Peter Narins elected president, International Society for Neuroethology

Professor Peter Narins has been elected president of the International Society for Neuroethology, a post he will hold until 2016.

UCLA research could help improve bladder function among people with spinal cord injuries

New UCLA research addresses a critical health problem for those who are paralyzed

Discovery of heart’s repair process suggests new treatment strategy for heart attack

Findings, from the lab of Dr. Arjun Deb, suggest the possibility of coaxing scar-forming cells in the heart to change their identity into blood vessel-forming cells, which could potentially be used to improve healing after a heart attack.

UCLA Life Scientists receive the elite NIH Director’s New Innovator Award

UCLA Life Scientists Elissa Hallem and Lili Yang are among four scientists from the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research that have received the prestigious NIH Director’s New Innovator Award.

Soon to become a minority in the U.S., whites express declining support for diversity, UCLA psychology study finds

UCLA psychologists find that white Americans may view diversity and multiculturalism more negatively as the U.S. moves toward becoming a minority-majority nation.

Man-made evolution is happening, and it’s time to control it

UCLA evolutionary biologist Thomas Smith and colleagues from seven other universities explain that pests and diseases are evolving too quickly, while people and endangered species are evolving too slowly.

UCLA biologists delay the aging process by ‘remote control’

UCLA biologists– David Walker, Matthew Ulgherait, and colleagues– have identified a gene that can slow the aging process throughout the entire body when activated remotely in key organ systems.

Why Access to Screens Is Lowering Kids’ Social Skills

Yalda Uhls, researcher at UCLA's Children’s Digital Media Center, Patricia Greenfield, professor of Psychology, and colleagues, have found that kids read emotions better after being deprived of electronic media.

New vaccine shows promise as stronger weapon against both tuberculosis, leprosy

The UCLA lab of Marcus A. Horwitz, has created an improved vaccine against tuberculosis that also offers cross-protection against bacterium that causes leprosy.