Campus News

The history of vaccine hesitancy, from smallpox to COVID-19

September 26, 2025

Vaccine policy made national headlines last week when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccine guidance committee met and scaled back recommendations around the COVID-19 booster and the combined MMRV shot. It’s far from the first time government vaccine policies have sparked heated discussion; since at least the turn of the...

Fossilized ear bones rewrite the history of freshwater fish

October 3, 2025

When saltwater fish long ago evolved to live in fresh water, many of them also evolved a more sophisticated hearing system, including middle ear bones similar to those in humans.

Two-thirds of all freshwater fish today — including more than 10,000 species, from catfish to popular aquarium fish like tetras and zebrafish — have this middle ear system, called the Weberian apparatus, which allows them to hear sounds at much higher frequencies than most ocean fish can, with a range close to that of humans.

University of California, Berkeley, paleontologist...

Berkeley microbiologist explains the wonder of viruses in 101 seconds

October 3, 2025

Screenshot from video

For many people, viruses are a scourge; they cause illness and even death, and the mere mention of them, whether they are harmless or cause the flu, sends many reaching for the disinfectant wipes.

But to Britt Glaunsinger, viruses are a wonder.

“I love efficiency, and viruses are masters at efficiency,” says...

Researchers discuss the rise of tech authoritarianism at Social Science Matrix event

October 1, 2025

California is the global center of technological advancement. A recent panel of researchers from Berkeley Social Sciences and other scholars convened last week at the Social Science Matrix to discuss how the rise of powerful tech entities and the rapid diffusion of new technologies across the state is reshaping society.

The “California Spotlight on Tech Authoritarianism” event panelists discussed the implications of these advancements, the undermining of democratic processes and the expanding frontiers of tech authoritarianism....

Nobelist George Smoot, whose satellite experiments validated the Big Bang theory, dies at 80

September 30, 2025

Smoot, a physicist at UC Berkeley and Berkeley Lab, shared the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics for detecting minute temperature variations in the cosmic microwave background, a prediction of the Big Bang theory.

a man in a brown leather jacket, blue shirt and glasses, with the Andromeda Galaxy in the background.

Physicist George Smoot told a packed press conference in 1992, “If you’re religious, it’s...

UC Berkeley ranked No. 1 public school in the U.S. by the Wall Street Journal

September 30, 2025

Sather Gate with students in foreground

In new rankings released today (Monday, Sept. 29) by the Wall Street Journal and College Pulse, UC Berkeley was named the No. 1 public college in the country — the second year in a row it received the distinction.

Monday’s ranking comes one...

Dacher Keltner, UC Berkeley psychologist, receives prestigious lifetime achievement award

September 23, 2025

Keltner, a distinguished professor of psychology at Berkeley, has led the discipline's study of human emotion, power and the concept of awe throughout his career.

Screenshot of Academic Review video featuring Dacher Keltner

Dacher Keltner, a UC Berkeley distinguished professor of psychology who has led the discipline’s study...

Berkeley Talks: How art allows us to see everyday things anew

September 22, 2025

"Life and art are entangled," says UC Berkeley philosopher Alva Noë. "An engagement with an artwork is an engagement with oneself."

a woman looks at enlarged mounted photos of sparse rooms in a house on a gallery wall

In his 2023 book The...

Genetic study of nomadic herders in Kenya shows what it takes to adapt to desert living

September 22, 2025

The Turkana people consume an animal-based diet in one of the hottest, driest places on Earth. Scientists uncovered the genetic variation behind this desert adaptation, and how it leads to problems as the Turkana transition to city life.

two women in colorful clothes walking through desert scrub, each carrying a plastic jerrycan on her head

The nomadic Turkana people of Northwest Kenya are superbly adapted to...

Liquid lunch? Wild chimps likely ingest the equivalent of several alcoholic drinks daily

September 19, 2025

A chimpanzee in a fig tree, looking down at the camera

The first-ever measurements of the ethanol content of fruits available to chimpanzees in their native African habitat show that the animals could easily consume the equivalent of more than two standard alcoholic drinks each day, according to researchers at the University of California, Berkeley.

It’s not clear whether they actively seek out fruit with high...