Monday, January 19, 2026
Home Featured Page 215

Featured

Featured News provide with the most recently educational information’s, including the university news, events, business, ranking, programs and  admissions, etc…

UM’s bacterial toxin research helps understand pathogenicity of gastroenteritis caused by bacterial contamination of...

A research team led by William Chao Chong Hang, associate professor in the Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS), University of Macau (UM), has identified a new type of V.

Vale: Griffith farewells Alan Mackay-Sim, a titan of science

Griffith University is paying tribute to one of its finest in Professor Emeritus Alan Mackay-Sim AM known to many as a pioneering stem-cell research scientist and former recipient of the Australian of the Year award.

Analysis: How the philosophy of the past can help us imagine the economy of...

The economy keeps making headlines for all the wrong reasons — stories about rising prices, supply shortages and a looming recession have been frequently making the front page these days.

Expert on American patriotism and welfare researcher awarded honorary doctorates

Professor of Social Work Mimi Abramovitz and Professor of Political Psychology Leonie Huddy have been awarded honorary doctorates by the Faculty of Social Sciences at Lund University.

How to protect yourself against bushfire smoke this summer

It’s bushfire season. So you might be wondering about the best way to protect yourself from the health impacts of smoke.

Young people want trustworthy mental health apps

Young people may not be receiving the mental health support they need because of a lack of trust in the smartphone apps that deliver such services, a study suggests.

Student videos guide cancer patients through treatment

For many, visiting a hospital brings feelings of uncertainty and stress. With the help of Swinburne students’ motion graphic videos, patients at Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre (Peter Mac) can receive treatment with less worry.

Advanced treatments of the future are soon here

Stem cells programmed to produce insulin in people with type 1 diabetes or to repair the heart muscle after a heart attack.

Increase in diabetes numbers hides a ray of hope

The rate of diabetes is increasing globally. We’re told it’s a tsunami. An epidemic. But that’s only half the story. The real picture has some rays of hope among the dark clouds.

UC Irvine-led study links metabolism changes in certain brain cells to Huntington’s disease

A research team led by the University of California, Irvine has linked the mutation that causes Huntington’s disease to developmental deficits in the brain’s oligodendrocyte cells that are caused by changes in metabolism.
- Advertisement -