Janice Moore recognized for pioneering parasitology, animal behavior work
Janice Moore, professor of biology in the College of Natural Sciences, has received the Animal Behavior Society’s 2016 Exemplar Award.
Janice Moore, professor of biology in the College of Natural Sciences, has received the Animal Behavior Society’s 2016 Exemplar Award.
This year’s poster session to be held in conjunction with CSU Collegiate Challenge business pitch competition April 27.
Little Shop of Physics, CSU’s traveling, hands-on science education program, is hosting its 25th annual Open House, Saturday, Feb. 27 at the Lory Student Center.
A computer science team’s cloud-based platform for comprehensively monitoring critical infrastructure will be featured at a Department of Homeland Security-sponsored public showcase in Washington, D.C.
The uniquely CSU team recently took their passion for no-holds-barred science exploration to teachers and students in southwestern Africa.
Chemistry faculty members Amy Prieto and Jamie Neilson have been jointly awarded $1 million from the Keck Foundation to develop a novel method for discovering new, functional materials.
The annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, taking place Feb. 11-15 in Washington, D.C., will include CSU researchers sharing the latest from their laboratories, and exciting up-and-coming trends in their fields.
Jeffrey Collett, professor and chair of the Department of Atmospheric Science, has been appointed to a national U.S. Department of Agriculture Air Quality Task Force for 2016-18.
Computer scientists and statisticians are creating powerful new software that can predict, simulate and analyze a major livestock disease outbreak.
Greg Florant doesn’t mind being the groundhog guy – in fact, he rather likes it. “My big day is coming up,” he jokes – that is, Feb. 2nd, when Punxsatawney Phil will be forcibly pulled from his hidey-hole to predict an early spring or prolonged winter.