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Binghamton engineer creates origami battery | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/features/paper-6113.html
Binghamton engineer creates origami battery. By Rachel Coker •. Jun 10, 2015 •. Origami, the Japanese art of paper folding, can be used to create beautiful birds, frogs and other small sculptures. Now a Binghamton University engineer says the technique can be applied to building batteries, too. Seokheun Sean Choi developed an inexpensive, bacteria-powered battery made from paper, he writes in the July edition of the journal. While paper-based biosensors have shown promise in this area, the existing techn...
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Engineer pursues biological solar power | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/news/biosolar-5986.html
Engineer pursues biological solar power. By Todd R. McAdam •. Feb 10, 2015 •. A Binghamton University engineering researcher designed a biological solar cell that’s a million times more effective than current technology. Preliminary data on Seokheun Sean Choi’s next advancement is a thousand times better than that. His cell also works in the dark, and is self-sustaining. Lab on a Chip. And Choi’s latest experiment churns out milliwatts per square centimeter reducing the calculator’s solar pan...That brin...
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Psychologist takes aim at anxiety disorders | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/features/anxiety-3100.html
Psychologist takes aim at anxiety disorders. By Todd R. McAdam •. Jun 8, 2010 •. When it comes to dealing with anxiety disorders, Meredith Coles has no interest in modest goals. How grandiose do we want to be? She said when asked about her dream for the field. I don’t want anyone to have obsessive-compulsive disorder, ever again. That’s pretty grandiose. Coles and her staff have already looked at some of the roots of the disorders, including research that points out the difficulty patients have in percei...
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Student seeks new understanding of brain | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/student-spotlights/lew-6127.html
Student seeks new understanding of brain. By Todd R. McAdam •. Jul 6, 2015 •. Brandon Lew wants to discover whether a person really can drink himself stupid. The science is more complex than you’d think, and to an undergraduate like Lew, a lot more fun. For me, I really like the lab meetings and talking about the research, says Lew, a physics and integrative neuroscience major from Massapequa, N.Y. I like the whole scientific process. No idea is stupid, Donovick says. Lew is subjecting adolescent rats to...
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Goldwater scholar focuses on wind energy | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/student-spotlights/pereyra-6085.html
Goldwater scholar focuses on wind energy. By Todd R. McAdam •. Jun 4, 2015 •. A year ago, Brandon Pereyra perched 165 feet above the plains of Golden, Colo., looked to the distant Rocky Mountains, then returned his attention to the gears of a wind turbine and how to make them more effective. Winning the Barry M. Goldwater scholarship, a $7,500 prize given to 260 undergraduate researchers, is nice, but just a mile marker on the road to something really big: efficient, affordable, green energy. I’ve ...
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Students | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/category/student-spotlights
Engineer innovates en route to med school. Published Mar 22, 2017. Binghamton undergrad studies tissue engineering, develops tool for first responders. Read more. Psychology student wins NSF fellowship. Published Jun 20, 2016. Elizabeth Cope Feurer hopes to find out whether laboratory methods of studying reactions to stress reflect the way adolescents experience stress in the real world. Read more. Physicist earns postdoctoral fellowship. Published May 10, 2016. Published Dec 8, 2015. Research in the news.
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News | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/category/news
Origami ninja star inspires battery design. Published Jun 7, 2016. A new disposable fuel cell developed at Binghamton could power biosensors and other small devices for use in challenging field conditions. Read more. Physicists gain new view of superconductor. Published Apr 13, 2016. A team of physicists, including Binghamton's Michael Lawler, has directly observed some unique characteristics of a superconductor for the first time, according to a paper published in the journal Nature. Read more. Binghamt...
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Features | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/category/features
Funding boosts flexible electronics research. Published Sep 1, 2015. Binghamton will lead the New York node of a new $75 million, five-year initiative to advance flexible hybrid electronics manufacturing. Read more. Binghamton engineer creates origami battery. Published Jun 10, 2015. Inexpensive paper batteries could one day power biosensors for use in remote locations. Read more. Research Days scheduled April 22-24. Published Apr 13, 2015. Innovation Day is April 24. Published Mar 10, 2015. How your sma...
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Faculty novelist now a best-selling author | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/news/rosenberg-2-5917.html
Faculty novelist now a best-selling author. By Rachel Coker •. Nov 5, 2014 •. Liz Rosenberg’s latest novel,. The Moonlight Palace,. Enjoyed a period atop the Kindle best-seller charts this fall. From Lake Union Publishing, was released in October. Thanks in part to a special Kindle First promotion and a 20-city virtual book tour, it has already reached a wide audience more than 100,000 readers in the first month of pre-publication. She recalls. And then this 17-year-old girl came into my life! I’ve alway...
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Student blends engineering, biology | Binghamton University Research News
http://discovere.binghamton.edu/student-spotlights/irwin-6121.html
Student blends engineering, biology. By Kenny Berkowitz •. Jun 10, 2015 •. Both are part of the motivation that drives Irwin, a 2015 graduate who plans to pursue a doctorate in bioengineering, and whose participation on these projects was a life-changing experience. As an undergraduate, being able to do research at this level is really cool, she says. It’s different from being in a lab as part of a class, where there’s a desired outcome that your professor wants you to have.”. You Might Also Like. Donna ...
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