News Archive

In This Is the Only Kingdom, Professor Jaquira Díaz tells a story about the barrio of el Caserío Padre Rivera in Puerto Rico.

Columbia University’s Knight Institute brought together experts to examine whether middleware can reshape control over online speech and the digital public sphere.

Columbia's biggest celebration of the year will take place on the Morningside Heights campus—here's everything graduates and their guests need to know before May 20.

The center will connect students, scholars, and policymakers to study how law structures economic power in America.

With the help of AI, Alexey Yurenev, an adjunct professor at Columbia’s School of the Arts, attempts to do just that in his new book.

Aging changes the brains of mice and people in similar ways, a finding that could provide new insights into how we grow old.

A new study aims to determine if altering brain circuit activity has treatment potential.


 

A recent survey identified that the University’s strengths are part of a broader, if fragmented, culture that is capable of constructive discourse.

New findings about bacteria could guide researchers to fresh breakthroughs, like new antibiotics and therapies for the microbiome.


 

Large language models' ability to interpret nuance, hidden meaning, and nonlinear storytelling remains an open question.

A new Columbia Public Health study is among the first to examine the cognitive consequences of poor financial well-being.

Columbia historians found evidence that a 1977 article claiming that talcum powder poses no harm was written by a paid consultant.

How students in an advanced Columbia Spanish course create a public-facing podcast exploring Afro-Latina identity in the United States.

The two renowned artists performed and then talked before a full house at the Lenfest Center for the Arts.

The American Association for the Advancement of Science honored them for scientific excellence and service to their communities.