Find coverage of Northeastern University in the press.
Is It Safe To Eat Those Steam-In-Bag Microwavable Foods?
“[They] are designed for minimal handling from production to plate, reducing the risk of cross-contamination in home kitchens,” explained Darin Detwiler, a food safety expert and professor at Northeastern University.
Should you trust your gut instincts? Ask these questions first.
Op-ed by Laura Huang, the author of You Already Know: The Science of Mastering Your Intuition, due out July 29, and a professor of management and entrepreneurship at Northeastern University.
One Tech Tip: How to protect your 23andMe genetic data
“At a fundamental biological level, this is you and only you,” said David Choffnes, a computer science professor at Northeastern University and executive director of its Cybersecurity and Privacy Institute.
2024 Election Results Under Scrutiny as Lawsuit Advances
Costas Panagopoulos, a professor of political science at Northeastern University, told Newsweek: “Statistical irregularities in elections should always be investigated, but the sources of such inconsistencies, which can include error or miscalculation, are not always nefarious. Still, scrutinizing election results can strengthen confidence in elections. Mistakes can happen.
RFK Jr.’s firing of CDC vaccine panel undermines science, could threaten public health, experts say
“It’s really important that we recognize that these actions impact everyone,” Dr. Neil Maniar, a public health professor at Northeastern University, told CNBC. “This is not just a committee that was retired. It is a committee whose work has broad implications.”
From funny to somber, here are some of this year’s most memorable commencement speech quotes
At Northeastern University’s undergraduate commencement May 11, CEO of Atlantic Music Group Elliot Grainge reminded graduates about the value of being told “no.”
These glowing axolotls may hold the secret to human limb regeneration
“This species is special,” said James Monaghan, a Northeastern University biologist who led the research. They’ve “really become the champion of some extreme abilities that animals have.”
A chemical in acne medicine can help regenerate limbs
That some species can regrow limbs while others can’t is one of the oldest mysteries in biology, says James Monaghan, a developmental biologist at Northeastern University.
Wired Espanol
The axolotl’s key to regenerating its limbs: Scientists discover the molecular switch behind the miracle
A team at Northeastern University, led by Professor James Monaghan, has unraveled a key piece of this biological puzzle.
L.A. clash over ICE raids fuels viral battle online — and vice versa
“To advance your side of the story, you need a piece of content that the algorithm likes. You need something that really grabs people’s attention by the throat and doesn’t let it go,” said Laura Edelson, an assistant professor at Northeastern University’s Khoury College of Computer Sciences.
El Pais
The axolotl’s regenerative power could be on your bathroom shelf.
This surprising quality was what caught the attention of biologist James Monaghan , director of the Chemical Imaging of Living Systems Institute at Northeastern University (United States), who has spent more than two decades trying to decipher and understand why these animals have such unique regenerative capabilities that border on the miraculous.
National Geographic
Axolotls can regrow limbs. Could they one day help us do the same?
“The paper gives us insight into how a limb knows what to grow back, which was a mystery in the field for a long time,” says James Monaghan, chair of biology at Northeastern University in Boston and the study’s lead author.