December 26, 2024
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Top 10 Binghamton University Research Stories of 2024

Posted by Katie Liu on Thursday, December 19, 2024

Binghamton University scholars are wrapping up another successful year, with projects ranging from developing artificial plants to reconstructing the lines of a famously script-less film.

According to a Stanford University study that looks at the impact of scientists worldwide, Distinguished Professor of Chemistry M. Stanley Whittingham is Binghamton's most influential researcher. Binghamton research found that the ingredient labels on tattoo ink often don’t match the actual substances in the bottle. New research from Binghamton University sheds light on which men might choose to ignore a lack of consent during a hookup and why. Binghamton doctoral student Maryam Rezaie, left, and Professor Seokheun “Sean” Choi have developed artificial plants that can feed off carbon dioxide, give off oxygen and generate power. A technique devised to extract DNA from ancient specimens could be used to identify badly burned human remains, according to research from Binghamton University researcher Matthew Emery. Nick Kaldis, professor of Chinese studies, and his student Sabrina Yu translated and published a script for the well-known Cantonese-language film Richard W. Smith, founder of Sodus-based Global Aquatic Research and an affiliated faculty member with Binghamton University's Earth Sciences Department, stands at the shore of Canandaigua Lake. Consuming components of the Mediterranean diet is associated with lower levels of perceived stress and mental distress, according to new research from Binghamton. Using ADHD drugs illicitly as a A research team has been exploring how mass layoffs and data breaches could be connected.

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