“It’s nothing less than the most democratic deed the world had ever seen, and the world would never be the same.”
Sterling Professor of Law and Political Science Akhil Amar discusses what makes the U.S. Constitution unique and why we celebrate...
When assessing the moral character of others, people cling to good impressions but readily adjust their opinions about those who have behaved badly, according to new research.
This flexibility in judging transgressors might help explain both how humans...
For human cells to form and move normally during development, a network of protein filaments, known as the actin cytoskeleton, must organize the cell’s shape from within. To help rearrange this network, another protein known as filamin must bind and...
Yale scientists have demonstrated a new method to control the behavior of light on a silicon chip — specifically, its direction — by using sound waves. This discovery appears Sept. 17 in the journal Nature Photonics.
For decades, researchers have tried to...
President Peter Salovey and Provost Ben Polak today announced a $26 million initiative to recruit and retain preeminent faculty. Their letter to faculty about the initiative follows.
Dear Colleagues,
Yale is the research university most committed to...