COS News

  • Research
    AI and physics
    “The basic premise is that AI can help us do better physics, and something that is less expected is that physics can also help us understand AI better,” said Northeastern professor James Halverson.

    AI and physics have more in common than you might think.

  • Research
    Mark Patterson
    Formed by superheated glacial water from the last ice age, the hydrothermal vents Professor Mark Patterson studies have been bubbling beneath the fjord for centuries.

    Professor receives Fulbright to explore one of the world’s most unique hydrothermal vents

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  • Meet Foroogh

    Meet Foroogh

    Contrast sensitivity, the ability to distinguish the foreground from the background is the foundation of human pattern vision. For this reason, contrast sensitivity has been considered as a major barometer of human visual function. By capitalizing on deep learning techniques and retinal imaging data, we showed that human contrast sensitivity can be reliably predicted from...
  • Meet Nadja

    Meet Nadja

    The antibiotics currently used to treat Lyme disease are broad-spectrum, damage the microbiome, and select for resistance in non-target bacteria. A screen of soil micro-organisms revealed a compound (Hygromycin A) highly selective against spirochetes, including Borrelia burgdorferi (the causative agent of Lyme disease). The mechanism of selectivity is puzzling because hygromycin A targets the ribosome. Hygromycin A...
  • Northeastern Partners With Entrepreneur David Roux To Launch The Roux Institute At Northeastern In Portland, Maine

    Northeastern Partners With Entrepreneur David Roux To Launch The Roux Institute At Northeastern In Portland, Maine

    The institute, scheduled to open in the spring, is designed to educate generations of talent for the digital and life sciences sectors, and drive sustained economic growth in Portland, the state of Maine, and northern New England. “The Roux Institute represents a significant expansion of our model,” said Joseph E. Aoun, president of Northeastern.
  • Billions Of Tons Of Plastic Are Choking The Ocean. She’s Here To Clean It Up.

    Billions Of Tons Of Plastic Are Choking The Ocean. She’s Here To Clean It Up.

    Northeastern graduate Amanda Dwyer did her doctoral research on how corals survive changing ocean conditions. Her next task is to help reduce the impact of billions of tons of plastic in the world’s oceans.
  • It’s not just your genes that are killing you. Everything else is, too.

    It’s not just your genes that are killing you. Everything else is, too.

    Environmental factors drive the majority of our risk for non-communicable diseases, says Albert-László Barabási, Robert Gray Dodge Professor of Network Science at Northeastern. We need to be studying them.
  • All in the mud: nutrients and microbes aid understanding of marsh resilience

    All in the mud: nutrients and microbes aid understanding of marsh resilience

    Researchers in the Bowen Lab at Northeastern University’s Marine Science Center are working to expand our understanding of salt marsh resilience to the threats of sea level rise.
  • As black seabass move north, lobsters face greater predation risk

    As black seabass move north, lobsters face greater predation risk

    As ocean temperatures warm, some marine species are moving north which can result in novel species interactions.
  • A Rat Had Basically No Brain. But It Could Still See, Hear, Smell, and Feel.

    A Rat Had Basically No Brain. But It Could Still See, Hear, Smell, and Feel.

    Many scientists agree that, although the brain can grow and develop, specific parts are meant only for specific functions, says Northeastern professor Craig Ferris. What if there were an animal that proved them wrong? I smell a rat.
  • We Know Exercise Is Good for Your Skin. This Protein Mimics Those Effects in Mice.

    We Know Exercise Is Good for Your Skin. This Protein Mimics Those Effects in Mice.

    Skin cells lose their ability to heal themselves with age. Northeastern biologist Justin Crane is testing how a new treatment to heal wounds in older mice can help researchers understand the mechanisms of healing human skin cells.
  • He’s on a Quest to Find the Patterns That Built ‘Everything Around Us’

    He’s on a Quest to Find the Patterns That Built ‘Everything Around Us’

    Gregory Fiete, a professor of physics at Northeastern, is exploring the electrons of materials that could catalyze a new technological era based on quantum systems.
  • Cannabis Products Are Everywhere. But What Do They Actually Do?

    Cannabis Products Are Everywhere. But What Do They Actually Do?

    Researchers at Northeastern and Loyalist College in Ontario, Canada, are teaming up to train graduate students in the analytical techniques required to investigate cannabis, and help them understand the regulatory landscape in both Canada and the U.S.
  • He’s Training Computers to Find New Molecules With the Machine Learning Algorithms Used by Facebook and Google

    He’s Training Computers to Find New Molecules With the Machine Learning Algorithms Used by Facebook and Google

    Using the same techniques that help social media learn about you, Northeastern assistant professor Steven Lopez is training machine learning algorithms to find millions of new molecules to help make materials for cancer therapy, renewable energy, and other important technologies.