This is my archive
A computer algorithm for analyzing time-lapse biological images could make it easier for scientists and clinicians to find and track multiple molecules in living organisms. The technique is faster, less expensive and more accurate than current methods — and it even works with cell phone images. Read More
USC joins White House summit on efforts that could accelerate research and improve patient outcomes. Read More
Alumna Dawn Gross is a hospice and palliative care physician. She’s also the host of “Dying to Talk,” a new radio show that aims to revolutionize how we discuss what to many is the last great taboo: Death. Read More
Matthew Kahn is committed to helping urban areas achieve the win-win scenario of economic growth and environmental sustainability. He joins the USC Dornsife economics faculty full-time this Fall. Read More
Brain scans show that stories that force us to think about our deepest values activate a region of the brain once thought to be its autopilot, according to USC Dornsife researchers. Read More
Fifteen years ago, Curtis Kin ’93 was a participant on the popular CBS reality TV show “Big Brother.” Now a judge for the Superior Court of California in Los Angeles County, he talks about his career and life in the real world. Read More
A contestant on the 16th season of the CBS competitive reality TV show “Survivor,” Alexis Jones ’05, ’06 used the media interest around her participation to launch her nonprofit I AM THAT GIRL. Read More
USC Dornsife claims two of the year’s 32 awardees as well as two top finalists. Marshall Scholars receive two fully funded years of graduate study in the United Kingdom. Read More
Join USC Dornsife on December 1 to make the world a better place through giving. Support Frontline Scholarship. Read More
Teeming with countless planets, stars, galaxies — and perhaps a host of as yet unimagined phenomena — the universe is incomprehensibly large. Despite its massive nature, reality ultimately boils down to infinitesimal basic building blocks. No one is quite certain what they are, but two USC Dornsife physicists explain how scientists may be closer than ever to an answer. Read More