Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                

In the News

El Pais

Article discusses research led by Charles Lynch, assistant professor of neuroscience in psychiatry, and Conor Liston, professor of psychiatry, at Weill Cornell Medicine.

USA Today

Daniele Visioni, professor of earth and atmospheric sciences, says that as climate catastrophes continue “people’s perceptions of how the climate is changing the urgency of the situation is mounting.” 

The Wall Street Journal

Laura Harrington, professor of entomology, discusses mosquito-borne illnesses.

New Yorker

The article references family estrangement research from Karl Pillemer, professor of psychology.

CNN

Robert Shepherd, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, discusses his research of robots controlled by mushrooms.

Time

Data from the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research is used to discuss the voting decisions of voters between the ages of 18-29.

Yahoo Finance

Alexios Mantzarlis, director of the Security, Trust, and Safety Initiative at Cornell Tech, says “The detector tools are inconsistent. Some of them, frankly, are snake oil.”

Associated Press

David Sherwyn, director of the Center for Innovative Hospitality Labor & Employment Relations, says “The hotels are saying the guests don’t want it, I can’t find the people and it’s a huge expense. That’s the battle.”

Newsweek

Researchers from Weill Cornell identified a brain network that is nearly two times larger in the brains of people with depression.

CNN

Robert Shepherd, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, discusses his research of robots controlled by mushrooms.

The Washington Post

Erica Groshen, senior labor market advisor at ILR, says “As commissioner, the most common comment I got was, ‘Your staff is so great. We call them up and they connect us with the people who were generating the numbers. You guys provide the best customer service in the federal government. Would we not want to not be providing that level of service?”

The Wall Street Journal

Katie Gold, assistant professor at CALS-SIPS, says “The responder at least makes me feel better about ignoring people. They’ve gotten a response.”