×ÔοÊÓÆµ

Research & Science

Randy Roberts, a student working toward his associate’s degree in enology at ×ÔοÊÓÆµ at Ashtabula, uses his previous degree in biology to help supplement his education.

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Student’s Biology Degree and Experience With Infectious Diseases Helps Him Succeed in Wine Program

Randy Roberts, a student working toward his associate’s degree in enology at ×ÔοÊÓÆµ at Ashtabula, uses his previous degree in biology to help supplement his education.

Tags: e2-071017 , e2 , Research & Science

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Student’s Biology Degree and Experience With Infectious Diseases Helps Him Succeed in Wine Program

×ÔοÊÓÆµ and MRRI will conduct studies to advance treatments for aphasia.

×ÔοÊÓÆµ and Moss Rehabilitation Research Institute to Conduct NIH Research Study on Rehabilitation for Aphasia

When someone suffers a stroke, traumatic brain injury, or brain tumor, one of the common symptoms is aphasia, a disorder that arises from damage to portions of the brain, usually the left side, that are responsible for language. It impairs the expression and understanding of language as well as read…

Tags: College of the Arts and Sciences , Division of Research and Sponsored Programs , Department of Psychology , brain health , Research & Science , Featured Story

Kent Campus

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Business Professor Craig Zamary challenges entrepreneurial students to consider impact of artificial intelligence on a global economy.

Artificial Intelligence

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Business Professor Craig Zamary challenges entrepreneurial students to consider impact of artificial intelligence on a global economy.

Tags: Ambassador Crawford College of Business and Entrepreneurship , Featured Story , Department of Marketing and Entrepreneurship , Research & Science

Kent Campus

Chance York

Professor Researches Link Between Genetics, Social Media Use

A person’s genetic makeup influences how frequently he or she uses social media, according to research by Chance York, Ph.D., assistant professor in ×ÔοÊÓÆµâ€™s School of Journalism and Mass Communication. York conducted the research by comparing survey responses between sets of fraternal and id…

Tags: Research & Science

School of Media and Journalism

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Professor uses cardboard boxes, cellphones and bubble wrap to cut the cost of expensive lab equipment.

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Professor Uses Cellphones to Make Science Affordable

If you ask Christopher Fenk, science is something that should be accessible to everyone. Through his research on using cellphones as lab equipment, Fenk is striving to provide classrooms with affordable alternatives to equipment that can cost between $1,200 to $2,000 per piece. Fenk, a chemistry pr…

Tags: Tuscarawas Campus , Featured Story , Research & Science

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PBS to highlight ×ÔοÊÓÆµ Stark professor's research on how butterflies could help serve as a model to deliver medicine to humans.

How Butterflies Could Help Deliver Meds to Humans

PBS to highlight ×ÔοÊÓÆµ Stark professor's research on how butterflies could be used as a model for delivering disease-fighting drugs to the human body.

Tags: Featured Story , Research & Science , Division of Research and Sponsored Programs , ×ÔοÊÓÆµ Stark

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×ÔοÊÓÆµ receives grant to help move inventions to the commercial market.

From Research Lab to Commercial Market: State Awards Grant to Boost Economy

×ÔοÊÓÆµ is among the institutions and businesses in Ohio to share $10 million in grants from the state’s Third Frontier Commission. ×ÔοÊÓÆµ will share $400,000 with Cleveland State University to help commercialize the inventions that they create through research. The grants ar…

Tags: Division of Research and Sponsored Programs , Research , Research & Science

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Metin I. Eren, director of archaeology and an assistant professor of anthropology in ×ÔοÊÓÆµâ€™s College of Arts and Sciences, prepares to fire a replica arrowhead at a special lab at the university's Kent Campus.

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Archaeologist Uses National Science Foundation Grant to Recreate, Test Ancient Weapons

×ÔοÊÓÆµ professor uses a $215,000 National Science Foundation grant to analyze weapons technology dating back 11,000 to 12,000 years.

Tags: Research & Science , Featured Story

Kent Campus

Gemma Casadesus Smith, an associate professor in ×ÔοÊÓÆµâ€™s Department of Biological Sciences, has been awarded a five-year, $1.8 million grant from the National Institute on Aging at the National Institutes of Health.

×ÔοÊÓÆµ Biologist Awarded $1.8 Million to Advance Research of Alzheimer’s in Women

×ÔοÊÓÆµ's Gemma Casadesus Smith is studying why women are more likely to develop Alzheimer's. 

Tags: Research & Science , Research , Featured Story

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