Research News

Learn more about UC Berkeley's researchers and innovators.

Showing 321 - 336 of 3168 Results
Berkeley Haas provides novel insight into the subscription model and that the market for online subscription services will be $900 billion by 2026.
The director of Berkeley’s Center for the Utilization of Biological Engineering in Space (CUBES) looks skyward to motivate himself for the coming day.
New research on the Cyprinodon diabolis documents the extreme effect that these harsh conditions have had on its genetic diversity.
Sangiovanni-Vicentelli was awarded the "Honoris Causa" for his research in electronic design at the 40th Anniversary of the Tor Vergata.
Ken Goldberg and his lab won the Best Systems Paper at the Science and Systems conference, and Best Paper at the IEEE Conference.
Trees in the West provide ecosystem services for the Pacific fisher, whose population in the southern Sierra Nevada population is endangered.
Institute for Education Sciences has awarded a $3 million grant to a research team to conduct a three-year study of pandemic recovery across 1,000 districts. 
Joe Hellerstein has won the VIS Test of Time Award for a paper he co-wrote in 2012 titled, “Enterprise Data Analysis and Visualization: An Interview Study.”
Using advances in machine learning, two separate teams have developed approaches to shorten in-the-field training for quadruped robots in record time.
National Institute of Health awarded researchers at the School of Public Health a grant to develop a model to prevent women in Zimbabwe from contracting HIV.
The first annual ACM conference spotlighted work where algorithms and data-driven approaches, alongside social sciences and other fields, can help solve equity and access issues affecting historically disadvantaged and underserved communities.
As Jennifer Chatman entered her 40s and gained even more expertise, she noticed something strange: Her student class evaluations started getting worse. 
Only a meter or two below our feet dwells bacteria-like organisms called archaea and fungi mingle with viruses and other non-living bits of DNA or DNA.
Visitors to Yosemite Valley gape in awe at El Capitan and the Half Dome, aware, perhaps vaguely, that rain and glaciers took a long time to sculpt the landscape.
Aaron Streets has been named to Popular Science’s Brilliant 10, honoring trailblazing early-career scientists and engineers.
Dr. Harriet C.P. Lau has been awarded a 2022 Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering from the David & Lucile Packard Foundation.