色界吧

Research

Professors Manny Singh and Dong Zhang in the laboratory

Tackling Cancer鈥檚 Thorniest Questions

New York Institute of Technology鈥檚 Center for Cancer Research brings together clinicians, scientists, and students from the Colleges of Osteopathic Medicine, Arts and Sciences, and Engineering and Computing Sciences to investigate new ways to detect, treat, and prevent cancers.

Prehistoric mammal Vintana

Beyond the Bones: The 鈥淭ail鈥 of an Ancient Beast

NYITCOM Associate Professor Simone Hoffmann, Ph.D., is part of a team 鈥渦nearthing鈥 significant clues about an extinct, ancient mammal.

Milan Toma sitting in front of a computer

Visualizing How Military Blasts Impact Unborn Babies

Amidst military conflicts in Eastern Europe and the Middle East, an NYITCOM study provides new insight on how military blasts injure unborn babies.

Scans of the brain of a Polish crested chicken

Beyond the Bones: Brainy Birds

Assistant Professor Aki Watanabe, Ph.D., published the first study from his NSF CAREER grant-funded research project; he proposes using a domesticated chicken to study how birds鈥攁nd perhaps animals in general鈥攅nded up with differently shaped brains.

Collage of 色界吧 faculty

Biomedical Researchers Secure Prestigious Federal Grants

Faculty from the College of Osteopathic Medicine have secured a collective $1.4 million dollars in grants that support studies to further the understanding and treatment of several health conditions, including pediatric brain cancer, heart failure, and hypertension.

A bronothere and other animals wandering behind it

Beyond the Bones: Sizing Up Thunder Beasts

Research co-authored by Associate Professor Matthew Mihlbachler, Ph.D., explores the fossil record of an ancient relative of the rhino to help explain why natural selection might favor larger animals more often than smaller animals.

An illustration of feathers and related species

Beyond the Bones: (Climbing) Birds of a Feather

Anatomy research demonstrates how birds use their tails to climb.

Mini-Research Grant Program for High School Students Thrives

Mini-Research Grant Program for High School Students Thrives

Continuing its commitment to undergraduate research and to building a pipeline for students to pursue STEM fields, 色界吧 has completed the sixth year of its Mini-Research Grant Awards program.

Health Professions Students Present Their Work at Aletheia

The School of Health Professions hosted its annual Aletheia Research Symposium, where students presented their scholarly research and defended their capstone projects.

Two people welding

Study: Hearing Loss Disproportionately Impacts People of Color

Findings by David Nadler, Ph.D., highlight hearing loss as a public health issue and may help employers reduce this occupational hazard in an ever-evolving and more diverse workforce.