AROUND UCHICAGO

Nobel laureate John Jumper returns to UChicago to discuss the AlphaFold protein revolution

Watch alum John Jumper deliver Bloch Lecture at standing-room-only event

Harris students win policy challenge with plan to revitalize downtown Chicago

Pitch proposes creating pedestrian zone on Michigan Avenue’s ‘Cultural Mile’

Study examines how laughing gas could treat depression

UChicago Medicine research finds promise in common anesthetic used for centuries

Inside the Lab

Explore Labs Across UChicago

Awad Lab: Predicting and preventing strokes and brain bleeds

In the newest episode of Inside the Lab, visit Prof. Issam Awad and learn about his team's mission: to prevent strokes before they happen.

Light Lab: Understanding the gut microbiome to treat disease

Step inside Asst. Prof. Sam Light’s lab to learn how scientists are mapping the incredible network of microbes living inside your gut—and how they can affect health or disease.

Education Lab: Using tutoring to reverse pandemic-era learning loss

Learn how UChicago experts are working with school districts nationwide to tackle learning loss and scale solutions to set students up for success.

Episode 158

How to stop gun violence before it starts, with Jens Ludwig

Crime Lab director argues we need to address behavioral causes of crime, in addition to policy and policing

Episode 157

Can your DNA predict your future?, with Dalton Conley

Sociologist examines how genetic science could forecast your income, education and love life

Episode 156

Can you really die of a broken heart? The hidden dangers of grief with Mary Frances O'Connor

Psychologist examines the stress that loss has on the body—and how society can help

Episode 155

The science behind raising successful kids, with Ariel Kalil

Developmental psychologist explains how parents can best invest time to close the education gap

Episode 154

Do animals understand death?, with Susana Monsó

In ‘Playing Possum,’ philosopher examines whether animals can grasp mortality—from dogs mourning owners to orcas grieving young

More from the University of Chicago Podcast Network

Capitalisn't

Is capitalism the engine of destruction or the engine of prosperity?

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Not Another Politics Podcast

Understand the political science behind the headlines

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Entitled

Why rights matter—and what’s the matter with rights

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Spring colors on campus

Explore scenes from across UChicago

UChicago Explainer Series

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Carbon-14 dating, explained

First developed in the late 1940s at UChicago, carbon dating can determine the age of organic materials as old as 60,000 years.

Improv, explained

Modern improv comedy began at the University of Chicago in the 1950s.