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Thursday, April 9, 2026
Student finds ‘true fulfillment’ in International Service Learning Program
Forty-seven students, faculty and staff members flew from Louisville to Cebu,聽a province of the Philippines, last month with the International Service Learning Program with...
We're In Control Now
Public health faculty launch campaign focused on HIV in African Americans
In an effort to raise awareness about free HIV testing and dispel stigma sometimes associated with HIV, a new multi-media campaign encourages members of...
UofL researchers are working with Hawthorne Elementary students to see if 15 minutes of targeted exercises each day will help their balance, motor control and behavior.
UofL researchers working with elementary students to measure exercise benefits
Second through fifth graders at Hawthorne Elementary School spend 15 minutes every day in the gym, going through several stages and exercises as part...
Over winter break, 17 UofL students headed to Atlanta to participate in an alternative service break trip.
UofL students ‘more equipped to serve’ after alternative winter break
During winter break, most UofL students headed home to celebrate the holidays with family and friends. But break was slightly different for 17 students,...
UofL researcher receives highest honor from American College of Cardiology state chapter Roberto Bolli, MD, to receive Honorable Maestro Award for work
University of Louisville cardiologist and researcher Roberto Bolli, MD, has been awarded the 2018 Honorable Maestro Award by the Kentucky Chapter of the American...
Cheri Levinson, Ph.D.
Beer with a Scientist: Can technology be used to treat eating disorders?
Eating disorders affect about 8 million people in the United States at any one time. Although a large majority is young women, anorexia nervosa,...
Colin Crawford
Brandeis School of Law welcomes new dean
On January 1, 2018, Colin Crawford began his tenure as the Brandeis School of Law鈥檚 24th聽dean. He鈥檚 a new face at the University of Louisville,...
Amyloid produced by commensal bacteria may cause changes in protein folding and neuroinflammation in the central nervous system through the autonomic nervous system (particularly the vagus nerve), the trigeminal nerve in the mouth and nasopharynx, and the gut (including mouth, esophagus, stomach and intestines), as well as via the olfactory receptors in the roof of the nose.
UofL researcher refining understanding of the role of microbiota in neurodegeneration with a new term: Mapranosis
Research in the past two decades has revealed that microbial organisms in the gut influence health and disease in many ways, particularly related to...
UofL, Harvard and USF develop model to teach signs of human trafficking
As many as 88 percent of human trafficking victims in the United States interact with a health care professional while they are being exploited....
Meteorite exhibit soars into space at Rauch Planetarium
More than 140 people raised a toast to the new, permanent William G. Russell Meteor Collection Exhibit at Gheens Science Hall and Rauch Planetarium...