Stories indexed under: Science

Total: 1318   RSSRSS feed

  • UW studies challenge national asthma guidelines Aug. 2, 2006 Antibiotics should not be used routinely when asthma patients have attacks, according to national asthma-treatment guidelines. But two new studies—one in adults and one in children—at University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health will test these current recommendations by analyzing whether using antibiotics for patients with uncontrolled asthma symptoms improves their condition.
  • Undergraduates delve into big science across campus Aug. 1, 2006 The University of Wisconsin-Madison has become a summertime magnet for undergraduate students looking to gain hands-on research experience.
  • New MRI technique quickly builds 3-D images of knees July 25, 2006 A faster magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data-acquisition technique, developed at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, will cut the time many patients spend in a cramped magnetic resonance scanner, yet deliver more precise 3-D images of their bodies.
  • National roster of science illustrators to meet at UW-Madison July 25, 2006 The Guild of Natural Science Illustrators Conference, hosted in 2006 by the University of Wisconsin-Madison, will be held Sunday, July 30-Saturday, Aug. 5.
  • Research dishes out flexible computer chips July 18, 2006 New thin-film semiconductor techniques invented by University of Wisconsin-Madison engineers promise to add sensing, computing and imaging capability to an amazing array of materials.
  • Soil scientists in the spotlight at World Congress of Soil Science July 10, 2006 Soil scientists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison will have international attention this week at the 18th World Congress of Soil Science on July 9-15 in Philadelphia.
  • Study of urban roadside dirt reveals potentially toxic mix of metals June 29, 2006 Scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison learned that there's more to that cloud of roadway dirt than meets the eye: What looks like ordinary dirt actually is a potentially toxic mixture of non-tailpipe vehicle emissions, including microscopic metal particles from brake and tire wear.
  • New process makes diesel fuel, industrial chemicals from simple sugar June 29, 2006 A University of Wisconsin-Madison chemical and biological engineering professor reports in the June 30 issue of the journal Science on a better way to make a chemical intermediate called HMF from fructose: fruit sugar. Chemical intermediates are compounds that are the raw material for many modern plastics, drugs and fuels.
  • Underwater treadmill benefits patients at Vet School June 27, 2006 Reupert, a beagle who could not walk immediately following surgery for a herniated spinal disk, was the first patient to benefit from the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Veterinary Medicine's new underwater treadmill therapy.
  • Study reveals how attention deficit drugs work June 26, 2006 Although millions depend on medications such as Ritalin to quell symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), scientists have struggled to pinpoint how the drugs work in the brain.
  • Researchers study why waste in bioreactor landfills degrades in haste June 23, 2006 Part of Craig Benson's laboratory looks - and smells - like a landfill. It's not that the University of Wisconsin-Madison professor of civil and environmental engineering is excessively messy. Rather, he's studying bioreactor landfills, a relatively recent technology in solid-waste management that may help landfill owners make better use of their land-and of the waste itself.
  • UW researchers reveal insights on silicon semiconductors June 23, 2006 "Smaller. Faster. Wildly complex." This could easily be the motto for semiconductors-the materials that, among lots of other advances in electronics, allow cell phones to continuously shrink in size while increasing the number of their mind-boggling functions.
  • Digging in Denmark, archaeologist uncovers rare prize June 21, 2006 University of Wisconsin-Madison archaeologist T. Douglas Price has received the unique distinction of being the first non-Dane to be awarded the Westerby Prize, Denmark's pre-eminent award for archaeology.
  • UW-Madison graduate tapped for top USGS post June 21, 2006 University of Wisconsin-Madison alumnus Mark D. Myers recently was nominated to be director of the U.S. Geological Survey by President George W. Bush.
  • E. coli work identifies new keys to regulation of bacterial gene expression June 16, 2006 The cellular process of transcription, in which the enzyme RNA polymerase constructs chains of RNA from information contained in DNA, depends upon previously underappreciated sections of both the DNA promoter region and RNA polymerase, according to work done with the bacterium E. coli and published today (June 16) in the journal Cell by a team of bacteriologists from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
  • Kids explore art and science in summer programs June 15, 2006 The Office of Education Outreach in the University of Wisconsin-Madison's School of Education is offering numerous opportunities for local students to learn about art, technology and science this summer.
  • Diet, aging study gains $7.9 million grant June 13, 2006 A pioneering long-term study of the links between diet and aging in monkeys will continue through 2011 with the help of a new $7.9 million grant from the National Institutes of Health.
  • Hybrid-vehicle team places second nationally June 8, 2006 Tired of high gas costs and poor sport utility vehicle (SUV) fuel efficiency? A group of engineering students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison has spent the last three years building one of the cleanest and most fuel-efficient SUVs in North America. The principles behind the vehicle, appropriately named the "Moovada," could one day be incorporated into mass-production hybrid SUVs.
  • The Why Files celebrates decade of science exploration June 6, 2006 The Why Files is celebrating its first decade online.
  • Chemists forge a new form of iron June 1, 2006 An international team of chemists has discovered a new and unexpected form of iron, a finding that adds to the fundamental understanding of an element that is among the most abundant on Earth and that, in nature, is an essential catalyst for life.