• Common PNW fish, uncommon feature: teeth on its forehead

    Earlier this year, researchers at the University of Washington published a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on the spotted ratfish, sometimes called a ghost shark.Karly Cohen, a postdoctoral researcher at the UW's Friday Harbor Labs, is interviewed.
    11/19/2025 | KUOW
  • 'There's no silver bullet' Seattle researchers say autism answers lie in early diagnosis, interventions

    Getting help for parents of children with autism and receiving an early diagnosis can be costly and slow. Annette Estes, director of the UW Autism Center and a research professor of speech and hearing sciences at the UW, is quoted.
    11/13/2025 | KUOW
  • How will the fields relationship to industry change over the next decade? Will a larger neurotechnology sector emerge?

    Interactions between academic neuroscience and industry will grow, and the neurotech sector will expand, most survey respondents predict. The current funding upheaval in the United States may accelerate this trend as the field searches for new funding models. Bing Wen Brunton, professor of biology at the UW, is quoted.
    11/10/2025 | The Transmitter
  • New voices: Podcasts from UW alumni and faculty we’re listening to this fall

    Looking for a fresh perspective? Check out these podcasts and radio shows from UW alumni and faculty, including Markus Dekanogisdi Teuton (Cherokee), (BM, Jazz Studies // BA, CHID, 2024) and Kara Bazzi (BA, Psychology, 2021). 

    11/10/2025 | University of Washington Magazine
  • The world is failing its 2025 Paris Agreement climate target now what?

    Ten years ago the world met in France to agree to the landmark Paris Agreement a global commitment signed by almost 300 nations to ward off catastrophic climate change. Adrian Raftery, professor emeritus of statistics and of sociology, is quoted.
    11/05/2025 | TIME
  • The ratfish: A fish with forehead teeth

    The spotted ratfish is a deep-ocean cartilaginous fish, part of the Chimaera genus that diverged from sharks about400 million years ago.Theyre commonly caughtaccidentallyby fishers in the Puget Sound. Karly Cohen, a postdoctoral researcher at the UW's Friday Harbor Labs, is quoted.
    11/04/2025 | Salish Current
  • High-tech lollipops that detect disease

    Ashleigh Theberge, a UW professor of chemistry, pursues projects ranging from designing at-home biological sample collection kits to exploring the physics of liquid flow to investigating molecules made by filamentous fungi. Her broad-ranging interests made her a fit for the Schmidt Polymaths Program, which supports mid-career scientists pursuing interdisciplinary research.
    11/03/2025 | Nautilus
  • Moon Duchin on the math of gerrymandering

    Dr. Duchin leads the Data and Democracy Research Initiative at the University of Chicago. In October, Duchin delivered the annual Blackwell Seminar, which honors one of her heroes, the mathematician and statistician David Blackwell. The UW is mentioned.
    11/03/2025 | The New York Times
  • We are First-Generation: College of Arts & Sciences Faculty and Staff

    In the College of Arts & Sciences, we are proud to celebrate our first-generation community through a collection of stories! We honor our faculty and staff, and their many contributions to our university community and beyond.

    10/31/2025 | College of Arts & Sciences
  • All aboard: UW researchers bring expertise to inaugural ocean week events

    In the wake of One Ocean Week Seattle, participating University of Washington researchers share highlights, connecting the weeks events to ongoing efforts to understand and protect marine ecosystems and coastal communities.

    10/28/2025 | UW News
  • Emissions from economic growth undermine international progress on climate change, UW study says

    A decade ago, nearly every country in the world adopted the Paris Agreement, which aims to limit the rise in global warming to well below 2 degrees Celsius by 2100. Adrian Raftery, professor emeritus of statistics and of sociology, is interviewed.
    10/27/2025 | OPB
  • Cicadas sing in sync as the sun rises

    Although cicadas are known to sing in unison, a new study shows the striking behavior of cicadas interacting with each other when a few cicadas sing, the others join. Saumya Gupta, a postdoctoral researcher of biology at the UW, is quoted.
    10/27/2025 | Mongabay
  • Were school COVID closures worth it? Not really, UW study finds

    COVID-era school closures caused the U.S. significant economic and educational loss while being less effective than other transmission interventions, according to new research. Adrian Raftery, professor emeritus of statistics and of sociology, is quoted.
    10/20/2025 | KUOW
  • Editorial: Seattleites Nobel Prize-winning work benefits all humanity

    Seattleite Mary Brunkow said she was astonished when she learned she and two scientist colleagues had won the 2025 Nobel Prize for medicine or physiology. But based on her career accomplishments in medical research, she shouldnt have been. Brunkow earned a bachelors degree in molecular and cellular biology from the UW.
    10/20/2025 | The Seattle Times
  • The Paris Agreement is working, but not well enough to offset economic growth

    University of Washington researchers analyzed data collected in the decade following the Paris Agreement, an international treaty signed in 2015 to limit warming by cutting emissions. The treaty has helped nations reduce the amount of carbon released per dollar, but emissions are still too high due to global economic growth.

    10/17/2025 | UW News