Stories
Healing Comes Home: TBRIź Practitioner Training Returns to TCU Campus After Nearly a Decade
KPICD welcomes cohorts of professionals to Texas Christian University for flagship TBRIÂź Practitioner Training.
Guiding Light: TCU's Fluorescence Research Advancing Biomedical Breakthroughs
Being well established in fluorescence technology, Zygmunt Gryczynski, TCUâs W.A. âTexâ Moncrief, Jr. Chair of Physics, got involved in probe development and their application to cancer imaging, cancer detection, DNA detection, protein detection, and diagnostic assays, such as the COVID PCR test that is based on fluorescence. With TCU having one of the most advanced fluorescence labs in the world, Gryczynski shares how research being done on campus can lead to significant medical breakthroughs.
Are meal delivery kits today's version of 1950's TV dinners? Anne VanBeber, Nutritional Sciences Professor, Gives Her Expert Opinion
Modern-day meals delivered right to your doorstep are a far cry from the Swanson and Hungry-Man trays of yesteryear. Offering dinners catered to vegan, keto, and low-calorie diets, prepared meals continue to soar in popularity. But just how nutritious are they? Anne VanBeber, Nutritional Sciences professor, gives her expert opinion on modern eating habits for those concerned with quick and easy meal prep.
The Institute of Behavioral Research Reveals New Mobile Health Unit
TCUâs Institute of Behavioral Research utilizes its $3.1 million portion of a larger $11.5 million grant to advance its ACTION research project. The project includes the use of a Mobile Health Unit (MHU), which will serve individuals who either have or are at risk for acquiring HIV or a substance use disorder. The project will initially concentrate on historically underserved areas in Tarrant County.
Summer Mengelkoch, Co-Founder and Research Scientist for TCU's Eos BioAnalytics, Speaks to News Outlets About Scientific Links Between People's Attractiveness and Immune Systems
Research scientist and co-founder of TCUâs Eos BioAnalytics Summer Mengelkoch led the study in which 79 women and 80 men were recruited and asked to have their photos taken and their blood tested to discover if there is a link between peopleâs attractiveness and their immune systems.
John Holbrook Speaks to Fort Worth Report on Geothermal Energy Taking Off in Texas
TCU geological sciences professor, John Holbrook, discusses how geothermal energy could become the next economically viable source of clean energy. Technology for harnessing heat from the earthâs core is rapidly developing. Holbrook has been an outspoken advocate for greater investment in geothermal production, especially as Texas continues to encounter questions over its dependence on natural gas to produce electricity.
Journal Publishes Research Results by TCU Biology Professor, Matt Chumchal, Analyzing the Use of Riparian Spiders as Sentinels of Contaminants in Aquatic Ecosystems
Matt Chumchal, TCU professor of biology, along with eight coauthors, recently had a paper, "Use of Riparian Spiders as Sentinels of Persistent and Bioavailable Chemical Contaminants in Aquatic Ecosystems: A Review," published in Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry (ET&C), an international scientific journal. The article reviews the use of riparian spiders as sentinels of environmental pollution, and suggests the development of national-scale programs to monitor chemical contaminants in aquatic ecosystems using spiders.
Cryptocurrency: Risky Investment or Money of the Future?
Bitcoin, the first cryptocurrency created, was at first developed to act as a payment tool solely for the online universe. It has evolved from a hobby among coders to a mainstream exchange on Wall Street. There are risks, however, with getting involved with cryptocurrency and financial systems that arenât regulated by the government. Liran Ma, professor in the department of computer science at TCU, clears up some of the confusion surrounding cryptocurrency, including complications related to cybersecurity.
COP26: Historic Achievement or Historic Failure?
The dust has barely settled on COP26, the UNâs latest conference on climate change. Heads-of-state, negotiators, climate scientists, government representatives, businesses, and a host of other interested parties, gathered in Glasgow for 12 days to assess the state of the worldâs climate and, more importantly, to lay out their commitments to reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.
Out of This World
Doug Ingram, senior instructor in TCUâs department of physics and astronomy, answers questions about the reinvigorated fascination with space travel and why he thinks the United States will ultimately win the race to the moon.