COS News

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    A new report from a group of Northeastern researchers explores across disciplines how biotech can ensure safe, sustainable life beyond Earth.

    The key to international space cooperation is developments in biotechnology, Northeastern researchers say

  • News
    The NeuroPRISM lab, led by assistant psychology professor Stephanie Noble, makes tools that pave the way for reliable and reproducible neuroimaging of the brain.

    Precise maps of the brain’s deepest corners are made possible through tools developed by these Northeastern researchers

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  • Could humans visit Venus? Here’s a plan to do just that.

    Could humans visit Venus? Here’s a plan to do just that.

    There’s a hellscape right here in our own solar system, and a team of Northeastern students wants to send human explorers to check it out. Photo by NASA/JPL
  • Remembering Jim Waters

    Remembering Jim Waters

    The Northeastern College of Science recently lost an important and influential member of the community. Entrepreneur, benefactor, trustee, and scientist, Jim Waters passed away on May 17th, 2021. Born and raised in Nebraska, Jim Waters’ family moved to Framingham Massachusetts in 1942. In 1947, he received a bachelor’s degree in physics and engineering from Columbia...
  • The not-so secret life of bees

    The not-so secret life of bees

    Elena Getsios, who just finished her third-year behavioral neuroscience and philosophy major at Northeastern, got a taste for beekeeping after attending an event about the craft a few years ago. She jumped at the chance to learn more when she saw that the university offered a co-op at Best Bees, an urban beekeeping company located...
  • Student Profile: Margaret Cai, Biochemistry and Chemical Engineering Major

    Student Profile: Margaret Cai, Biochemistry and Chemical Engineering Major

    Margaret Cai is a Chemical Engineering and Biochemistry Major. She is graduating in the Class of 2022. Why did you decide to study Chemical Engineering and Biochemistry at Northeastern? “I’ve always been very interested in biology and chemistry. When I was younger, I read books about diseases just because I found them fascinating. I chose...
  • Northeastern’s award-winning coastal research campus in Massachusetts faces public vote

    Northeastern’s award-winning coastal research campus in Massachusetts faces public vote

    NAHANT, Mass. Northeastern students Jaxon Derow and Sahana Simonetti gather mussels for a research project at Northeastern’s Marine Science Center. For ecological forecasters at the center, mussels act as a barometer of climate change, and help researchers understand changing biodiversity in the Gulf of Maine. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University
  • She’s building better bones while encouraging diversity in science

    She’s building better bones while encouraging diversity in science

    Morgan Pfaff, who studies biochemistry, conducts biomaterial research for bone graft applications in Egan Research Center. Pfaff recently received an National Science Foundation grant.
  • How Bill Detrich’s foresight led to the DNA sequencing of a rare icefish species

    How Bill Detrich’s foresight led to the DNA sequencing of a rare icefish species

    In 2004, Northeastern’s Bill Detrich had an idea ahead of its time: that scientists would one day sequence DNA from all of the Earth’s living creatures. Now, his efforts in anticipation of that genetics boom are paying off. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University
  • Scialog’s Newest Bioimaging Fellow: Dr. Bryan Spring

    Scialog’s Newest Bioimaging Fellow: Dr. Bryan Spring

    This article highlights Northeastern’s Bryan Spring who has recently been selected as a Scialog fellow for research in bioimaging. This prestigious award is meant to foster collaboration and innovation within the bioimaging community.
  • Lifestyle choices affect our brain’s capabilities throughout life — this researcher wants to know how.

    Lifestyle choices affect our brain’s capabilities throughout life — this researcher wants to know how.

    Timothy Morris did not anticipate he would become an academic, but his career path led him to the position he now loves: postdoctoral researcher at Northeastern. Morris recounts his research journey, the significance of his current work, and why academia at Northeastern is his calling.
  • Sculpture meets science when physicist Albert-László Barabási makes art from network patterns

    Sculpture meets science when physicist Albert-László Barabási makes art from network patterns

    Albert-László Barabási wanted to be a sculptor. Then he discovered physics and pioneered a new field of network science. Now, the Northeastern professor has also developed a new form of art, too. Photo by Ruby Wallau/Northeastern University
  • Existing drugs may hold the key to curing COVID-19

    Existing drugs may hold the key to curing COVID-19

    Developing new disease treatments can take years. That's why Northeastern researcher Deisy Morselli Gysi and her colleagues looked at existing drugs to treat COVID-19. And now they have four strong contenders. Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University
  • He studies how proteins change in reaction to drugs

    He studies how proteins change in reaction to drugs

    John Engen is the James L. Waters chair in analytical chemistry and distinguished professor of chemistry and chemical biology in the College of Science. Photo by Ruby Wallau/Northeastern University