IU News Archives
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Ben Rhodes, former deputy national security advisor to Obama, to speak at IU Bloomington
February 13, 2017Serving as deputy national security advisor from 2009 to 2017, Rhodes oversaw the president's national security communications, speechwriting, public diplomacy and global engagement programming. He previously served former Congressman Lee Hamilton.
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Study considers ripple effects of CEO awards
February 13, 2017The study's authors say both shareholders and board directors can learn from the research, which revealed tendencies among CEOs when their competitor wins an award and they do not.
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Report from Indiana University center examines state education funding
February 9, 2017The report from the Center for Evaluation and Education Policy will help guide Indiana legislators as they develop a two-year budget that includes funding for public schools.
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Computer trained to predict which AML patients will go into remission, which will relapse
February 9, 2017Researchers have developed the first computer machine-learning model to accurately predict which patients diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia, or AML, will go into remission following treatment for their disease and which will relapse.
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Engineer Dan McNerny joins IURTC as technology manager to evaluate, market intellectual property
February 9, 2017The hiring of Dan McNerny will strengthen IURTC's ability to evaluate invention disclosures from IU faculty and staff, find appropriate protection, and market them to corporate partners.
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IUPUI researcher seeks new way of increasing empathy in physicians
February 9, 2017"Do no harm" are words often associated with the oath taken by physicians when they become practitioners. Amber Comer's research may add another phrase: Be kind.
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IU School of Education faculty share NSF grant to study failure as crucial part of learning
February 8, 2017The project, "Maker: Studying the Role of Failure in Design and Making," will delve into how failure plays an important role for youth and educators, particularly those involved in STEM activities.
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Researchers at IU, other universities to explore humanities perspective on environmental change
February 7, 2017Indiana University religious studies scholar Lisa Sideris and colleagues at three other universities will receive $141,215 over three years for a project that will bring humanities perspectives to climate change and other issues of human-environment interaction. The project, "Being Human in the Age of Humans: Perspectives from Religion and Ethics, researches new ways of envisioning what it means to be human in the Anthropocene, or the Age of Humans.