a five-year, $1.98 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF). Northeastern mathematicians, physicists and biologists will connect with first- and second-year Northeastern students to […]
September 03, 2009

Examining the Sound Patterns of World Languages

To better understand the human capacity for language, Northeastern psychology professor Iris Berent is searching for common sound patterns—simple syllables like “ba”—that are universally preferred across all human languages. This research into language patterns is being funded by a $1 million grant that Berent transferred with her when she moved to Northeastern from her previous […]
July 17, 2009

In the Media

More In the Media
Randall Hughes
Marine and Environmental Sciences
Saving eelgrass, the most important plant you’ve likely never heard of
January 16, 2025
Karen Quigley
Psychology
Why am I always interrupting people?
January 14, 2025
Abby Williams
Mathematics
Northeastern University AI Bot Is Helping Students With Calculus
December 10, 2024
Briony Swire-Thompson
Psychology
LifeKit’s tips on how to counter misinformation
November 2, 2024
Rebecca Carrier
Biology
Mucus: It’s Snot What You Think
October 31, 2024
Ajay Satpute
Psychology
Wake Up Well: Fear can be an invitation to learn
October 2, 2024
Briony Swire-Thompson
Psychology
To combat misinformation, start with connection, not correction
September 30, 2024