Health
- Can chronic pain patients think themselves into wellness? An unprecedented brain imaging study aims to find out.
- A new study indicates that imagination has real neurological impacts that could help patients overcome phobias or post-traumatic stress disorder.
- Tissue damage can throw circadian clocks throughout the body off track, influencing body temperature, hormone rhythms and a host of other bodily functions.
- After publishing a special section decrying massive layoffs at The Denver Post and criticizing its owners, former editorial page editor turned CU News Corps Director Chuck Plunkett will be honored for igniting a national dialogue.
- CU 51´«Ã½ researchers in the College of Media, Communication and Information analyze social media crisis informatics to help improve emergency communications before major weather events.
- There's no one in the world quite like you. CU 51´«Ã½ researchers are working to develop novel biomaterials perfectly tailored to each person's needs.
- New biomechanics research uncovers how Nike's Vaporfly 4% shoe helps athletes topple world records and eye the two-hour marathon.
- Researchers are exploring a new form of biostasis that could entirely eliminate the need for cooling, potentially revolutionizing combat medicine, organ donation, vaccines and more.
- A new brain imaging study has revealed the more pain people expect, the stronger their brain responds to pain, which may explain why chronic pain persists long after damaged tissue has healed.
- New research shows that the spread of ideas through academia may depend on where they come from as much as their quality.