Campus News

Astrophysicist Alex Filippenko awarded Gruber Cosmology Prize for work on supernovae

May 19, 2026

By clarifying the differences among various types of exploding stars, Filippenko enabled them to be used to measure the expansion of the universe.

UC Berkeley supernova and black hole expert Alex Filippenko will share the 2026 Gruber Cosmology Prize, which was announced today (May 19) by the Gruber Foundation.

The prize, one of the most prestigious awards for research on the origin and fate of...

Berkeley Reappoints Sara Guyer as Dean Following Major Expansion in Arts & Humanities

May 15, 2026

In 2021, when Sara Guyer became dean of arts and humanities for the College of Letters and Science, it was a time of profound uncertainty nationwide for higher education — and for the humanities, in particular. To this day, university leaders across the nation continue to grapple with financial pressures, declining enrollment, and post-pandemic disruption by cutting costs, eliminating programs, and adopting other austerity measures.

But Guyer, who was reappointed today for a second five-year term as dean, has refused contraction, focusing instead on investment,...

Two UC Berkeley scholars elected to the American Philosophical Society

May 14, 2026

The oldest scholarly organization in the U.S., the American Philosophical Society, has elected two UC Berkeley faculty members to its ranks.

In a May 1 announcement, the society named historian Carla Hesse and chemist Jeffrey Long to the 2026 class. A total of 43 national and international scholars received the honor.

The society was founded...

Fumi Okiji appointed as new Director of the Arts Research Center

May 14, 2026

The Division of Arts & Humanities at UC Berkeley is pleased to announce Fumi Okiji as the new Director of the Arts Research Center (ARC), starting July 1, 2026.

Okiji is a performer and theorist whose work moves across Black studies, critical theory, and sound and music studies. Her first book, Jazz as Critique: Adorno and Black Expression Revisited (Stanford, 2018), reconsiders the critical potential of art through an encounter between Theodor Adorno and traditions of Black creative music. Her new book, Billie's Bent Elbow: Exorbitance, Intimacy and a...

Why we still can't get enough of Shakespeare after all these centuries

April 29, 2026

UC Berkeley Professor Oliver Arnold explores the 16th‑century playwright’s enduring appeal and the way ‘Hamnet’ imagines a small‑town son of a glovemaker becoming a global icon.

For centuries, scholars and artists alike have wondered: What makes Shakespeare Shakespeare? What gives his work its strange durability, its emotional force, its endless capacity for reinvention?

We know some things about William Shakespeare. He was born in 1564 in a small market town in England, the son of a glovemaker. We know he married a woman who became an abiding figure in his life, and...

Two UC Berkeley L&S faculty members win New Horizons prizes for math and physics

April 29, 2026

Mathematician Yunqing Tang and physicist Benjamin Safdi were honored for their early career contributions.


Two young UC Berkeley faculty members, Yunqing Tang of mathematics and Benjamin Safdi of physics, are among the winners of this year’s New Horizons Prizes, awarded annually by the Breakthrough Foundation to early-career scientists.

The announcement was made Saturday, April 18, at a gala awards ceremony for...

Sunbirds suck, scientists find. Hummingbirds don’t.

April 18, 2026

Two unrelated groups of nectar eaters, hummingbirds and sunbirds, evolved different techniques to slurp the sweet liquid from flowers. The tongue suctioning employed by sunbirds is unique among vertebrates.

While we often think of hummingbirds as sucking nectar from flowers, they’re not sucking the way we suction juice through a straw — they’re really sponging up nectar with their tongues and squeezing the juice into their mouths by compressing their tongues with their beaks.

Humans are naturally able from birth to use mouth suction to draw in liquid, but it’s not...

The Nordic folklore behind the Joffrey Ballet's 'Midsummer Night's Dream'

April 18, 2026

As the ballet begins its April 17-19 run at Cal Performances, UC Berkeley scholar Linda Rugg unpacks the surreal Scandinavian rituals and rural history featured in the production.

As the days stretch toward the summer solstice — the longest day of the year — Cal Performances is presenting the Joffrey Ballet’s Midsummer Night’s Dream, an original production by acclaimed Swedish choreographer Alexander Ekman that dives headlong into the surreal,...

Four UC Berkeley L&S professors win illustrious Guggenheim Fellowships

April 18, 2026

From Zora Neale Hurston to Jennifer Doudna, winners of the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship are known for artistic creations, scientific discoveries and groundbreaking scholarship that fundamentally transform our world.

This year, four UC Berkeley faculty are joining this illustrious group.

The Guggenheim Foundation announced this week that Berkeley historians Elena Conis and Hannah Zeavin, biologist Rasmus Nielsen, and bioengineer and neuroscientist Michael Yartsev are among...

Your news feed may be making polarization worse

April 16, 2026

A new UC Berkeley Economics study finds that online news algorithms can quietly push readers toward more polarized views by reinforcing what they already believe.

The research from Berkeley Economics PhD Student Mingduo Zhao shows that even small differences in opinion can be amplified over time as algorithms learn what users click on and serve them more of the similar content. The result is a feedback loop that can deepen divisions, while also keeping users more engaged.

In his dissertation, paper titled, ...