Research News

Learn more about UC Berkeley's researchers and innovators.

Showing 193 - 208 of 3167 Results
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. 
Dan Schnur says last week's criminal indictment for mishandling top secret information and obstructing the federal investigation has given Trump a political boost.
A new study shows that, even lacking good error correction, there are ways to mitigate errors that could make quantum computers useful today.
Chemists are working to retool the cell’s polypeptide manufacturing plants to generate polymer chains more elaborate than what can now be made in a cell or a test tube.
One in which there is a plausible scenario that Trump shared classified information with other governments, including Russia’s.
California magazine talks with faculty, author, and research center director Dacher Keltner about his research on awe.
Findings reveal details that are lost as the wind exits the corona as a uniform blast of charged particles.
In the recently published paper, I School Associate Professor David Bamman reveals much about what is known and remains to be known about the large language model (LLM) fueling ChatGPT. 
The center will be a research and advocacy hub to boost Berkeley Law’s public mission in the criminal justice arena.
Biophysicist honored for pioneering electron microscopy research that elucidated the earliest steps of gene transcription.
Bioengineering Professor Aaron Streets says it is important for those who conduct that research “to represent the full diversity of human genetic variation.
An ultrafast x-ray imaging technique shows how the symmetry of methane’s structure evolves after rapid removal of an electron, providing insights into its physical and chemical properties.
Study shows that established relationships between a loan officer and a borrowing manager not only increase the likelihood of a loan, but tend to make the conditions of that loan better for the borrower.
Paleontologists are increasingly finding evidence that dinosaurs had elaborate head ornaments not preserved with the fossil skulls that were likely used as visual signals or semaphores to others of their kind.
New research shows that simple bipartisan commitments to the old-fashioned ideals of American democracy may offer a way to ease toxic polarization and increase positive feelings among voters on all sides.