News

UI students win National Science Foundation graduate fellowships

Thursday, June 30, 2011
Graduate students Valerie Beck and Georgina Moreno have been awarded 2011-12 National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Fellowships to pursue graduate studies at the University of Iowa. Beck, a doctoral candidate in psychology, and Moreno, a doctoral candidate in neuroscience, each will receive three years of support from the NSF, including a $30,000 annual stipend, a $10,500 cost-of-education...

Davidson seeks treatment to sneak across blood-brain barrier (Chemistry World, June 2011)

Piggy-backing on the BBB Beverly Davidson, a neurologist at the University of Iowa, US, has been seeking a therapy for children who suffer from lysosomal storage disease, caused by the absence of a particular brain enzyme . 'We know we can't simply deliver the enzyme into the blood and have it access the brain, so we try to devise methods to overcome this problem,' she explains. Her group took...

Achievements: UI Faculty, staff making news

Tuesday, May 31, 2011
Offices and Awards Curt Sigmund, professor and head of pharmacology in the Carver College of Medicine, has been selected as the 2011 Ernest H. Starling Distinguished Lecturer by the American Physiological Society.

Millersburg man riding horse across Iowa for UI Alzheimer's research

Friday, May 27, 2011
At night, he will sleep in a bed in the back of his pick-up truck. By day, he will ride on horseback three miles per hour across the state of Iowa. This is 80-year-old cowboy Bill Taylor's summer odyssey to raise money for Alzheimer's research at University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. Taylor, of Millersburg, Iowa, will begin his 259-mile journey at 10 a.m. June 6 in Grandview, along the...

New blindness-preventing research 'is exciting'

New research that may lead to treatments which cure or prevent blindness is "exciting" news, according to one researcher.Dr Budd Tucker, who is currently an assistant professor of ophthalmology at the University of Iowa, Carver College of Medicine, said a new study he was involved in could hold "great promise" for future treatments through regenerating skin stem cells, which can help to repair the...

Denburg: working together may help senior citizens make better decisions (Science News, May 23)

Trading cognitive declinesWorking together may protect older people whose thinking skills are declining from getting burned on investments and other crucial decisions. A computer set-up that allowed a group of seniors to trade shares of political candidates from both parties during the 2008 primaries, much as stocks get traded, cut the financial losses of participants with brain-related problems...

Sections Of Retinas Regenerated And Visual Function Increased With Stem Cells From Skin

Scientists from Schepens Eye Research Institute are the first to regenerate large areas of damaged retinas and improve visual function using IPS cells (induced pluripotent stem cells) derived from skin. The results of their study, which is published in PLoS ONE this month, hold great promise for future treatments and cures for diseases such as age-related macular degeneration, retinitis pigmentosa...

William Talman, Neurology

William Talman admits he was never really good at jigsaw puzzles, but that didn’t stop him from a career in biomedical research and science advocacy. During his first year of medical school, Talman recalls, “One of my professors challenged us one day, saying ‘Do any of you like to solve jigsaw puzzles? If so, you will probably like neurology because you can logically put the pieces together.’”...

UI grad student ‘a rockstar’ of neuroscience

A conversation is a lot more than words.And Rupa Gupta, a University of Iowa graduate student, said she wants to unravel the intricacies of interaction, such as eye contact and timing.“I’m just interested in how people interact with people,” said Gupta, who is working toward a Ph.D. in neuroscience.Her advisers call her a standout in her field, but the 25-year-old was hesitant to praise her...

Antipsychotic drugs may contribute to brain tissue loss in schizophrenia

Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to track how brain volumes change over time, researchers at the University of Iowa have found that antipsychotic medications commonly used to treat schizophrenia appear to contribute to the loss of brain tissue that sometimes occurs in patients with this condition. The findings, which are published in the February issue of the Archives of General Psychiatry...