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Columbia's Double Discovery Center Receives Federal Funding to Launch First-Gen Mentorship Program

Thanks to US Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, Project Start Right will extend DDC’s resources to first- and second-year college students.

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

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.

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.

From basketball record breakers to Franklin Medal winners, Columbians made the most of the year's shortest month.

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. 

The School of International and Public Affairs, the Kraft Center for Jewish Student Life, and Columbia Religious Life co-hosted a discussion with the U.S. special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism.

When he’s not in the lab, Kevin Fleshman might be at the Met Cloisters or eating dim sum in Chinatown.

The group has released a report on the rules on demonstrations, the first in a series of recommendations that it will offer.

Abbott, a Principal Investigator at Columbia's Zuckerman Institute, was recognized for his work in theoretical neuroscience.

New research shows that even the most powerful blasts won't result in a so-called volcanic winter.

New research found that two years of education was significantly associated with slower aging and a lower risk of death.

Columbia Zuckerman Institute researchers found that elephantnose fish may tap into sensory information gathered by nearby fish.

Anne Nelson’s Red Orchestra warns about the fragility of all democracies, and how citizens need to be vigilant.

Quantum science papers often focus on two-dimensional materials. Columbia News explains why.

As a director, Ghina Fawaz is on a mission to tell tales that blend art and healing.

Ramin Bahrani discusses If Dreams Were Lightning with Wafaa El-Sadr.

Starting with the sale of a single bouquet from Isadore Gilbert Mudge’s garden in 1942, Columbia Community Service, largely run by women over the past 82 years, has raised millions of dollars in support of nonprofits serving Harlem and Morningside Heights.

The Initiative will be centered around four main pillars: women's economic opportunity, women's health, women's safety and security, and women's leadership, democracy, and human rights. 

By measuring the direction that a person’s brain waves move, we may be able to predict their behavior.

In Splinters, her first memoir, Leslie Jamison explores her divorce and the birth of her daughter.

Carla Hoge has been investigating the strange behavior of the protein PRDM9 since joining Columbia six years ago.

Columbia stem cell scientists have a new theory.

After graduating from Columbia in May, she’ll head to Oxford University to pursue a degree in intellectual history.

She discussed her work, the importance of dialogue with others, and the essentiality of the arts.

Business School research reveals that economic hardships experienced in formative years can impact attitudes toward immigration and government redistribution later in life.

We will not tolerate unauthorized disruptions or harassing behavior at admitted student events. I ask you to join me in welcoming our new students in a spirit of civility and kindness.

Timely guidance can empower patients to advocate for their health throughout life, according to new Columbia research.

The collaboration between Columbia University’s Bundles Scholars and Incite will create enhanced funding, mentorship, skill-building, and networking opportunities for program participants.

This week, 140 medical students at Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons received the results of their residency match.

Courtney Jimenez, a psychology PhD student, is building experiments that explore how social our time spent alone is.

A new survey of the skin’s primary sensory neurons has upended old assumptions.

Opa shared how the Columbia Employment Information Center was a launchpad for furthering his career at Columbia University.

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

In this book excerpt fromLaughter in the Dark, Yasmine El Rashidi invites readers to explore acountry that is being transformed, for good or bad, by the rise of a fresh youth culture.

After the pitcher’s mound, Mo’ne Davis makes the most of her time at Columbia’s School of Professional Studies.

The Obama Presidency Oral History releases 26 new interviews and 400 new stories related to healthcare reform on an innovative new website.

Members of the Columbia Nursing community gathered recently for the School of Nursing's inaugural Dialogue Across Difference event, “Art in the Time of Crisis: Still Rising.” 

Since joining Columbia, Mann has researched humpback whales and shipwreck divers.

Through an ARPA-H grant, Columbia researchers will aim to build a living replacement knee to be tested within five years.

The annual awards, established by former University Trustee Gerry Lenfest, recognize faculty excellence across the Arts and Sciences.

In Julia Bryan-Wilson’s book, the sculptor’s work is put in dialogue with marginalized makers and artists.

Columbia researchers can now detect AI-generated content without accessing AI's architecture, algorithms, or training data.

Thanks to US Senators Chuck Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, Project Start Right will extend DDC’s resources to first- and second-year college students.

The finding could help fill critical gaps between quantum mechanics and Einstein’s theories, solving a major dilemma in physics.

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