Research
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November 19, 2013
Center to study how technology may help youths with disabilities
A $4.5 million federal grant will allow U-M researchers to study how technology β including apps and a video game β may help young adults with disabilities improve health and become more independent.
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November 15, 2013
Some see work as a calling, others say itβs just a job
Why does one person see work primarily as a means to a paycheck, while another sitting in the next cubicle expects work to provide genuine fulfillment?
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November 15, 2013
Bad boys: Research predicts whether boys will grow out of it
Using the high-tech tools of a new field called neurogenetics and a few simple questions for parents, a University of Michigan researcher is beginning to understand which boys are simply being boys and which may be headed for trouble.
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November 15, 2013
What preschoolers know about healthy eating
When you hand a preschooler a donut, does she know it’s junk food? The answer is yes, says University of Michigan researcher Kristen Harrison.
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November 15, 2013
Mutual benefits: Stressed-out trees boost sugary rewards to ant defenders
In a paper that appears in the journal PLOS Biology, University of Michigan ecologist Elizabeth Pringle and her colleagues identify a clear-cut case of a stress-strengthened ant-tree mutualism and suggest a possible mechanism underlying it, one based on interspecies carbon exchange.
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November 11, 2013
Higher ed briefs
News from other Michigan public universities and U-M peer institutions across the nation.
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November 8, 2013
Innovation on display at MCubed demo day Nov. 15
More than 200 pilot projects born of bold ideas and unlikely collaborations will be on display next Friday at a symposium to mark the first funding anniversary of the MCubed research funding initiative.
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November 5, 2013
U-M professor co-authors landmark dictionary about Buddhism
Donald Lopez, the Arthur E. Link Distinguished University Professor of Buddhist and Tibetan Studies, has spent the past 12 years compiling the most authoritative and wide-ranging reference on Buddhism ever produced in English.
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November 1, 2013
Richer countries have safer roads
Wealthier nations, whose residents own a majority of the world’s vehicles, have the lowest roadway fatality rates, say University of Michigan researchers.
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November 1, 2013
Global warming led to dwarfism in mammals β twice
Mammal body size decreased significantly during at least two ancient global warming events, a new finding that suggests a similar outcome is possible in response to human-caused climate change, according to a University of Michigan paleontologist and his colleagues.