Through
4/26
A round-up of Penn mentions in local, national, and international media.
Penn In the News
Paul Heaton of Penn Carey Law and colleagues have developed an AI-based tool to help prosecutors and legal professionals determine the accuracy of eyewitness suspect identifications.
Penn In the News
Penn Medicine has partnered with the Philadelphia Eagles and Independence Blue Cross to raise awareness and education around sudden cardiac arrest and CPR, with a mobile CPR unit led by Benjamin Abella.
Penn In the News
Cary Coglianese of Penn Carey Law and Michael Kearns of the School of Engineering and Applied Science discuss the origins, definition, and future of artificial intelligence.
Penn In the News
Tobias Wolff of Penn Carey Law says that affirmative action in college admissions isn’t dead following the Supreme Court’s ruling, but it has been vastly diminished as a tool and will likely be targeted by hostile litigation.
Penn In the News
Philip Gehrman of the Perelman School of Medicine says that trying harder to sleep and thinking about sleep actually make sleeping harder to achieve.
Penn In the News
Master’s student Dennis Mashindi of the Perelman School of Medicine discusses the Hinkson Holloway program, a collaboration between PSOM and the College of Physicians to mentor young Black men who want to pursue a career in medicine.
Penn In the News
Deborah Mandell of the School of Veterinary Medicine says that the recent canine influenza outbreak in Pennsylvania appears to be slowing down, though she still advises precautionary measures.
Penn In the News
Nareen Ahmed of the Perelman School of Medicine describes her experience training doctors and providing humanitarian aid in the earthquake-stricken regions of Turkey and Syria.
Penn In the News
A study by Eugenia C. South of the Perelman School of Medicine and John MacDonald of the School of Arts & Sciences and colleagues found that repairing a home can reduce crime on a block by 23 percent.
Penn In the News
Dan Romer of the Annenberg Public Policy Center says that belief in vaccine misinformation has declined but that its continued propagation in a public venue like city council is unfortunate.