Malena Rice, a graduating Ph.D. student and National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow in the Department of Astronomy, has been named a 51 Pegasi b Fellow by the Heising-Simons Foundation.
The prestigious fellowship, which is named for the first...
This month, Insights & Outcomes launches into spring with a penetrating look at the evolution of arm muscles, the regulation of the body’s T cell receptors, attitudes about alcoholism among problem drinkers, and the possible path forward with COVID-19...
Yale’s Office of Undergraduate Admissions has completed its review of first-year applications and offered admission to 2,234 of the 50,015 students who applied for the Class of 2026. The newly admitted applicants will be joined by an additional 46...
Antiretroviral therapy (ART) is highly effective at controlling HIV infections, but the virus never completely goes away. Instead, it hides in roughly one in every 1 million immune cells.
Specifically, HIV hides within specialized cells known as cytotoxic...
Consciousness, the distinctive quality that allows humans to perceive the world, sometimes gets in the way of people trying to comprehend the ecosystems in which they live — a paradox that hinders our ability to live sustainably, argues Michael Dove, the...
Since the end of the civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s, large numbers of Black people have made their way into settings previously occupied exclusively by whites. They have received mixed receptions.
Many neighborhoods, schools, workplaces,...
In 2021, Yale established a center based at Yale Law School to focus on racial injustice, perhaps the most pernicious and deep-rooted problem facing the United States.
The Law and Racial Justice Center, now taking shape, will be a hub for related teaching...