Research
The Challenges of Emergency Care for Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder Patients
UMass Amherst social psychologist concludes ‘broad public and institutional changes’ are needed
Coastal Habitats Can Weather Sea-Level Rise If There is Enough Sediment
New research shows the key may lie in a Massachusetts salt marsh
Our Future Climate Depends Partly on Soil Microbes
In a surprising twist, food, not temperature, is the most important factor driving microbial release of CO2
Reika Katsumata Receives Young Investigator Research Program Award From The Air Force Office of Scientific Research
Assistant professor in the Department of Polymer Science and Engineering has received a three-year, $450,000 award
Microbiologist Searches For Vulnerabilities in Tuberculosis Bacteria
Associate professor of microbiology was awarded a grant from the National Institute of Health
Barbara Osborne Named Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors
Distinguished Professor in the Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences was recently chosen as a 2022 Fellow by the National Academy of Inventors (NAI)
Paris Agreement Temperature Targets Could Worsen Climate Injustice For Island States
Justice-focused policies are needed to minimize impacts of sea-level rise, which will be borne disproportionately by island nations
Om Parkash Dhankher Receives the Highest Recognition from the Crop Science Society of America
Plant/agriculture biotechnologist was recently named as a CSSA Fellow
Investigating Long-Term Memory at the Molecular Level Through a Calcium-Sensitive Protein
Associate professor of biochemistry and molecular biology awarded $1.8 million NIH grant to advance research into the roles of CaMKII
ATLAS Group is Leading the Charge in Exploring Subatomic Particle Physics
UMass’s physicists are at the forefront of one of the world’s greatest experiments
Study Finds Midwestern US Soil is Eroding 10 to 1,000 Times Faster Than It Forms
UMass Amherst researchers are first to precisely calculate the pre-agricultural rate of erosion across the Midwestern U.S., thanks to exploding stars
New Research Shows Marine Species May Be More Tolerant to Warming
To save nature, focus on populations, not species