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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  • Both Insulator and Conductor, This Material Will Help Revolutionize Quantum Computing

    Both Insulator and Conductor, This Material Will Help Revolutionize Quantum Computing

    Quantum computers represent an incredible leap in computing, but it's still in its infancy. Harnessing the power of spintronics, Professor Don Heiman is creating special materials to help make these computers more efficient, more accurate, and help usher them into the mainstream.
  • Childhood Trauma Changes Your Brain. But It Doesn’t Have to Be Permanent.

    Childhood Trauma Changes Your Brain. But It Doesn’t Have to Be Permanent.

    Neuroscientists at Northeastern are using rats to understand how trauma in infancy makes children, but especially girls, more likely to develop anxiety and other similar disorders later in life.
  • NASA Is Going Back to the Moon. Northeastern University Students Are Designing Robots to Explore the Terrain.

    NASA Is Going Back to the Moon. Northeastern University Students Are Designing Robots to Explore the Terrain.

    Some parts of the moon never see the light, but they are full of resources that NASA could mine to settle on the lunar surface and venture beyond. The agency selected a team of Northeastern students to develop robotic systems to help survey the darkest areas of the moon.
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    What Hidden Mysteries Lie Within the 15th-century Dragon Prayer Book?

    When researchers unearthed a tiny, fragile prayer book hidden deep in Northeastern’s archives, they embarked on a journey to unlock its mysteries. Complex script, medieval music, and poisonous ink are among the discoveries.
  • Global Population, Climate, and Technology Are Changing Human Health. Here’s What We Can Do About It.

    Global Population, Climate, and Technology Are Changing Human Health. Here’s What We Can Do About It.

    “We see how much the world is changing,” Northeastern student and Rhodes Scholar Kritika Singh told an audience of students, researchers, clinicians, and industry experts on Friday. “People, planet, and technology need to change along with it in order to have a healthier and safer world.”
  • Could Houses of the Future Be Made by Bacteria?

    Could Houses of the Future Be Made by Bacteria?

    Imagine if we could grow a building the way coral polyps grow a reef, or if living cells in our clothes could break down sweat and body odor. It’s not science fiction, says associate professor Neel Joshi. It’s the future of scientific research.
  • Six Northeastern Professors Named to 2019 List of ‘Highly Cited Researchers’ Around the Globe

    Six Northeastern Professors Named to 2019 List of ‘Highly Cited Researchers’ Around the Globe

    The 2019 Highly Cited Researchers list features has included six Northeastern researchers who rank in in the top 1 percent by citations in their fields between 2006 and 2016.
  • The coronavirus outbreak is an international public health emergency. Here’s what that means.

    The coronavirus outbreak is an international public health emergency. Here’s what that means.

    “Either the screening, detection, and isolation in China will be able to contain the epidemic there, or it will be a global issue,” says Alessandro Vespignani, Sternberg Family Distinguished University Professor at Northeastern. “And this will be decided in the next couple of weeks.”
  • Food, Forests and Fisheries: A Journey In Conservation and Food

    Food, Forests and Fisheries: A Journey In Conservation and Food

    Student Caitlyn Ark journals about her dialogue of civilizations experience in Romania and Crete.
  • A Close-up Look at the Mysterious Plague Sweeping Through Caribbean Reefs

    A Close-up Look at the Mysterious Plague Sweeping Through Caribbean Reefs

    Northeastern students are surveying a coral reef off the coast of Panama for signs of stony coral tissue loss disease, which threatens twenty species that comprise the heart of the Caribbean’s coral reefs.
  • Meet Cassandra

    Meet Cassandra

    The goal of this project was to explore how to control and manipulate the spontaneous polymerization of collagen, the primary material that makes up native tissue, in order to increase the accessibility of collagen in the design of biomaterials and regenerative medicine. In our previous work, we demonstrated that we could increase both the solubility and […]
  • Meet Tim

    Meet Tim

    The axolotl salamander regenerates its limbs and tail by mounting a massive proliferative response in cells adjacent to the injury. To study this proliferative response, we created a line of axolotls where cells fluoresce different colors depending on where the cell is in the cell cycle; cells that are diving or preparing to divide fluoresce […]