Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Like many graduate students in the humanities, Cameron Strang, a Ph.D. candidate in his fourth year, came to The University of Texas at Austin’s History Department through a slightly circuitous route.
Cameron Strang, Ph.D. student in the Department of History.
After graduating from McGill University, Strang worked as an elementary school teacher and a landscaper before returning to his undergraduate major of history. He started out in the Master’s Program in Museum Studies at the University of New Hampshire, but he soon transferred
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Tags: Cameron Strang, Department of History, Institute for Historical Studies, Science, southeast borderlands
By Tim Green
Published at 12:46 PM |
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Tuesday, February 28, 2012
Even if you look through the telescope on the roof of Robert Lee Moore Hall in the middle of The University of Texas at Austin campus, it’s hard to feel close to the stars and other celestial objects.
Walk over to the Harry Ransom Center and you can get very close – and yes, even personal – to some of the people who made a science of looking at the skies.
For Mary Kay Hemenway, a research associate and senior lecturer in
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Tags: American Institute of Physics, Caroline Herschel, Department of Astronomy, Halley's Comet, Harry Ransom Center, Mary Kay Hemenway, William Herschel
By Tim Green
Published at 2:00 PM |
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Friday, February 10, 2012
Namkee Choi, professor in the School of Social Work at The University of Texas at Austin, is helping older homebound adults deal with depression with the Internet, a laptop and face-to-face communication. Yes, there is an app for that.
Tags: homebound, Internet, Meals on Wheels and More, Namkee Choi, older adults, PST, Skype, Social Work, tele-pst
By Tim Green
Published at 9:17 AM |
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Monday, January 30, 2012
Use of methamphetamines is on the rise nationally after a decrease a few years ago, according to university researchers.
Use of meth dropped significantly in 2007 and 2008 after laws limiting the availability of pseudoephedrine went into effect made it much harder to obtain key ingredients.
Jane Maxwell, a senior research scientist in the School of Social Work at The University of Texas at Austin, is concerned that programs to help people addicted to methamphetamines continues.
However, indicators of meth use – reported
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Tags: addiction, Jane Maxwell, meth, methamphetamine, School of Social Work
By Tim Green
Published at 10:28 AM |
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Thursday, January 19, 2012
Imagine what it would be like to shave 10 hours from your workweek. How would you make the most out of your free time? Would you tackle that home improvement project? Attend to that pile of laundry? Or take a nap in the backyard hammock?
Economics Professor Dan Hamermesh.
According to a new economics study, co-authored by Daniel Hamermesh, professor of economics at The University of Texas at Austin, people are more likely to put those household chores aside and practice
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Tags: Daniel Hamermesh, Japan, Korea, leisure, work hours
By Tim Green
Published at 6:00 PM |
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Saturday, December 24, 2011
It seems that the only time astronomers at The University of Texas at Austin took a break from finding new planets and bigger black holes during the fall 2011 semester was when university geologists edged in with evidence of a lake under the surface of Saturn’s moon, Europa.
As busy as those researchers were, the semester also brought discoveries in green energy, Parkinson’s disease, post-traumatic stress disorder, concealed handguns and the relationship between children’s happiness and their parents.
Here’s a look at
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Tags: Appalachian swallowtail butterfly, astronomy, auto focus, concealed handguns, geology, hybrid speciation, Kepler, mcdonald observatory, Parkinson's diseases, PTSD, research, solar cells, solar energy
By Tim Green
Published at 2:00 PM |
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Monday, December 19, 2011
Namkee Choi credits her grandmother for her career as a social work professor and for her focus on older adults.
Choi, a professor in the School of Social Work at The University of Texas at Austin, grew up in a South Korean village in the years after the Korean War combat ended.
Namkee Choi, professor in the School of Social Work at The University of Texas at Austin.
“We saw a lot of poverty,” she says, “especially in the wintertime. Peasants would run
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Tags: grandmother. Getting Started, Namkee Choi, older adults, Social Work
By Tim Green
Published at 12:00 PM |
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Tuesday, December 13, 2011
State Sen. Kirk Waton, Alexa Stuifbergen, dean of the School of Nursing, and Earl Maxwell, chief executive of the St. David’s Foundation, marked the foundation’s endowment of a health-care research center.
Over the past decade, researchers from across The University of Texas at Austin have received small grants from the Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention Research in Underserved Populations, which is in the School of Nursing.
The researchers used this money – about $600,000 altogether – to undertake small pilot
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Tags: CHPR, health care, health disparities, low income, older adults, School of Nursing, St. David's Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention in Underserved Populations, St. David's Foundation
By Tim Green
Published at 9:00 AM |
1 Comment
Friday, December 9, 2011
Life expectancy in the United States is on the rise – but not for everyone. Although many older Americans are healthier and more prosperous than any previous generation, rates of gains are inconsistent between the genders and across education levels and racial and ethnic groups.
Graduate student researchers at the Population Research Center (PRC) are working toward understanding these health disparities that continue to persist and grow in the United States, and to help extend our most precious resource: human life.
To help
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Tags: demography, health disparities, life expectancy, Population Research Center, sociology
By Tim Green
Published at 9:38 AM |
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Wednesday, November 30, 2011
Adela Ben-Yakar, an engineering professor, and Jon Pierce-Shimomura, a neurobiology professor, have teamed up to develop technology to test drugs for neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer’s.
Scientific collaborations across disciplines can be great when they happen.
Researchers bring different skills, expertise and perspectives that can illuminate hard problems.
But just bringing different disciplines together can be a hard problem in itself, despite work being done by universities to break down the siloes that contain them.
So we wondered how Adela Ben-Yakar, a professor in the
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Tags: aging, alzheimer's disease, c. elegans, Cockrell School of Engineering, College of Natural Sciences, engineering, molecular biology, neuroscience
By Tim Green
Published at 9:00 AM |
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