Baby boomers survived rock and roll with hearing intact, study finds
Despite dire predictions about listening to loud music, members of the rock ‘n’ roll generation are aging with much better hearing than their parents had at the same age.
Despite dire predictions about listening to loud music, members of the rock ‘n’ roll generation are aging with much better hearing than their parents had at the same age.
Dr. Yolanda Becker has spent her medical career transplanting organs. Now she’ll be a key part of the governmental body that helps to keep organ transplantation safe and effective.
The Center for the Humanities is planning a public panel discussion on race and racism on Wednesday, Jan. 20.
Textbook costs can be a burden for college students. The University of Wisconsin-Madison’s student government and university administration are working hard to address these potential difficulties on behalf of students and families.
University Health Services (UHS) has once again received national recognition for providing the highest levels of quality care.
UW-Madison senior Nika Roza Danilova has garnered an international following under the name Zola Jesus for her experimental caterwauler music.
Even if you haven’t seen “Avatar,” you may have caught the movie’s trailer on television, heard its characters are blue and 10 feet tall, or know it was directed by James Cameron of “Titanic” and “Terminator” fame. Based on those tidbits, you may have decided you’re dying to see the blockbuster or you’d rather watch paint dry.
Two separate groups of UW-Madison students are unharmed and accounted for after Tuesday’s catastrophic earthquake near Port-au-Prince, Haiti.
Martin Luther King Jr. Day is the only federal holiday designated as a national day of service. Many events this year invite Madison residents of all backgrounds to celebrate King’s legacy by observing “A Day On, Not A Day Off.”
“Market to Market,” the nation’s longest-running agribusiness news show, will host a rural economic summit on Wednesday, Jan. 20, immediately following the Wisconsin Agricultural Economic Outlook Forum.
The pleasing aroma of bubble gum, orange or vanilla is changing the way many young patients are sedated for certain medical procedures.
Robert Yu (left), lecturer in the kinesiology department, works with campus police officer Shelley Thiel (right) to demonstrate a technique for escaping an attacker during a self-defense workshop at the fourth annual Badger Watch Conference held at the Memorial Union on Jan. 7, 2010. Badger Watch, a UW-Madison crime prevention program, is a collaborative effort …
As the global nanotechnology industry continues to produce cutting-edge consumer products, the scientific community is leaving a key part of the U.S. public behind when sharing knowledge of this new field of science, according to a new study by the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Arizona State University.
For the first time in U.S. history, four distinctly different generations are working side by side, and each of them – Matures, Baby Boomers, Generation X and Generation Y – is guided by a different set of values, beliefs and expectations.
A team of University of Wisconsin-Madison researchers has created the strongest form of collagen known to science, a stable alternative to human collagen that could one day be used to treat arthritis and other conditions that result from collagen defects.
Robben W. Fleming, former provost who became the first chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, died on Monday, Jan. 11 at his home in Ann Arbor, Mich. He was 93.
While much of the promise of stem cells springs from their ability to develop into any cell type in the body, the biological workings that control that maturation process are still largely unknown.
Dan Edlebeck has been named interim university registrar, Vice Provost for Enrollment Management Joanne Berg recently announced.
As global climate change fuels more frequent and intense hurricanes and droughts, migratory birds, especially those whose populations are already in decline, will bear the brunt of such climate-fueled weather, suggest a pair of new studies.
Cochlear implants are electronic devices that stimulate auditory nerves directly, bypassing damage in the inner ear, and thus restoring some hearing. Although cochlear implants have revolutionized the treatment of deafness, many users have trouble understanding speech, particularly in crowds.