COS News

  • News
    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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  • Finding the needle in the data stack: Advice from a Facebook data scientist

    Finding the needle in the data stack: Advice from a Facebook data scientist

    During her time at Northeastern, Delia Mocanu developed a passion for network science. Now at Facebook, she finds herself working on one of the largest data experiments in history — the News Feed.
  • Announcing the Associate Dean for Equity

    Announcing the Associate Dean for Equity

    Professor Randall Hughes will serve as the first Associate Dean for Equity in the Northeastern College of Science.
  • Biochemistry Students Selected for Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award

    Biochemistry Students Selected for Outstanding Chapter of the Year Award

    Undergraduates in NU’s American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Chapter were selected for the 2020 ‘Chapter of the Year’ honor
  • Biology and Bioinformatics With Julian Stanley

    Biology and Bioinformatics With Julian Stanley

      What motivated you to pursue a PlusOne master’s degree? I joined Northeastern in the biochemistry program on a 5-year, 3-co-op plan. I already had an interest in bioinformatics, but the Bioinformatics PlusOne program had not been approved yet. During my third year, I wanted to learn more technical skills, so I briefly switched to the “Biology and […]
  • Jacqueline Wood’s Journey Through Two Degrees

    Jacqueline Wood’s Journey Through Two Degrees

    What motivated you to pursue a PlusOne master’s degree? I decided to pursue the PlusOne program before I started college. It was one of the reasons I chose Northeastern, besides co-op. I knew before I began college that I wanted to work in a forensic science lab, analyzing either drug substance or toxicology samples. I […]
  • This Soup Kitchen Needed Help. The Marine Science Center Faculty Delivered.

    This Soup Kitchen Needed Help. The Marine Science Center Faculty Delivered.

    When the COVID-19 pandemic forced My Brother’s Table, the largest soup kitchen on Massachusetts’ North Shore, to change how it serves guests, the community at Northeastern’s Marine Science Center took note, and stepped up.
  • Remembering Alfred Viola

    Remembering Alfred Viola

    Alfred Viola, who taught at Northeastern for 41 years and founded its chemistry PhD program, passed away on May 15th. He was 92.
  • Three Seas students take a closer look at marine predators and their prey

    Three Seas students take a closer look at marine predators and their prey

    A Three Seas Program alumni takes a closer look at fear and its effect on ocean prey.
  • People in the U.S. started moving around more before stay-at-home measures were lifted

    People in the U.S. started moving around more before stay-at-home measures were lifted

    Even before the vast majority of states were loosening the measures intended to keep people physically distant and slow the spread of the coronavirus, people were starting to travel further and see each other more, according to research from Northeastern’s Network Science Institute.
  • The ‘Murder Hornet’ Is Out to Get Bees, Not Humans. So Why Are People Still Freaking Out About It?

    The ‘Murder Hornet’ Is Out to Get Bees, Not Humans. So Why Are People Still Freaking Out About It?

    The arrival of the Asian giant hornet in the U.S. has sparked an outcry on social media, but entomologists say that people should not worry about the oversized wasps. Still, some people may be concerned, as the underlying nature of fear isn’t the same for everyone, says neuroscientist Ajay Satpute.
  • The Person Walking Past You Isn’t Wearing a Mask. What Should You Say?

    The Person Walking Past You Isn’t Wearing a Mask. What Should You Say?

    It’s best to avoid hostility and communicate with empathy when it comes to helping people understand why covering their faces can slow the spread of the virus, say Northeastern researchers.
  • The Coronavirus Might Have Weak Spots. Machine Learning Could Help Find Them.

    The Coronavirus Might Have Weak Spots. Machine Learning Could Help Find Them.

    What makes SARS-CoV-2 so infectious? The answer is in its proteins. Mary Jo Ondrechen and Penny Beuning, professors of chemistry and chemical biology, are using machine learning to investigate these proteins and begin to understand how to slow the spread of the virus.