Faculty Labs

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186 Labs Found
Lee-Parsons Laboratory
This research group is applying metabolic engineering principles and methodologies to improve the production of important compounds, i.e. critical plant-derived pharmaceuticals or biofuels, from plant cell & tissue cultures and microalgae cultures.
Levine Lab
Mechanics of motility at both single cell and multicellular levels, genetic and metabolic networks underlying phenotypic changes en route to cancer metastasis, effective detection by and activation of the adaptive immune system
Lifespan Emotional Development Lab (LEDlab)
The Lifespan Emotional Development Lab (LEDlab) investigates the links between attention and emotion throughout the adult lifespan.
Linguistics and Law Lab
The Linguistics & Law Lab is working at the border between law and linguistics to improve justice through linguistic research.
Joshi Lab
The group generally works at the intersection of biomaterials science and synthetic biology. A major focus of the group’s research is on Engineered Living Materials, especially in genetically programming microbial cells to secrete and direct the assembly of biopolymeric matrices.
Logothetis Lab
Diomedes Logothetis's research brings together Medicinal Chemistry, Drug Delivery, Pharmacology/Physiology, and Structural Biology with the aim to form a solid foundation of pre-clinical studies on the action of pharmaceuticals and naturally occurring substances.
Lotterhos Lab
The Lotterhos Lab at Northeastern Marine Science Center seeks to understand how climate has shaped marine biodiversity and how a now rapidly changing climate will affect biodiversity in the future.
Makowski Lab
Image and signal processing as applied to biophysical data designed to answer fundamental questions about the molecular basis of living systems
Marine Evolutionary Genomics Lab
Marine Evolutionary Genomics Lab (Gatins Lab) Our lab uses genomic tools to better understand how ecological and evolutionary processes shape biodiversity patterns in marine systems. Our current research focuses on three main areas: genetic connectivity in marine fishes, genomic signatures speci..
Marine Science Center
An internationally recognized research institution that focuses on the ocean environment, marine life and ecology, and discovering biotechnological and medical potentials in the sea. Projects include building underwater robots and creating genetically engineered seaweed to clean wastewater from a..
Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center
The Massachusetts Green High Performance Computing Center is providing a world-class computational infrastructure, indispensible in the increasingly sensor and data-rich environments of modern science and engineering discovery.
Mathematical Physics
Mathematical Physics falls under the field of mathematical analysis, which is a broad branch of mathematics that encompasses many fields, generally sharing a basis in calculus. Historically, analysis has played a crucial role in solving problems in physics and engineering; recent years have seen su..

News

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Living tissues may form like avalanches, Northeastern researchers say — a discovery that could aid new treatments

An avalanche is caused by a chain reaction of events. A loud noise or a change in terrain can have a cascading and devastating impact.

A similar process may happen when living tissues are subject to being pushed or pulled, according to new research published by Northeastern University doctoral student Anh Nguyen and supervised by Northeastern physics professor Max Bi.

As theoretical physicists, Bi and Nguyen use computational modeling and mathematics to understand the mechanical processes that organisms undergo on a cellular level. With this more recent work, they have observed that when subjected to sufficient stress, tissues can “suddenly and dramatically rearrange themselves,” similar to how avalanches are formed in the wild.

This observation challenges the notion that mechanical responses in tissues are entirely localized, suggesting instead that stress redistribution can lead to coordinated rearrangements across larger regions, explains Bi.

“What Anh has found in these computational simulations is that these [cells] are actually talking mechanically, meaning that if rearrangement happens with four cells, the energy that gets released from these four cells is enough to trigger other cells to undergo rearrangement.”

Read more from Northeastern Global News.

Photo by Alyssa Stone/Northeastern University

April 24, 2025
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Elliot Grainge, a successful entrepreneur, record executive and Northeastern graduate, is the 2025 undergraduate commencement speaker

Elliot Grainge, the CEO of Atlantic Music Group and a Northeastern graduate, will be the speaker at the university’s 2025 undergraduate commencement.

The ceremony will take place at 4 p.m. on Sunday, May 11, at Fenway Park in Boston.

Atlantic played a pivotal role in the careers of such acclaimed artists as Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles and Led Zeppelin, and more recently Ed Sheeran, Bruno Mars and Charli xcx.

After establishing his powerhouse indie label 10K Projects, Grainge was tapped, at just 30 years old, to lead Atlantic Music Group’s next chapter.

“Returning to Northeastern to speak at commencement is really meaningful to me,” Grainge said. “This university and my experience in Boston in general helped shape not only the way I think about business and creativity but helped me build a foundation as an independent thinker and entrepreneur.”

“I’m so excited to share my experience with the Class of 2025 and encourage them to trust their own vision as they move on to the next chapter of their lives.”

Read more from Northeastern Global News.

Photo by Logan Mock

April 24, 2025
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Northeastern scientists help detect axion quasiparticles, offering new clues to dark matter

Northeastern University scientists and international collaborators have successfully created laboratory conditions that allowed them to observe axion quasiparticles for the first time, bringing researchers closer to understanding dark matter.

The research published this week in Nature represents a significant step in bridging the gap between theoretical physics and experimental proof, which can lead to both a better understanding of the universe and applications in future technology of magnetic memory.

The research — an effort that included more than a dozen organizations across five countries — included three Northeastern physicists: Arun Bansil, a university distinguished professor and director of the Quantum Materials and Sensing Institute; Kin Chung Fong, an associate professor of physics and electrical and computer engineering; and Barun Ghosh, a postdoctoral student.

“This study provides another exciting example of the very rich tapestry of quasiparticles that are harbored by quantum matter,” Bansil says. “It is clear that quantum materials will continue to offer us surprises long into the future to open new pathways for addressing pressing fundamental science questions as well as materials platforms for developing transformational new technologies.”

Read more from Northeastern Global News.

Photo by Matt Modoono/Northeastern University

April 17, 2025
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Breakthrough ALS research: Free tool from Northeastern scientists could revolutionize drug development

Interested in finding a better way to develop drugs to treat amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Northeastern researcher Jeffrey Agar and a team of scientists came up with a technique that improves the drug discovery workflow for an entire class of pharmaceuticals.

“This could now become the gold standard for how covalent drugs are developed from now on,” says Agar, an associate professor of chemistry and pharmaceutical sciences.

The goal is to make the technique free and available to labs small and large, part of what Agar refers to as the “democratization of science.”

“We decided not to patent this,” he says. “Just take it, use it and make drugs safer.”

Read more from Northeastern Global News.

Photo by Matthew Modoono/Northeastern University

April 16, 2025

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