News

Four years ago, a friend recommended the Riverside Free Clinic to John Ciulla. A resident of Rialto, Ciulla, 65, has been a ...
Researchers have uncovered how to manipulate electrical flow through crystalline silicon, a discovery that could lead to ...
The "Carry the Class" teaching method helps college students master concepts while fostering a sense of ownership through ...
Photo shows four coauthors on the research paper. From left to right are Zeinab Chahine, Karine Le Roch, Thomas Hollin (first author of the research paper), and Jacques Prudhomme. (UCR/Stan Lim) Led ...
Research plants growing in a campus greenhouse. (Elena Zhukova/UCR) The study, led by Meng Chen, a University of California, Riverside professor of cell biology, shows that plants rely on multiple ...
I t is a truth universally acknowledged, that a fast-growing region lacking sufficient doctors, must be in want of a medical school. Inland Southern California, with about 40 primary care physicians ...
Azalea Corral has a family photo that shows her three younger siblings and parents smiling together against a Santa Barbara countryside backdrop. It was taken on February 8, 2020 — the last time they ...
The Salton Sea, the body of water in Southern California’s Coachella Valley and Imperial Valley, is shrinking over time as the planet warms and exposing more lakebed and new sources of dust in the ...
University of California, Riverside, scientists have moved a step closer to finding a use for the hundreds of millions of tons of plastic waste produced every year that often winds up clogging streams ...
Plants in a UCR laboratory changing color in response to high light stress. (Jin-Zheng Wang/UCR) UC Riverside scientists recently published a seminal paper in the journal Science Advances reporting ...
Professor Boris Baer's family tending beehives in Riverside, Calif. (Boris Baer/UCR) Honeybees pollinate more than 80 agricultural crops, which account for about a third of what we eat. Several ...
Young woman injecting insulin. (gece33/iStock/Getty) Some drugs for these diseases dissolve in water, so transporting them through the intestines, which receive what we drink and eat, is not feasible.