News Archive

In Costa Rica, Climate School scientists are installing geophysical instruments that can monitor the underground in real time.

Columbia Business School recently hosted a discussion with students, staff, and faculty to better understand and address rising polarization as part of the University's Values in Action initiative. 

María José Contreras Lorenzini works at the intersection of research and art, in an urban context.

A new study offers insight on why sleep and daydreaming are good moments to arrange and store long-term memories.

Iyengar brings a wealth of experience in academic leadership and long record of success in convening faculty from disparate fields to tackle pressing interdisciplinary challenges.  

Columbia Engineering and the Knight First Amendment Institute recently convened multidisciplinary experts to discuss the impact of artificial intelligence on public discourse, free speech, and democracy.

A new book traces how the Tea Party laid the groundwork for the rise of Trump.

The Columbia engineers who developed the new technique are working with campus oncologists to bring their work to patients.

Columbia researchers have found a molecule that rouses dormant breast cancer cells, and a way to suppress it.

A study is shedding new light on how the brain identifies familiar individuals and recalls past experiences with them.

A book gathers experts and scholars to investigate how this decline is playing out during the climate crisis.

Students, faculty, and staff gathered in person and online to explore how the often binary conversations around current events inform our understanding of democracy, the elements that prevent us from coming together for civil discourse, and where we go from here.    

The Committee on the Rules of University Conduct encourages the Columbia community to weigh in with comments, concerns, and suggestions.

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

They were recognized for their contributions in economics, mathematics, and engineering.