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Jeff Falk

illustration of magnetogenetic technology for wireless neuron activation

Wireless activation of targeted brain circuits in less than one second

July 14, 2022

Rice neuroengineers and collaborators have created wireless technology to remotely activate brain circuits.

A Rice University lab tests material covered in strain-sensing smart skin. The multilayer coating contains carbon nanotubes that fluoresce when under strain, matching the strain experienced by the material underneath. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)

Strain-sensing smart skin ready to deploy

July 14, 2022

Carbon nanotubes’ natural fluorescence enables a method to detect high strain concentrations, which can lead to damage that threatens the integrity of critical infrastructure like aircraft, buildings, pipelines, bridges and ships.

SARS

SARS-Arena reveals hidden hooks in virus

July 13, 2022

SARS-Arena will help to find conserved parts in proteins from SARS-CoV-2 that could be a key for the development of wide-spectrum vaccines.

An illustration compares flakes of hexagonal boron nitride, top, and turbostratic boron nitride, bottom, the latter synthesized through the flash Joule heating process developed at Rice University.

Flashing creates hard-to-get 2D boron nitride

July 11, 2022

Rice University chemists use their flash Joule heating process to synthesize 2D flakes of boron nitride and boron carbon nitride, highly valued for lending thermal and chemical stability to compounds.

Rice University graduate student Maria Claudia Villegas Kcam filters DNA for an experiment to target “silent” genes in a strain of bacteria that show potential for developing new antibiotics. (Credit: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University)

Hidden genes may be tapped for new antibiotics

July 11, 2022

Rice University bioscientists learn to trigger “silent” gene clusters in bacteria that could be rich sources of new antibiotic candidates.

Racism concept

Interracial contact may not reduce racism, says report

July 7, 2022

Racial apathy and the belief that Black people no longer experience prejudice in today’s world represent the “new racism,” according to Tony Brown, professor of sociology at Rice University and lead author of the study, “Changes in Racial Apathy Among White Young Adults: A Five-Year National Panel Study,” published in the journal Sociological Inquiry.

McNair Hall, home of Rice Business

Ten new professors join Rice Business

July 6, 2022

The Jones Graduate School of Business at Rice University has added ten faculty members with expertise ranging from management to marketing. It’s a record number of new tenured and tenure-track professors for the school.

Natasha Kirienko and Svetlana Panina in Kirienko’s Rice University laboratory in 2019

​​​​​​​Researchers discover new leukemia-killing compounds

June 30, 2022

Researchers from Rice and MD Anderson Cancer Center have discovered potential new drugs for treating leukemia.

Migration

Expert available to discuss trauma and grief among immigrants following tragedy in San Antonio

June 29, 2022

An expert from Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy is available to discuss this week’s horrific migrant deaths in San Antonio.

Photo of Kraft Hall.

New senior staff, structure announced for Rice’s Kinder Institute for Urban Research

June 29, 2022

As incoming director Ruth López Turley takes the helm of Rice University’s Kinder Institute for Urban Research July 1, the institute is announcing a new executive leadership team that will help implement a five-year expansion plan.

Rice University computer scientists introduced Emu, an algorithm that uses long reads of genomes to identify the species of bacteria in a community. The program could simplify sorting harmful from helpful bacteria in microbiomes like those in the gut or in agriculture and the environment. (Credit: Kristen Curry/Rice University)

Emu stands tall at detecting bacteria species

June 29, 2022

Rice computer scientists develop Emu, which uses long reads of genomes to identify bacteria in a community.

Rendering of family walking in flood.

Flooding exacerbates pollution exposure in at-risk urban communities

June 28, 2022

Increased flooding in the U.S. is exposing more people to industrial pollution, especially in racially marginalized urban communities, according to new research from Rice University, New York University and Brown University.

new engineering and science building

Landmark new engineering and science building on campus to bear Ralph S. O’Connor’s name

June 28, 2022

A self-made businessman who started out working in oilfields and ended up building an empire in energy and real estate investments will be memorialized at Rice University with a landmark new science and engineering building named in his honor.

Rice University firmware engineer Patrick Kelling works on circuitry bound for the Large Hadron Collider. (Credit: Rice University)

Rice physicists available to discuss Higgs boson 10th anniversary

June 28, 2022

Rice University physicists are available to discuss the July 4 anniversary of the Higgs boson discovery and the recent restart of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) for a third round of experiments.

Blockchain concept

Blockchain tech can help small businesses launch and grow, says Baker Institute expert

June 28, 2022

Blockchain technology can give small businesses and entrepreneurs new avenues for funding their ventures and create opportunities for growth, according to a report from Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy.

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