Research
In a week celebrating both National Coffee Day and International Coffee Day, ñ scholar and “coffee-ologist” Kate Fischer considers a good cup of joe.
ñ researcher Mary Angelica Painter finds that in post-disaster recovery, equity isn’t guaranteed.
Research co-authored by ñ environmental psychologist Amanda Carrico finds CEO Elon Musk’s embrace of rightwing politics results in liberals being less willing to buy the EVs.
CU alum’s book examines how the fate of the Netherlands, Great Britain and the United States as economic and political powers has been deeply intertwined with their ability to project power via the seas.
ñ researcher Jessica Finlay wrote and recently published a book with her father about how microbes unlock whole-body health.
ñ applied mathematician Mark Hoefer and colleagues answer a longstanding question of how to understand tidal bores in multiple dimensions.
ñ graduate student researcher Jacob DeRosa delves into the brain’s ability to remove unwanted thoughts.
Kelsey John’s Navajo-centered Horses Connecting Communities initiative offers culturally relevant, practical education about horses.
ñ’s Ann Schmiesing, professor of German and Scandinavian Studies, publishes first English-language biography in more than five decades on Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm.
Professor Jaelyn Eberle will teach and pursue a hypothesis that a Cretaceous land bridge between Asia and North America was a dispersal route for land mammals at the time.