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Ecosystems dominated by high-powered competitors are more efficient at recycling nutrients than low-powered systems, argues UC Davis paleontologist Geerat Vermeij in a new paper. The idea ties together evolution and ecology, and explains how ecosystems may have evolved to become more efficient since life appeared on Earth.…
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When Biswanath Mukherjee came to UC Davis in 1987, the only telephones were landlines and the internet was something for academics and scientists. Now his work on networks -- including the first network firewall, demonstrated in his lab -- has anticipated multibillion dollar industries.Andy Fell, UC Davis által
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UC Davis paleontologist Ryosuke Motani and Chinese colleagues recently described a new and curious fossil. The 250 million-year-old animal was a marine reptile that seems to have lived much like the modern platypus, hunting by touch in dark or muddy water with its sensitive snout.Andy Fell, UC Davis által
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Mathematics is the language of the universe, and mathematicians can use this language to help people better understand the world. I talked to some UC Davis mathematicians about the problems they work on and why they are important. From quantum computers to the movement of subatomic particles and microorganisms swimming through fluids, it’s a journe…
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A year ago this week, a series of fires broke out in Napa, Sonoma, and Mendocino counties, one of California’s best-known wine growing regions. While 90 percent of the grapes in Napa County had been harvested, a few vineyards still had grapes on the vine, including at the UC Davis experimental station in Oakville. Wildfire smoke can ruin wine. Anit…
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Traumatic experiences, such as maltreatment as children, can influence how our mind and body react to stressful situations. UC Davis psychologist Paul Hastings and colleagues at the University of Washington have shown that intensive training for parents referred to Child Protective Services can improve physiological reactions to stress in their you…
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Spinal injuries are life changing, but research is showing that the body is better than thought at adapting to and recovering from injury. UC Davis bioengineer Karen Moxon talks about how therapies can help rats can take steps after spinal injury. More information: https://www.ucdavis.edu/news/working-around-spinal-injuries…
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For Judy Callis, teaching is about helping students make connections, between the biochemistry they learn in her lectures, what they have learned in other classes and their own life experiences.Now Callis, a biochemist who studies the ubiquitin protein system in plants, has been awarded the UC Davis Prize for Undergraduate Teaching and Scholarly Ac…
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When fires ripped through suburban Santa Rosa last year they may have done more than reduce homes to ashes. They could have created unknown or previously unrecognized health hazards in the smoke and ash. UC Davis graduate student Gabby Black is part of the team trying to figure out what is in the ash and air.…
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If you’ve ever tried to untangle a pair of earbuds, you’ll understand how loops and cords can get twisted up. DNA can get tangled in the same way. UC Davis biomathematician Mariel Vazquez talks about her work on the math of how DNA can be cut and reconnected. The math involved turns out to be involved in other fields as well.…
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Conventional wisdom says that our eyes are drawn to objects that stand out from the background. But this "magpie theory" of visual attention is wrong, says John Henderson of the UC Davis Center for Mind and Brain. A new study from Henderson's lab shows that attention is drawn to areas of a scene that are "meaningful" instead.…
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Even the simplest organisms are hard to predict. Computer scientist Ilias Tagkopoulos. UC Davis Genome Center, talks about the model he and colleagues have built for the bacterium E. coli. The model could act as a 'crystal ball' that helps researchers design better experiments. Tagkopoulos says this is an exciting time to be on the interface of bio…
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