National Science Foundation grant boosts UWM’s clean water research
A UWM engineering faculty member was accepted into the national I-Corps Program to help him further commercialize miniature electrochemical water sensors that he developed.
News from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
A UWM engineering faculty member was accepted into the national I-Corps Program to help him further commercialize miniature electrochemical water sensors that he developed.
Kimberly Blaeser and J. Val Klump are among those recognized for 2020. They are the fourth and fifth UWM faculty members to be named as fellows since the program began in 1982.
Amogh Bhatnagar, son of Amit Bhatnagar, UWM associate professor of business, won the prize for a health care cost comparison model he created that uses data science.
MILWAUKEE _ The UWM App Brewery has partnered with Froedtert and the Medical College of Wisconsin Cancer Network to develop a smart phone app called NIMBLE, which streamlines communication between specialist doctors treating patients whose cancer has metastasized to the brain. The technology not only provides real-time treatment recommendations, but also speeds the initiation of treatment. NIMBLE – Network for the Integrated Management […]
UWM has signed the first of a planned series of agreements with area universities and colleges to provide an accelerated, dual degree program for students interested in pursuing a career in athletic training.
MILWAUKEE _ The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee has signed the first of a planned series of agreements with area universities and colleges to provide an accelerated, dual degree program for students interested in pursuing a career in athletic training. Through a new partnership with Wisconsin Lutheran College, students will be able to earn both a bachelor […]
Investors’ stock market losses may increase the incidence of violent crime, according to a study by a UWM researcher. But surprisingly, stock market gains may also increase violence — just among non-investors.
UWM researchers Ionel Popa and Luai Khoury have developed a technique that may advance the field of soft robotics, which involves robots made of pliable materials like those found in living organisms.
Employing cutting-edge imaging equipment, physicists can now watch molecules in action, both operating properly or going awry and causing disease.
The new research vessel for the School of Freshwater Sciences will be named the Maggi Sue. It will replace the current vessel, the Neeskay, a converted Army T-boat that is more than 65 years old.