Environmental Sciences Seminar: Alan Titus, U.S. Bureau of Land Management
In the Land of Rainbows and Unicorns: Forensic Science of a 76.4 million-year-old Tyrannosaur Mass Mortality
The ASRC offers event and meeting spaces that can accommodate up to 100 guests for your next conference, reception, meeting, workshop, film shoot, or private event.
In the Land of Rainbows and Unicorns: Forensic Science of a 76.4 million-year-old Tyrannosaur Mass Mortality
Probing and predicting the behavior of intrinsically disordered proteins by integrating NMR spectroscopy and computation
Dynamics and constraints of enzyme evolution
Use of groundwater-surface water modeling as an investigative tool in the urban critical zone
The Neutron Spin Echo Spectrometer at SNS and its Biophysics applications
Mechanisms of Lipid Bilayer Membrane Curvature Generation
Hydrologic sensors, real time data, and data visualizations
DNA damage in immunity and cancer
In this workshop we’ll explore what ‘engagement’ with youth and community members really means.
ecoWEIR Tech: a Nature-Based Approach for Integrated Water Management
Bacterial adaptation to shifting environments
Structural and functional studies of the temperature-sensitive TRP channel TRPV3
Development of a modified floristic quality index as a rapid habitat assessment method in the northern Everglades
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Illuminating the Biochemistry of Zinc and RNA in Living Cells
Characterizing membrane proteins in native membranes without tricks
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
The intersection of the RIO kinases and PRMT5 in Ribosome Biogenesis
Opening Windows into the Cell: Bringing Structure to Cell Biology Using Cryo-electron Tomography
Lessons Learned and New Frontiers in PKA Signaling
Antibody discovery using LIBRA-seq
Please come and join us for a workshop co-hosted by Epigenetics Core and Living Imaging Core. We will discuss how to use Imaris to streamline your RNAscope analysis using images generated at our core!
Join us on March 19th at 10 a.m. for the next event in our Building an Interdisciplinary Science Culture: Beyond Reductionism.
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
A Brain Awareness Week virtual event presented by the CUNY Advanced Science Research Center
Biophysical experiments and biomolecular simulations: A perfect match?
Coordination of cell division, chromosome segregation and capsule assembly in Streptococcus pneumoniae
Structure and inhibition mechanism of the human citrate transporter NaCT
How disordered is disorder? An atomistic level view of mixed folded proteins
Please join the CUNY Nanoscience Community as we share our research stories and welcome new researchers into the community. The virtual symposium will feature interactive talks, a Science Art & Meme Competition, and a fun networking session.
Drivers of Heterogeneity in Alzheimer’s disease
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Mapping and Exploiting the Internal Wiring of Dynamic Protein Structures
Disordered protein complexes – a rethinking of molecular communication?
The recently published NSF Survey on Doctorate Recipients, 2019, highlights the lack of progress made in diversifying the STEM professoriate. Hispanic or Latinx scientists and engineers comprise 5% of PhDs employed by 4-year educational institutions, and Black or African American scientists and engineers, 4%. During this event, we will explore one contributing factor to underrepresentation
This event is organized and sponsored by the new student-led group, CUNYSciCom, with assistance from the GC Science Communications Academy and the Doctoral and Graduate Students' Council. The event will be held on June 18th, from 1-6 pm.
The fourth annual gathering of the CUNY biophysics community will feature talks from CUNY faculty, students, and postdocs.
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Updates from the ASRC Environmental Sciences Initiative Research Groups
Understanding membrane protein complexes with a computational and experimental strategy
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Updates from the ASRC Environmental Sciences Initiative Research Groups
Talking to cells: technologies to image and control cellular function deep inside the body
Structural Investigations of Plant Biomass and Fungal Cell Walls by Solid-State NMR and Dynamic Nuclear Polarization
Structural Visualization of Chromatin Regulatory Complexes using Cryo-EM
Please register online here. Biomaterials at the Interface of Tissue Engineering & Cancer Immunology Matthew T. Wolf, Ph.D. Laboratory of Cancer Immunometabolism, National Cancer Institute DNA-Based Nanostructures for Chemical and Biological Analysis Devleena Samanta, Ph.D. The University of Texas at Austin Exploiting the Fluorous Effect to Develop Adaptive Theranostic Devices in Oncology Scott H. Medina, Ph.D.
