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UC San Diego’s Graduate Programs and Schools Shine in U.S. News and World Report Rankings

March 30, 2021

Released today, the 2022 U.S. News Best Graduate Schools rankings gave high marks to UC San Diegos’s graduate education in political science and the Jacobs School of Engineering, among other professional schools and programs on campus.

J. Freeman Gilbert: Leading Scripps Oceanography Geophysicist

August 21, 2014

James Freeman Gilbert, a renowned professor emeritus of geophysics in the Cecil H. and Ida M. Green Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics (IGPP) at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, died in Portland, Oregon, on Aug. 15, 2014, from injuries related to an auto accident. He was 83…

Gift to Support Research into Links between Hearing Loss, Isolation and Dementia

December 3, 2020

…by wireless technology pioneers—will continue a mission at Qualcomm Institute to use technology to help improve live From developing the first portable cell phone technology to establishing the first cell phone service to meet the needs of seniors, wireless technology pioneers Arlene Harris and Martin Cooper have always innovated technology…

Building Binational Bridges through STEM

October 10, 2019

…to generate powerful explosions, monitoring what happened to different materials through an ultra-high-speed camera. This research will be used to design materials better able to withstand these types of shocks from earthquakes or explosions. Conducting research was a new experience for both Garcia Trillo, who is interested in being an…

NOAA Selects UC San Diego for Cooperative Institute to Study Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Systems

June 1, 2020

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration today announced it selected the University of California San Diego to host the new Cooperative Institute for Marine, Earth, and Atmospheric Systems (CIMEAS). The selection comes with an award of up to $220 million over five years.

New Technology from UC San Diego Cracks Fundamental Challenge in Neuroscience

October 10, 2022

A new study by researchers at the University of California San Diego demonstrates a new neurotechnology geared toward answering a long-running question in neuroscience: How can scientists link the separate activity of many single neurons in the brain to the waves and oscillations of the local broade

Capturing Public Support for an Endangered Species Through Photography

April 14, 2016

…totoaba fish and shrimp continue to use the nets illegally, leading to the incidental capture of vaquita, which become tangled in the nets and drown. According to the World Wildlife Fund, the estimated 100 individuals remaining are at risk of becoming extinct by 2018 if incidental capture is not prevented…

A Boost from AI

September 5, 2023

Tritonlytics Team member Wayde Gilliam shares how he brought this passion for AI to the university, creating tools that help the team focus on the most important aspects of their work, including the Staff@Work Survey which runs now through September 15.

Objective Subtle Cognitive Difficulties Predict Amyloid Accumulation and Neurodegeneration

December 30, 2019

Researchers report that accumulating amyloid protein occurred faster among persons deemed to have “objectively-defined subtle cognitive difficulties” (Obj-SCD) than among persons considered to be “cognitively normal,” offering a potential new early biomarker for Alzheimer’s disease.

AI Software “EdgeRIC” Could Make Your Internet Experience Smoother, Faster

August 6, 2024

A new AI-based software platform from the lab of UC San Diego’s Dinesh Bharadia aims to reduce lag and offer the public a more efficient, smooth experience online over the cellular network.

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