News
Students on Wright State’s International Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) team earned a silver medal at a worldwide synthetic biology research project competition.
Wright State will provide office and laboratory space to Air Force personnel in the Neuroscience Engineering Collaboration Building, providing access to the university's MRI scanner.
Lance Greene, professor of anthropology, is a finalist for the Thomas Wolfe Memorial Literary Award for “Their Determination to Remain: A Cherokee Community’s Resistance to the Trail of Tears in North Carolina.”
Clintoria Williams, associate professor of neuroscience, cell biology and physiology, will further her research aimed at identifying novel therapeutic approaches effective for chronic kidney disease.
The fifth annual Runkle Woods Symposium on Nov. 18 will showcase research and artistic creations inspired by the Wright State campus woods.
A SMART scholarship will support Sasha Willis's pursuit of a Ph.D. in human factors and industrial/organizational psychology through Wright State's Eye Movement and Motion Psychophysics Lab.
The Lake Campus Agricultural Program teaches students modern farming practices and helps them to understand the science and relationship that farming has with the environment.
Wright State will collaborate with Central State University, the University of Cincinnati and other institutions in two projects supported by Intel Corporation.
Graduate electrical engineering student Javonne Baker worked on radar-related projects during a summer research program at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.
“The Handbook of Consensual Non-Monogamy Affirming Mental Health Practice” is co-edited by Michelle Vaughan, associate professor in the School of Professional Psychology.