U.S. News & World Report Nov. 7, 2019 Scientists ID clue in effort to contain herpes virus UArizona researchers have discovered a function in a pro-inflammatory protein that could play a part in improving therapeutics for the herpes virus.
KJZZ Nov. 7, 2019 University of Arizona awarded nearly $2.5 million for disability education program University of Arizona students will train for high-demand jobs working with students with hearing and visual impairments.
Forbes Nov. 6, 2019 Is social media the best place to get fitness and health advice? UArizona researchers found that the more exercise-related posts a person sees on social media, the more concerned they feel about their own weight.
Newsweek Nov. 5, 2019 Failing this many times could help us learn new things more efficiently UArizona researcher Robert Wilson is the lead author of a study titled "The Eighty Five Percent Rule for Optimal Learning."
Hallmark Channel Nov. 5, 2019 David Sbarra on keeping relationships David Sbarra, a professor in the University of Arizona Department of Psychology, discusses the benefits of keeping healthy relationships.
KJZZ Nov. 5, 2019 Invasive buffelgrass threatens Arizona's saguaros UArizona researchers are seeking solutions to the buffelgrass threat and creating a predictive model that incorporates policy and law.
The Conversation Nov. 5, 2019 NASA's TESS spacecraft is finding hundreds of exoplanets – and is poised to find thousands more Daniel Apai writes that the search is on for possibly habitable planets close to our solar system with NASA's new space telescope TESS.
KJZZ Nov. 4, 2019 Kitt Peak instrument to study dark energy begins final tests University of Arizona scientists played key roles in an unprecedented effort to map millions of galaxies to better understand the nature of dark energy.
KVOA Nov. 4, 2019 No Doubt 'floored' with tribute from UArizona marching band No Doubt guitarist Tom Dumont and bassist Tony Kanal took to Twitter to praise the UArizona band's set.
The New York Times Nov. 2, 2019 The government protects our food and cars. Why not our data? Jane Bambauer, a professor at the James E. Rogers College of Law, discusses whether there is a need for a stand-alone data regulator.