The most popular class in the history of Yale is now available online, joining 20 other Coursera classes taught by Yale faculty.
The class, Psyc 157, “Psychology and the Good Life,” is taught by psychology professor Laurie Santos. Nearly a quarter of all...
Between 2002 and 2013 in the United States, nonstatin drug use increased by 124%, resulting in a 364% increase in nonstatin-associated expenditures, Yale researchers found. This study was published on Jan. 22, 2018 in the Journal of the American Heart...
Hannah-Rose Murray, a visiting fellow at the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition, will discuss Frederick Douglass and other African-American abolitionists who traveled to Britain in a free presentation at the New...
Young women who report heart attack symptoms are more likely to have them dismissed by their providers as not heart related, a new study led by the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH) finds.
The research, published in Circulation, a journal of the...
Artist and activist Faith Ringgold took audience members on a visual journey through her nearly seven-decade career during her Chubb Fellowship Lecture at Yale on Feb. 15.
Using slides as illustrations, Ringgold described her evolution as an artist — from...
While in the United States heart disease is the leading cause of death, in China it is stroke. People have speculated for years about why the Chinese are predisposed to stroke to a greater extent than heart disease. Some have believed that there is a...
Alison Snyder, science editor at Axios, will speak at Yale on Thursday, Feb. 22, as a Poynter Fellow in Journalism.
Snyder will speak at a Benjamin Franklin College Tea on “Science Myths and the Media” at 4 p.m. at the Franklin Head of College House, 90...