Campus News

Six young faculty members named Sloan Fellows

February 18, 2025

Six headshots of UC Berkeley faculty named Sloan Fellows in 2025

Six young early career researchers at UC Berkeley have been awarded a prestigious Sloan Research Fellowship, granted annually to “honor exceptional researchers at U.S. and Canadian educational institutions whose creativity, innovation and research accomplishments make them stand out as the next generation of leaders,” according to an...

Why conspiracies are so popular — and what we can do to stop them

February 6, 2025

Even in the face of overwhelming evidence, false narratives can be incredibly sticky. Many people insist that the earth is flat, that childhood vaccines cause autism, or that climate change is a hoax, despite ample scientific evidence to the contrary.

“Stories are very powerful,” said Timothy Tangherlini, a UC Berkeley professor in the Department of Scandinavian and the School of Information. “We’re much more comfortable with hearing stories that confirm our beliefs than ones that challenge...

Watch a professor explain the evolutionary war that gave us caffeine

February 6, 2025

Screenshot of 101 of Coevolution video with Noah Whiteman and a monarch butterfly in the corner

Few of us think much about how our kitchens came to be full of so many thrilling tastes and aromas, like the warmth of cinnamon or the punchy bite of pepper. But when Noah Whiteman opens a cabinet, he sees not just ingredients for a...

Life cycles of some insects adapt well to a changing climate. Others, not so much.

January 31, 2025

Closeup of a grasshopper outside on the ground

Photo: Thomas Naef, 2022

As insect populations decrease worldwide in what some have called an “insect apocalypse,” biologists are desperate to determine how the six-legged creatures are responding to a warming world and to predict the long-term winners and losers.

A new study of Colorado grasshoppers shows that, while the answers are complicated, biologists...

The Andromeda galaxy struts its stuff

January 22, 2025

It may be a “train wreck,” in the words of astronomer Dan Weisz, but it’s a beautiful train wreck.

Weisz, an associate professor of astronomy at the University of California, Berkeley, is referring to the Andromeda galaxy, the nearest large galaxy to our own Milky Way and the closest one that astronomers can study for clues to our galaxy’s evolution.

A mosaic image of the entire Andromeda galaxy (Messier 31, or M31), 2.5 million light years away but six times larger than the moon in the night sky, was released today (...

Ceremony celebrates xučyun ruwway, UC Berkeley’s newest housing for graduate students

January 22, 2025

As a Native American, McKalee Steen said she often has felt “misunderstood or not seen” in college and in search of community among students who often “are ignorant to what your background might be.”

But on Wednesday in Albany, at a celebration of UC Berkeley’s newest graduate student residence, the Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma citizen and Berkeley’s Graduate Assembly president expressed pride in the name of the housing complex — xučyun ruwway (HOOCH-yoon ROO-why) — that’s spelled out above the main entrance.

“Even though these are just words on a building, it’s powerful to...

Astronomers thought they understood fast radio bursts. A recent one calls that into question.

January 22, 2025

Astronomer Calvin Leung was excited last summer to crunch data from a newly commissioned radio telescope to precisely pinpoint the origin of repeated bursts of intense radio waves — so-called fast radio bursts (FRBs) — emanating from somewhere in the northern constellation Ursa Minor.

Leung, a Miller Postdoctoral Fellowship recipient at the University of California, Berkeley, hopes eventually to understand the origins of these mysterious bursts and use them as probes to trace the large-scale structure of the universe, a...

Jennifer Doudna Awarded National Medal of Technology and Innovation

January 7, 2025

Headshot of woman with blond hairJennifer Doudna, a UC Berkeley biochemist who shared the 2020 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the invention of CRISPR-Cas9 genome editing, has been awarded a National Medal of Technology and Innovation, the nation’s highest honor for technological achievement.

President Joe Biden named Doudna and 10 other technology medalists in a...

Berkeley Voices: Think you know what dinosaurs were like? Think again.

December 30, 2024

Was the T. rex brightly colored with feathers? Did it run as fast as movies make it seem? How new discoveries challenge our long-held beliefs about the world of paleontology.

Key takeaways

Paleontologists can better understand how dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals looked and lived by studying living animals. New discoveries have reshaped what we thought we knew about dinosaurs and the prehistoric world. Fossils hold clues about the role of different species of plants and animals during climate change — and the future of Earth.

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2024 Winter Commencement: A day of reflection, celebration and advice

December 30, 2024

Graduate wearing cap and gown speaks from a lectern

Prisha Bhadra said her journey to graduate from UC Berkeley began long before she set foot on campus. Her parents, who immigrated from India, “left behind familiarity, security, and every single loved one they had” to give her the chance to choose her own path. For students with immigrant roots, she said, “This moment feels bigger than just us. It’s the...