-
Big Decisions, Little Data
Accurate predictions for the spread of AIDS are hard to come by in countries where health data is limited. An A&S professor's new statistical model has improved accuracy of AIDS projections and is now being adopted by many African countries.
-
Humanities in the Digital Age
With support from a major Challenge Grant, the UW Simpson Center for the Humanities is planning a Digital Humanities Commons to create and evaluate the next generation of digital humanities scholarship.
-
Revisiting Helen of Troy
Disappointed by the depiction of Helen of Troy in a recent film, Ruby Blondell was inspired to research Helen, whom she describes as “simultaneously the supreme object of men’s desire and the instrument, or agent, of their destruction.”
-
Archaeology Field School's a Gem—Literally
The UW's field school at Tel Dor, Israel, took center stage recently when a student unearthed a very rare gemstone, carved with a portrait of Alexander the Great, that dates back to about 230 BCE.
-
Remembering Robert Heilman Through Letters
In a new book, Robert Heilman's life—including his years as chair of the Department of English—is presented through letters to and from colleagues and renowned writers from Theodore Roethke to Wallace Stegner.
-
Mapping Seattle's Gay and Lesbian History
Tour downtown Seattle with Professor Michael Brown and you’ll experience the city from a rarely seen perspective, focusing on Seattle’s gay and lesbian history.
-
Where Economics, Philosophy, and Literature Meet
Greed. Excess. Exploitation of natural resources. Sound familiar? In a new book, Money Matters, Professor Richard Gray explores how these issues played out in late 18th and early 19th century Germany.
-
Athena Unleashed
It doesn't look like much, but Athena is currently the most powerful computer on the UW campus, helping scientists tackle fundamental questions about our universe.
-
The Escalating Role of Religion in Politics
In a new book, Communications professor David Domke looks at important shifts in the use of religion in political messaging, beginning in the 1980s.
-
Searching for Clues in the Kuril Islands
A team of UW faculty and students, along with Russian and Japanese colleagues, are piecing together a history of the isolated Kuril Islands by studying its archaeological, geological, and biological record.
-
Salsa Dance
Juliet McMains, assistant professor of dance, studies the rise in salsa’s popularity and its transformation over time.
-
A Celebration of Undergraduate Research
More than 600 students participated in the 2007 Undergraduate Research Symposium, one of several opportunities to present undergraduate research to the community.
-
Timely Art for Montlake Library
Photography professor Rebecca Cummins’ artwork at the Montlake branch of the Seattle Public Library is an aperture sundial that beams colorful circles of light into the building.