“With rising global temperatures and decreasing water availability, dehydration is becoming a more common challenge,” he said ...
In her new book, Christina Schwenkel explains how sound became a vital tool in the country’s COVID-19 response ...
Genetic or bacterial diseases have previously been shown to have an effect on lung microbes. However, a UC Riverside ...
Theodore L. Hullar, who served as UC Riverside’s fifth chancellor from 1985 to 1987, died Sept. 28 at the age of 90.
Equity investors improved airport operating and customer service, finds a global study that spanned two decades and four ...
As the warehousing and logistics industry becomes increasingly entrenched in Southern California’s Inland Empire, a bold ...
MS is a chronic autoimmune disorder that damages myelin, leading to symptoms such as vision issues, fatigue, coordination ...
A newly described fossil reveals that leeches are at least 200 million years older than scientists previously thought, and that their earliest ancestors may have feasted not on blood, but on smaller ...
Aggressive immigration practices — such as detention, deportation, and workplace raids — are contributing to widespread emotional trauma among both immigrant and U.S.-born children living in ...
Add this to the benefits of being in a couple: A safe space in which to dish. “Spill the Tea, Honey: Gossiping Predicts Well-Being in Same- and Different-Gender Couples” is the name of a new study ...
A UC Riverside study has found that as land in California's Central Valley sinks due to excessive groundwater pumping, so do local housing values. The research found that homes in subsiding — or ...
Chemists have confirmed a 67-year-old theory about vitamin B1 by stabilizing a reactive molecule in water — a feat long thought impossible. The discovery not only solves a biochemical mystery, but ...