91Ô­´´

Research and Impact

Squirrel standing in tall grass.

OHIO researcher collaborates on paper on evolution of mating systems

OHIO Researcher Donald Miles contributed to a paper published in American Nationalist about a new model for the evolution of mating systems that focuses on social interactions.

Six students stand on stage, with one at the podium while presenting

Six OHIO students visit nation's capital, share insight into Appalachian community development opportunities

91Ô­´´ students and faculty convened with 13 other Appalachian-based colleges and universities during the 19th annual Appalachian Teaching Project (ATP) Symposium in Washington, D.C.

Cory Cronin and Berkeley Franz

91Ô­´´ awarded national grant to study community-benefit investments made by for-profit healthcare organizations

91Ô­´´â€™s Cory Cronin and Berkeley Franz have been awarded a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation grant to study the community benefit efforts conducted by for-profit hospitals in the United States.

Group looking at pictures and documents on tables

OPIE student's journey with OHIO includes long-lost Japanese boat from 2011 tsunami

Koudai Nakada, a previous student in OHIO's Ohio Program of Intensive English, collaborated on research with Dr. Christopher Thompson about a fishing boat that disappeared during Japan's 2011 tsunami.

Members of the Colombian national soccer team helped the research team plant trees in Colombia.

Doctoral student studies ice-covered volcano — one of the last tropical glaciers in the world

Nina Adjanin traveled to Colombia for a glaciology study.

John Sabraw, Michelle Shively, and Guy Riefler pose with a creek behind them.

Acid mine drainage cleanup plant moves closer to full scale thanks to $3.5M award

91Ô­´´, Rural Action and the Ohio Department of Natural Resources are moving forward with a plan that would ultimately construct a full-scale acid mine drainage water treatment plant.

Ronan Carroll with lab student

OHIO microbiologist examines how to combat bacterial infections with support of NIH grant

Microbiologist Ronan Carroll was awarded a $2.1 million grant from the National Institutes of Health to study how scientists can combat a bacterial infection that is becoming resistant to antibiotics.

A comparison o ffossil teeth from Majungasaurus, Ceratosaurus and Allosaurus

Adelphi, OHIO researchers determine dinosaur replaced teeth as fast as sharks

A meat-eating dinosaur species (Majungasaurus) that lived in Madagascar some 70 million years ago replaced all its teeth every couple of months or so, research by OHIO and Adelphi faculty found.

Why Rural Matters Cover photo

Why do rural schools matter?

Faculty and alumni inspire new focus on rural students who face dire inequity. 

Provost Undergraduate Research Fund provides $31,160 in funding to 24 students

The 91Ô­´´ Provost Undergraduate Research Fund awards program has provided 24 students with a total of $31,160 in funding for their original research, scholarship and creative work this fall.

Veteran journalist Seymour Hersh, who won a Pulitzer Prize for breaking the My Lai story, and David Crane (BA ’72 and MA ‘73), former chief prosecutor for the United Nations Special Court for Sierra Leone, joined Haeberle on the panel.

E.W. Scripps School of Journalism hosts expert panel on My Lai Massacre

The photos were taken by Army combat photographer and former 91Ô­´´ student Ron Haeberle. The final count of lives lost in the massacre in the village of My Lai was 504 people.

John J. Kopchick Awards support 17 student and faculty research projects

Seventeen 91Ô­´´ students and faculty members have received funding for their health and medical research from the John J. Kopchick Awards.

Dr. Michael Kopish forges international partnership with university in Brazil

The Patton College has longstanding global impact and celebrates Teacher Education Associate Professor Dr. Michael Kopish for his overseas accomplishments.

Graham Smith and daughter Hadley

Symposium helps dad understand daughter's medical condition

Graham Smith of Dublin, Ohio, is neither a medical clinician nor a research scientist, but attended the third annual International Symposium on Growth Hormone and Metabolism.

Mark Berryman, Ph.D., in lab

NIH-funded study probes fine details of deafness

With support from a three-year, $452,998 grant from the National Institutes of Health, researchers led by Mark Berryman, Ph.D., aim to learn more about deafness at both genetic and cellular levels.

Showing 556 to 570 of 652 entries