Planning for a disease outbreak? There’s a game for that.
Computer scientists and statisticians are creating powerful new software that can predict, simulate and analyze a major livestock disease outbreak.
Computer scientists and statisticians are creating powerful new software that can predict, simulate and analyze a major livestock disease outbreak.
Bat body type, and the environmental conditions bats use in their hibernation sites, may explain species differences in bat mortality from a common fungal infection.
A Fort Collins-based team at Colorado State University won the virtual poster session for the NASA DEVELOP program.
While Colorado State University has gained widespread publicity for its fermentation science and technology program — especially the beer-brewing angle — one CSU faculty member from a different department is taking a new tack by examining the history of beer in a country known primarily for its wine.
The Smart Village Microgrid laboratory at CSU’s Energy Institute has received a critical equipment donation from Schneider Electric, a company expert in sustainable energy management and industrial automation.
According to a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences by CSU Professor Ruth Hufbauer, beetles can be used as a model species to tackle the problem of how to help a species avoid extinction.
Sporadic outbreaks of plague among black-tailed prairie dogs could lend insight into the spread of infectious zoonotic disease, say CSU biologists.
SoGES is accepting proposals for Global Challenges Research Teams and Resident Fellows.
Sheryl Magzamen is investigating the combined influence of air pollution and pesticides on childhood asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Several Colorado State University entities recently received Pharos Fund grants from Fort Collins-based Bohemian Foundation.