A walk through the Human-Animal Translational Science Research Symposium
Translational scientists across campus gathered on Oct. 12 to share their findings and learn from one another.
Translational scientists across campus gathered on Oct. 12 to share their findings and learn from one another.
A Colorado State University/Wildlife Conservation Society study revealed that mountain goats with their saber-like horns emerged victorious over bighorn sheep in more than 98 percent of contests at three sites along a 900-mile gradient of above-treeline mountainous habitat from Colorado to Alberta, Canada.
Paul Evangelista, a senior research scientist at CSU’s Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory (NREL), is leading the international initiative to find the sources of the hundreds of cheetah cubs estimated to be taken from their mothers each year.
Snowpack is a victim of increasing western wildfires, causing some regions to have less peak snow accumulation and reducing the number of days snow is on the ground, according to new Colorado State University research.
Researchers at Colorado State University’s Geospatial Centroid and the Department of Anthropology and Geography will spend the next year mapping the environmental injustices that occur at hundreds of prisons across the United States.
Speakers shared insights, tools and personal stories in an effort to bring greater awareness to people struggling with their mental health.
Researchers Jaclyn Stephens and Arlene Schmid plan to use brain imaging technologies to advance the scientific understanding of yoga therapy for adults with chronic brain injury.
As technology shifts to automate more on-the-job processes, occupational health researchers, such as Gwen Fisher from the Department of Psychology, are studying ways to design workplaces to foster new learning, autonomy, and problem-solving in support of worker health and well-being.
Hear from CSU Veterinary Extension Specialist Ragan Adams and College of Agricultural Sciences Associate Professor Jennifer Martin on the threat of African Swine Fever and CSU’s role in combating it.
The new CIOSU will work to advance University efforts toward strengthening the economic, environmental, cultural and social foundations of the state’s local and regional food systems.