- September 19, 2024
Post-Covid complaints about 鈥淶oom fatigue,鈥 work-life imbalance, etc. belie a deeper longing for what was lost in the transition to remote work.
- September 17, 2024
With his 4-VA proposal 鈥淣anoscale Visualization of Electrocatalytic Carbon Dioxide Reduction Activity at Cu Nanocatalysts,鈥 Yun Yu wanted to investigate options in catalytic electrode materials to improve and enhance electrocatalysis, a process essential for harnessing sustainable energy sources for artificial photosynthesis.
- September 16, 2024
亚洲AV professor Lisa Gilman lived in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) from the time she was born until she was 9 years old. She is currently working on her research of migrants and displaced people who have been affected by war and trauma with her project, 鈥淢y Culture, My Survival: Arts Initiatives by Refugees for Refugees.鈥
- September 5, 2024
George Mason's Bioengineering Department chair is working on a novel way to reduce blood clots related to implanted medical devices.
- September 4, 2024
A $16.5 million grant for the Justice Community Opioid Innovation Network (JCOIN), led by Faye S. Taxman, will enable the research network to expand its focus.
- September 4, 2024
New faculty member Thema Monroe-White joins the Schar School and the College of Engineering and Computing.
- September 4, 2024
Thanking someone in advance for something you鈥檙e asking them to do increases their motivation and commitment to the task. This savvy managerial technique also raises some tricky ethical questions.
- September 4, 2024
In a new study, George Mason researcher Michael Bloom has found associations between use of skin care products and exposure to potential developmental toxicants.
- August 22, 2024
Artificial intelligence can perform peer firm selection鈥攁 key task for investors鈥攁t least as accurately as well-established alternative algorithms and human experts, according to research by Costello profs Long Chen and Yi Cao.
- August 21, 2024
A collaboration between the conflict analysis and resolution and geography and geoinformation science is giving scholars access to data that shows the breadth and depth of violence of the Sudanese Civil War: a key component of achieving justice in cases of human rights violations and war crimes.