‘Health and Human Science Matters’ research podcast returns for a second season
CSU's College of Health and Human Sciences' podcast, Health and Human Science Matters, returns for season two with an emphasis on research impact.
CSU's College of Health and Human Sciences' podcast, Health and Human Science Matters, returns for season two with an emphasis on research impact.
The proposal aims to take transdisciplinary research to a new level by creating a regional sustainability network that spans the state.
Neha Lodha, assistant professor in CSU's Department of Health and Exercise Science, believes that by identifying and measuring behavioral biomarkers, it may be possible to prolong the time when individuals with cognitive impairment can continue driving safely.
University of Notre Dame faculty member Kristin Valentino to speak at the 2022 MacPhee Forum on Issues in Prevention Science on March 28.
After last year’s move to a virtual poster show and presentations, this year’s third annual College of Health and Human Sciences Research Day was back in person – and the excitement was evident among both participants and visitors.
Fabiola Mora and Mary Ann Lucero are both doctoral students, staff members in the AAC, and have recently been named 2022 Colorado Department of Higher Education (CDHE) Policy Fellows! Read on to learn about their journey and impact.
All Colorado State University students, faculty, and staff, as well as the wider community are invited to celebrate the incredible accomplishments of research and creative scholarship in the College of Health and Human Sciences at the CHHS Research Day event on March 1. Title and abstract for entries due Feb. 4!
A new studying method has improved Colorado State University students’ grades in Intro to General Microbiology by about a letter grade, according to CSU education Professor James Folkestad, the director of the Center for the Analytics of Learning and Teaching (C-ALT).
Annika Weber, Ph.D. student in the Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, is finding alternative ways to promote public health.
John Killingsworth, assistant professor in the Department of Construction Management, Zachary Schaller, assistant professor in the Department of Economics, and Katie Bond, graduate research assistant in the Department of Construction Management, will develop a new course with the theme of circular economics and construction.