Reconstituting cytoskeletal systems in artificial cells
To receive the Zoom link, please send your name and affiliation to mphilipp@gc.cuny.edu. Speaker: Nir London, Ph.D., The Alan and Laraine Fischer Career Development Chair, Department of Organic Chemistry, Weizmann Institute of Science Title: Crowdsourcing a Cure for COVID-19 Abstract: COVID-19, caused by SARS-CoV-2, lacks effective therapeutics. Additionally, no antiviral drugs or vaccines were developed against
Updates from the ASRC Environmental Sciences Initiative Research Groups
Metabolic compartmentalization and adaptations in cancer
Nozomi Ando, Associate Professor, Dept of Chemistry & Chemical Biology, Cornell University
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Updates from the ASRC Environmental Sciences Initiative Research Groups
Protein self-assembly at the right time and place
Exposomics, Medicine and Public Health
Aneuploidy disrupts cellular physiology and metabolism
Updates from the ASRC Environmental Sciences Initiative Research Groups
Tau Joint Seminar CUNY Energy Institute
Correlation of membrane protein dynamics with function
Updates from the ASRC Environmental Sciences Initiative Research Groups
Inputs and outputs in protein tyrosine phosphatase signaling
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Evolutionary and mechanistic diversity of CRISPR RNA-guided transposases
Join us for a professional development and networking event open to all CUNY graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and faculty interested in furthering their STEM academic research careers!
Join us for the next speaker in this series: Benjamin A Garcia, PhD, Raymond H. Wittcoff Distinguished Professor and Head of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics at the Washington University School of Medicine, in St. Louis.
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
This event is part of the Biochemistry Seminar Series and will host Sjors Scheres, Research Leader at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology at Cambridge University, Cambridge, UK, as the inaugural guest speaker.
In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting Professor Filip Van Petegem, Dept. of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting W. Seth Childers, Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA.
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Join the Photonics Initiative for a one-hour talk, in this on-going spring seminar series, from Kiyoul Yang, Stanford University.
Join the Photonics Initiative for a one-hour talk, in this on-going spring seminar series, from Qiushi Guo, California Institute of Technology and Yale University.
In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting Shelley D. Minteer, Professor in the Dept. of Chemistry and Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT.
Please join the Neuroscience Initiative for an introductory seminar on the workflow of their newest instrument addition at the Epigenetics Core of the ASRC – 10 Chromium iX Controller.
Join the Photonics Initiative for a one-hour talk, in this on-going spring seminar series, from Kai Wang, Stanford University.
In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting Nicholas K. Tonks, Professor of Cancer Research; Dep. Director, NCI-Cancer Center Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, NY.
Joshua Caldwell, PhD, Vanderbilt University
In this online event hosted by the Neuroscience Initiative, a speaker from Partek Inc. will be giving a talk titled: Start to Finish Multi-omics Data Analysis.
Join the Neuroscience Initiative as they partner with the Dana Foundation to celebrate Brain Awareness Week, March 14-20. As a part of the public events hosted by the Neuroscience Initiative, professor Orie Shafer and his lab members will answer questions on how circadian clocks work, how the environment acts on your brain to affect your clock and sleep, and the effects of shifting to daylight saving time.
Join the Photonics Initiative for a one-hour talk, in this on-going spring seminar series, from Michele Cotrufo, The City University of New York.
Join the Photonics Initiative for a one-hour seminar to discuss the four aspects of thermal radiation with Yuzhe Xiao, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting Professor Rama Ranganathan, from the Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology, Pritzker School of Molecular Engineering at The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
Join the Macaulay STEM Society, an organization that promotes research opportunities and allows students to explore their interests in STEM, at 11 a.m. on March 25 to explore research opportunities for undergrads at the ASRC. The day will consist of lab tours, lunch and a faculty/mentor meet-and-greet. Research areas at the ASRC include Nanoscience, Photonics,
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Renowned physician-scientist Michael Brown (1985 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, shared with Joseph Goldstein) reveals firsthand insight into the process of discovering new drugs. Describing his own research on how our bodies sense cholesterol, which led to the development of statin drugs, Brown discusses how the seed of an idea in the laboratory develops
In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting Professor Marta Filizola, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
Join the Photonics Initiative for a one-hour talk from Mischa Bonn, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research, Mainz, Germany.
In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting Associate Professor Daniel Rosenbaum from the Department of Biophysics, UT Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX.
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In this weekly seminar series, the Structural Biology Initiative will be hosting Professor Harel Weinstein of the Physiology & Biophysics Department at Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY.
The topic of his lecture will be art-science-technology, based on his recent book The Artist in the Machine: The World of AI-Powered Creativity.
Join the Neuroscience Initiative for CUNY Think Tank: A two-day symposium on the impact of climate crisis on the ecosystem and human health.
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.
Join the Photonics Initiative for a one-hour talk from Paulo Ferreira from the International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory.
Join us for a one-hour talk from Teri W. Odom, Joan Husting Madden and William H. Madden, Jr. Professor of Chemistry and Chair of the Chemistry Department at Northwestern University.
Please join us May 6th for the Defense and Intelligence Research Forum hosted by The Research Foundation of The City University of New York (RFCUNY).
Join the Neuroscience Initiative for another exciting Mini Symposium on Metabolism: Function & Imaging with a reception in the cafe to follow!
Campus Safety - General Information and Situational Awareness Training hosted by CCNY Public Safety.
This event is part of the 2022 Professional Development Seminar Series hosted by the CUNY Office of Research, in partnership with the Velay Summer Undergraduate Research Fellowship.
This event is part of Communicating Your Science, a series of talks and workshops aimed at helping STEM professionals publish and communicate their research.