In the News

  1. May 9, 2024
    • Salim Hayek

    “In the early days of bone marrow transplantation … cardiotoxicity leading to heart failure was a major concern. This concern has persisted in contemporary BMT,” said Salim Hayek, associate professor of internal medicine, whose research team created a novel tool that predicts a person’s risk for cardiovascular complications after bone marrow transplantation.

    Healio
  2. May 9, 2024
    • Claire Pettersen

    “We hope that our data will ultimately improve winter storm forecasts and tell western cities when to expect a drought because of insufficient snowpack,” said Claire Pettersen, assistant professor of climate and space sciences and engineering, who is leading a multi-university field campaign on the impact of climate change on snowpack and water availability in the western United States.

    DBusiness
  3. May 9, 2024
    • Brian Connolly

    “It’s not really all that clear what’s going to happen with broker commissions. … At least initially, we’re likely to see the percentage commission system continue,” said Brian Connolly, assistant professor of business law, about a new real estate rule that no longer requires sellers’ agents to offer commissions to buyers’ agents.

    CNN
  4. May 8, 2024
    • Scott Shireman

    “This is a gateway for someone right now who has some or no college education. They’re ambitious and smart, but they’re working in a gig or a retail job. And we’ll create a gateway for that person to an entry-level job in potential career paths,” said Scott Shireman, director of the U-M Innovation Center, who would like to see 30,000 Detroiters enrolled in job certification programs each year at the new center.

    Bridge Michigan
  5. May 8, 2024
    • Parth Vaishnav

    “The firms would see fuel cost reductions … an increase in productivity and there would be safety and environmental benefits. It would be the government asking truck operators to share some of the gains they would make from automation,” said Parth Vaishnav, professor of environment and sustainability, on the benefits of self-driving semitrucks.

    E&E News
  6. May 8, 2024
    • Carol Flannagan

    “The faster you’re going, the farther down the road you have to be able to see the thing that (the system) is assessing. It’s a harder job for the sensor,” said Carol Flannagan, research professor at the U-M Transportation Research Institute, on a federal rule that requires automatic emergency braking systems in vehicles — with enhanced speed and nighttime requirements — by 2029.

    Automotive News
  7. May 7, 2024
    • Kristina Fullerton Rico

    Transnational grief — experiencing the loss of someone you love while in another country — is “one of the most difficult parts of being undocumented in the United States,” said Kristina Fullerton Rico, predoctoral fellow at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy’s Center for Racial Justice. “If we pass laws that prioritize a fast path to citizenship, we could avoid having people go through these experiences.”

    Yes! Magazine
  8. May 7, 2024
    • Lan Deng

    Lan Deng, professor of urban and regional planning, says that large developers in China overbuilt in places that didn’t need that much supply, a key factor triggering the ongoing property market crisis: “The concentration of the real estate industry not only exacerbates challenges for the national economy, but also brings negative impacts to local economies.”

    Newsweek
  9. May 7, 2024
    • Vicki Ellingrod

    “Some of these medications might cause more heat sensitivity because you’re not sweating. Your body is not making the secretions that it should be making,” said Vicki Ellingrod, dean of the College of Pharmacy, about certain drugs that block cells’ receptors from binding to a neurotransmitter that helps the body adjust to heat. 

    Scientific American
  10. May 6, 2024
    • Todd Allen

    “How well it goes could be really important in determining the future of nuclear power plants. It sets a new precedent for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to figure out how to work their way through,” said Todd Allen, professor of nuclear engineering and radiological sciences, about the recommissioning process for Michigan’s Palisades nuclear power plant.

    Great Lakes Now