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Released: 13-Feb-2017 2:05 PM EST
Social Work Professor and Burn Survivor Develops App to Help Burn Victims
University of Tennessee

Burn patients need support to transition to burn survivors. That's why Thereasa Abrams, an assistant professor in UT's College of Social Work and a burn survivor herself, has developed an app called the Bridge.

Released: 10-Feb-2017 9:20 AM EST
Five Tips for Staying Healthy and Living Longer
University of Tennessee

Benjamin Franklin is credited with saying that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. What can you do to gain the benefits of prevention?

Released: 12-Dec-2016 10:05 AM EST
Holy Batcave! Personal Sighting Leads UT's Dinets to New Data on Spectral Bat
University of Tennessee

Spectral bats, also called false vampire bats for their imposing size—with a wingspan of over three feet—are the largest bats in the Americas and typically roost in trees in lowland forests. Vladimir Dinets, research assistant professor of psychology at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, has discovered evidence that the species also can live in caves and is more adaptable than previously thought, thanks to personal observation and information gleaned from social media accounts of tourists.

Released: 28-Nov-2016 1:05 PM EST
UT Professor Develops Algorithm to Improve Online Mapping of Disaster Areas
University of Tennessee

Yingjie Hu, UT assistant professor of geography, has developed an algorithm to improve online mapping of disaster areas.

Released: 9-Nov-2016 2:05 PM EST
It's Not a Bird! It's Not a Plane! It's the Fastest Flying Mammal, Says UT Study
University of Tennessee

When most people think of animals moving at high speed, they envision cheetahs or swiftly diving raptors. They can now add the Brazilian free-tailed bat — a tiny nocturnal mammal — to the list. A new study from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, shows that the Brazilian free-tailed bat can achieve flight speeds faster than those previously documented for any bat or bird.

Released: 3-Nov-2016 11:05 AM EDT
Emery Co-Authors Study on Detection of Water on Asteroid Named Psyche
University of Tennessee

A UT professor has helped detect water on Psyche, the largest metallic asteroid in the solar system. The asteroid is the target of a proposed NASA mission.

Released: 3-Nov-2016 11:05 AM EDT
UT Scientists Identify Bacterial Genes That Could Lessen Severity of Malaria
University of Tennessee

UT researchers have identified a set of bacterial genes that may help them find ways to lessen the severity of the disease malaria. Their findings could also aid the research of fellow scientists working in malaria-stricken regions around the world.

Released: 30-Sep-2016 3:05 PM EDT
From Pokemon Go to Birdwatching: UT Scientist Studies How We Express Our Inner Hunter
University of Tennessee

Interested in birding or wildlife photography? Enjoy playing Pokemon Go and catching imaginary creatures? If so, you may simply be expressing your inner hunter. So says a new study from Vladimir Dinets, a University of Tennessee, Knoxville, research assistant professor of psychology.

Released: 15-Sep-2016 3:05 PM EDT
UT Students to Provide Real-Time Social Media Analysis of Presidential Debates
University of Tennessee

Students in a graduate seminar at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, will be monitoring social media discourse during the upcoming presidential and vice presidential debates and on Election Day and reporting out their results in real-time for media use and public consumption.

Released: 3-Aug-2016 11:05 AM EDT
UT Professor Discusses the Science of Olympians
University of Tennessee

Once every four years, people from all nations marvel at the incredible feats of the greatest athletes in the world. What is it that allows them to run, jump and throw faster and farther than the average person?

Released: 21-Jun-2016 10:05 AM EDT
UT Expert Discusses Critical Voting Groups for 2016 Election
University of Tennessee

The 2016 presidential elections will be one of the nation's historic races—both because of the presumptive candidates and the voter groups each will drive to the polls—according to a political science expert at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Released: 9-May-2016 1:05 PM EDT
Fetal Heart Monitor App Helps Train Future Nurses
University of Tennessee

Sheila Taylor leaned in to see the baby’s heartbeat rhythm. She watched as the baby’s heartbeat line fell without a corresponding spike showing the mother’s uterus contracting down on it.

Released: 10-Feb-2016 10:05 AM EST
Whooping Cranes' Predatory Behavior Key for Adaptation, Survival
University of Tennessee

The whooping crane, with its snowy white plumage and trumpeting call, is one of the most beloved American birds, and one of the most endangered. As captive-raised cranes are re-introduced in Louisiana, they are gaining a new descriptor: natural killer. A new study from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, suggests Louisiana cranes are faring well thanks in part to their penchant for hunting reptiles and amphibians.

5-Feb-2016 2:05 PM EST
Gut Environment Could Reduce Severity of Malaria
University of Tennessee

Microorganisms in the gut could play a role in reducing the severity of malaria, according to a new study co-authored by researchers at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, and the University of Louisville.

   


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