Research News

Maze with one pathway highlighted.
  • Families confront roles in rural jail incarceration
    5/12/25

    While families have no official place in the system, it's time to start thinking about them as potential partners, UB scholar Allison Dwyer Emory says.

  • New technique could protect stem cells
    6/10/24

    Using shear-thinning hydrogels instead of saline solution to inject stem cells into the brain could lead to new therapies for MS and other neurological diseases.

  • Webinar highlights crucial health-housing link
    6/6/24

    A UB faculty member and PhD student addressed challenges from the perspective of the Pan American Health Organization.

  • SPHHP dean contributes to JAMA paper on WHI
    6/5/24

    Jean Wactawski-Wende says the paper aimed to provide further detail, clarity and longer-term assessment of risks and benefits of hormone replacement therapy.

  • UB cystic fibrosis research has been transforming patients’ lives
    6/4/24

    For decades, UB researchers have been committed to studying and keeping up with the dramatic advances in treating CF.

  • Meds for Type 2 diabetes, obesity may lower risk of acute pancreatitis
    6/4/24

    UB research contradicts concerns drugs like Ozempic could put patients who’ve had pancreatitis at risk for getting it again.

  • How AI can help companies leverage data
    6/3/24

    Dario Gil, IBM's director of research, delivered the keynote at Friday's UB | AI Chat Series.

  • RNA editing sites likely play larger role in genetic disease
    5/30/24

    The UB research reveals how environmental challenges can affect human gene expression through RNA editing.

  • UB faculty part of AI security initiative
    5/30/24

    The faculty will serve as key members of a project to secure the Department of Defense’s most critical AI models while also speeding the tech’s commercialization in the private sector.

  • IBM research leader to deliver keynote at AI chat series
    5/29/24

    Darío Gil, senior vice president at IBM, will discuss exploring the future of AI for maximum industry impact.

  • Semiconductor advance could lead to improved electronic devices
    5/24/24

    A new study suggests the innovation could lower costs and increase flexibility.