COS News

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    a sea spider
    Connie Phong wants to know how an animal adapted to live in a highly specialized environment — just below the freezing point for seawater — responds to warming oceans.

    How Northeastern scientists are using Antarctic sea spiders to study life on the edge

  • News
    Fleury Augustin Nsole Biteghe has identified a way to target two of the deadliest cancer types with chemotherapy drugs but without the harms associated with chemotherapy.

    Northeastern researcher uses light to target and kill cancer cells

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    Showing 116 results in Biology

  • Northeastern co-op is Training Massive Sea Lions and Smaller Harbor Seals

    Northeastern co-op is Training Massive Sea Lions and Smaller Harbor Seals

    “I created my own co-op,” says Welch, 19, who is studying ecology, evolution and biology with an eye on veterinary school.
  • New Northeastern lab studying ticks and Lyme disease

    New Northeastern lab studying ticks and Lyme disease

    Most people try to keep their distance from the deer tick that transmits Lyme disease and the bacterium that causes it. Not researcher Constantin Takacs. He plans to order one and is cultivating the other in his new lab at Northeastern.
  • Inside Rebecca Carrier’s Advanced Drug Delivery Research Lab

    Inside Rebecca Carrier’s Advanced Drug Delivery Research Lab

    “One problem I saw as a formulation scientist was that a lot of what we did was trial and error,” says Carrier, associate chair for research in the chemical engineering department, professor of chemical engineering with affiliations in bioengineering and biology.
  • Behind the Beanpot: An Exclusive Q&A with Megan Carter, COS Student and Member of the Women’s Ice Hockey Team

    Behind the Beanpot: An Exclusive Q&A with Megan Carter, COS Student and Member of the Women’s Ice Hockey Team

    With only days away from the beloved Beanpot championship, Megan Carter, a senior biology student and member of the women’s ice hockey team, joined us for an exclusive Q&A on her passions on and off the ice.
  • Do milder winters mean Lyme disease season lasts all year?

    Do milder winters mean Lyme disease season lasts all year?

    The lack of snow cover and mild winter weather that has people trading in snowshoes and skis for hiking boots, and shovels for gardening rakes, is also increasing their exposure to Lyme disease year-round, scientists say.
  • Drink that kombucha at your own risk: What a Northeastern scientist thinks about popular gut health advice

    Drink that kombucha at your own risk: What a Northeastern scientist thinks about popular gut health advice

    Type “gut health” in your search browser and you will find millions of popular web entries that tell you to take charge of your gut and eat specific foods to improve its condition. First came probiotics. Then whole grains. Next, grocery stores started to devote whole display cases to kombucha. And now we are rediscovering the taste of other fermented foods.
  • Northeastern student wins Mitchell Scholarship

    Northeastern student wins Mitchell Scholarship

    Growing up, Vivek Kanpa never wanted to be a computer scientist like his parents. They would try to teach him how programming works by showing him the “Hello, World!” program or Java language.
  • The layers of science behind every World Cup kick

    The layers of science behind every World Cup kick

    Northeastern professors Dagmar Sternad and Arun Bansil break down the physics and neuroscience behind World Cup soccer ball kicks.
  • The Mathematical Patterns Hidden in Northeastern’s Arboretum

    The Mathematical Patterns Hidden in Northeastern’s Arboretum

    The Fibonacci sequence and the golden ratio are present everywhere in nature, including in the Northeastern University Arboretum. Northeastern mathematics professor Evan Dummit explains how the phenomenon is more than a coincidence.
  • Northeastern student helps launch new sport for people with disabilities in Boston

    Northeastern student helps launch new sport for people with disabilities in Boston

    Dylan Hogan, a Northeastern pre-med student, coached the Boston team at the inaugural volt hockey World Cup in Sweden.
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    Q&A with Jihoon Jun, BA in Biology

    Jihoon Jun is currently enrolled in the biology program and will be graduating in 2023. Learn about his experience in the program. Q: What is your major, and when are you graduating? I’m a Biology major on the Predental track, graduating in 2023. Q: Why did you decide to pursue this major? Knowing I wanted […]
  • What are crowdsourced photos taken along hiking trails telling us about the climate?

    What are crowdsourced photos taken along hiking trails telling us about the climate?

    Northeastern graduate Graceanne Piselli's uses crowdsourced data on local plants along New England National Scenic Trail to help identify signs of climate change.