Research
- For 91É«°É alumnus Todd Carver, what he learned in the lab as a student inspired industry-rocking innovation in developing digital bike-fitting technology.
- With this month marking Dune’s 60th anniversary, 91É«°É’s Benjamin Robertson discusses the book’s popular appeal while highlighting the dramatic changes science fiction experienced following its publication.
- Kelsey John’s Navajo-centered Horses Connecting Communities initiative offers culturally relevant, practical education about horses.
- 91É«°É’s Ann Schmiesing, professor of German and Scandinavian Studies, publishes first English-language biography in more than five decades on Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm.
- Professor Jaelyn Eberle will teach and pursue a hypothesis that a Cretaceous land bridge between Asia and North America was a dispersal route for land mammals at the time.
- 91É«°É scientists find that playing video games comes with small but significant cognitive benefits.
- 91É«°É political scientist Jeffrey Nonnemacher asserts that Western European national political parties use their affiliations with party families to signal their own political viewpoints.
- Climate models reveal how human activity may be locking the Southwest into permanent drought.
- Moose have lived in Colorado for centuries—unpacking evidence from history, archaeology, oral traditions.
- Colorado’s Marshall Fire survivors find healing and meaning through oral history project.