News Archive

Columbia Health’s Senior Vice President, Melanie Bernitz, outlines what to know about COVID-19 and flu treatment and prevention.

This year's scholars include an interior designer, community leader, entrepreneur, and HR professional, all hailing from Upper Manhattan.

From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.

Cloudy skies opened up to a sunny, fun-filled neighborhood event on Columbia's Manhattanville campus on October 21.

Matthew Connelly, who runs Columbia’s History Lab, researches the answer to that and other questions about U.S. government records.

Read profiles of 50 newly tenured professors and their unique contributions to Columbia's scholarly community.

Neuroscience and New York restaurants are his current passions.

A message of concern for our community from President Minouche Shafik.

The hub will bring together experts to engineer immune cells for early disease prevention, detection, and treatment.

Chemotherapy is essential for many cancer patients, but some suffer from cognitive impairment throughout treatment.

Rafael Yuste provides a unified framework for how the brain functions in “Lectures in Neuroscience.”

Neurobiologist Margaret Haney, director of Columbia’s Cannabis Research Laboratory, lays out the perils and promise of pot.

After just six weeks of shortened sleep, a study found, the cells that line our blood vessels are flooded by damaging oxidants.

Synthetic biologists at Columbia Engineering have discovered a new way to attack tumors. 

Ava Robles and Lucie Schwartz gained hands-on experience, thanks to the MA in Art History Presents project.