Research News

Learn more about UC Berkeley's researchers and innovators.

Showing 177 - 192 of 3165 Results
Starting a writing group to guide policy and public opinion in support of Ukraine, launching a platform for humanitarian aid, and a site that acts as a living memorial and repository of testimony about the war.
The poll is an important milestone for the BCSP’s public education program and for establishing longitudinal analysis of public opinion about psychedelics over time.
A new paper describes the school's journey over a two-year period to establish an Antiracist Pedagogy Faculty Leadership Academy, a series of antiracism trainings for staff and non-faculty academics, and an elective course on antiracism for students.
Sleep scientists at UC Berkeley have discovered a potential mechanism in humans that might explain the link between certain types of brain waves and the body’s sensitivity to insulin.
Berkeley researchers have designed a portable sun-powered device that can extract and convert water molecules from the air into drinkable water.
They warned the decision will reduce opportunities for people of color and thwart the nation’s progress toward racial equality.
Berkeley’s Institute for Data Science, Graduate School of Journalism, and partners will collect, curate and make accessible records that a 2019 state law unlocked for the public.
At least one group has found evidence that the rhythms of these pulsars are affected by the stretching and squeezing of spacetime by these long-wavelength gravitational waves.
Professor Juana Maria Rodríguez's new book relates intimate stories of Latinx sex workers from around the world and demonstrates the ways they have always “formed part of queer worlds.
A stiff jaw in mammals is thought to be a side effect of establishing a uniquely mammalian hearing system.
Dubbed “the Woodstock of Hackathons,” the event was hosted by Berkeley’s premiere startup accelerator, Berkeley SkyDeck, and Cal Hacks, a nonprofit that runs collegiate hackathons.
To Celeste Kidd the answer is simple: It’s dangerous and perhaps the most concerning aspect of generative AI’s rapid expansion. 
New study demonstrates that hummingbirds happily sip from sugar water with up to 1% alcohol by volume, finding it just as attractive as plain sugar water.
A new study is the first to document how removing commission fees on trading platforms improves returns for the average trader.
A new report finds that rising groundwater levels in the San Francisco Bay Area could impact more than 5,200 state- and federally-managed contaminated sites at risk.
Karthik Shekhar has been awarded this scholarship for research on the evolution of neural diversity and patterning in the visual system.