You are here:
News
Columbia, Barnard, and Teachers College join Morningside and West Harlem neighbors to help clean Broadway and send a message of unity.
In An Ethos of Blackness, Vivaldi Jean-Marie reexamines the movement’s core beliefs and practices.
A study found that working jobs with moderate or high physical activity is linked to an increased risk of cognitive impairment.
From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.
The new Anthropology chair plans to nourish faculty and student growth in the department, and launch the Disappearance Lab.
Melissa Smey shares her thoughts on the cherished Columbia tradition.
Postdoc Oliver Philcox was also recognized with an early-career award.
Meet us on September 19 and 20 to initiate the Washington Heights, Morningside Heights, and West Harlem portions of the effort to clean up Broadway.
A study tracked how tools like ChatGPT mistake nonsense for real language. Can these flaws open new windows on the human brain?
The study could help chemists design better drugs that are more difficult for SARS-CoV-2 to sidestep.
From Convocation and move-in, NSOP to ice cream trucks on College Walk, the fall semester is off to an energetic start.
Henry Clemente, a head cleaner with Facilities and Operations, knows every nook and cranny of the Morningside campus. He shares the spots every newcomer should know.
Chia-Ying Lee is building models to improve our understanding of storm risk.
A new Columbia study is the largest cohort study to date on racial and ethnic disparities in postpartum Type 2 diabetes.
Finding land mines on foot with a metal detector is slow and dangerous, so scientists are making the process faster and safer.