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Penn Vet Lends Expertise to Improve Colombian Cattle Producers’ Livelihoods

Penn Vet Lends Expertise to Improve Colombian Cattle Producers’ Livelihoods

Cattle in the United States are generally managed to either produce milk or to produce beef. However, in most of the world, cattle are counted on to do both in what are called dual-purpose production systems.

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Mechanical Engineers Win Top Prizes at the Cornell Cup

Penn Mechanical Engineers Win Top Prizes at the Cornell Cup

The senior design classes held in each of the School of Engineering and Applied Science’s six departments are an opportunity for University of Pennsylvania students to put their skills to the test, by picking a real-world problem and developing a new piece of technology to solve it.

Evan Lerner

Penn Telescope Minerva-Red Joins Hunt for Earth’s Twin

Penn Telescope Minerva-Red Joins Hunt for Earth’s Twin

University of Pennsylvania astronomers are celebrating the dedication of a new planet-hunting telescope known as Minerva-Red. Installed at the Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory in Arizona, Minerva-Red is part of the Minerva project, an array of low-cost telescopes that are designed to discover planets orbiting stars other than the sun.

Evan Lerner

Penn’s Kang Ko Has a Promising Future in Academic Dentistry

Penn’s Kang Ko Has a Promising Future in Academic Dentistry

By Madeleine Stone  @themadstone Kang Ko never planned to become a typical dentist. Long before he came to the University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine to pursue his degree, he fell in love with teaching and research. 

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Researchers Show That Mental ‘Map’ and ‘Compass’ Are Two Separate Systems

Penn Researchers Show That Mental ‘Map’ and ‘Compass’ Are Two Separate Systems

If you have a map, you can know where you are without knowing which way you are facing. If you have a compass, you can know which way you're facing without knowing where you are. Animals from ants to mice to humans use both kinds of information to reorient themselves in familiar places, but how they determine this information from environmental cues is not well understood.

Evan Lerner

Making Friends of Friends Benefits Hyenas, Penn Biologist Finds

Making Friends of Friends Benefits Hyenas, Penn Biologist Finds

Bonding with a friend of a friend is something most humans gravitate toward naturally, or at least Facebook likes to think so every time it suggests friends for you to “friend.”

Katherine Unger Baillie

Penn Researchers Develop Liquid-crystal-based Compound Lenses That Work Like Insect Eyes

Penn Researchers Develop Liquid-crystal-based Compound Lenses That Work Like Insect Eyes

The compound eyes found in insects and some sea creatures are marvels of evolution. There, thousands of lenses work together to provide sophisticated information without the need for a sophisticated brain. Human artifice can only begin to approximate these naturally self-assembled structures, and, even then, they require painstaking manufacturing techniques.

Evan Lerner

Penn Researchers Join Two NSF Projects on Medical Cyber-physical Systems

Penn Researchers Join Two NSF Projects on Medical Cyber-physical Systems

The University of Pennsylvania is participating in two National Science Foundation projects designed to advance cyber­physical systems with medical applications. Cyber­physical systems are built from and depend upon the seamless integration of computation and physical components.

Evan Lerner

Beth Winkelstein Appointed Penn Vice Provost for Education

Beth Winkelstein Appointed Penn Vice Provost for Education

Beth Winkelstein has been named vice provost for education at the University of Pennsylvania. She is a professor of bioengineering and the associate dean for undergraduate education in Penn’s School of Engineering and Applied Science.

Leo Charney

New Dinosaur’s Keen Nose Made it a Formidable Predator, Penn Study Finds

New Dinosaur’s Keen Nose Made it a Formidable Predator, Penn Study Finds

A researcher from the University of Pennsylvania has identified a species of dinosaur closely related to Velociraptor, the group of creatures made infamous by the movie "Jurassic Park.” The newly named species likely possessed a keen sense of smell that would have made it a formidable predator.

Katherine Unger Baillie