How NYU School of Medicine is Harnessing New Tech
Dr. Marc Triola is embracing new technologies to improve the ways we teach at NYU School of Medicine.
How One of Our Graduates Rescued Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
When Dr. Martin Luther King was stabbed in 1958, Dr. Aubré de Lambert Maynard, a graduate of what became NYU Grossman School of Medicine, helped save him.
How Oxytocin Boosts Parenting Skills
NYU Langone researchers find that after oxytocin levels rise in virgin mice, they exhibit maternal behavior; humans may do the same.
How Oxytocin Makes a Mom
Findings redefine oxytocin as not just a ‘love drug,’ but more as an amplifier and suppressor of neural signals in the brain.
How People of Color Can Advocate for Their Health
Dr. Kathie-Ann Joseph, an oncologist at NYU Langone’s Perlmutter Cancer Center, discusses how people of color can advocate for their health.
How Poor Glycemic Control & Obesity Worsen COVID-19 Outcomes
NYU Langone endocrinologist Dr. José O. Alemán and colleagues discover troubling links between glycemic control, obesity, and COVID-19.
How Reconstructive Surgery Kept a College Athlete Playing
Dr. Laith M. Jazrawi and Dr. Young W. Kwon at NYU Langone’s Sports Medicine Center rebuilt Michael’s sternoclavicular joint after it was dislocated.
How Singing Mice May Help Us Understand Language Deficits
NYU Langone neuroscientist Dr. Michael A. Long studies singing mice to demonstrate the brain mechanisms behind coordinated vocal turn-taking.
How Spine Surgeon Dr. Erich Anderer Empowers His Patients
Dr. Erich Anderer, chief of neurosurgery at NYU Langone Hospital—Brooklyn helps an injured athlete recover fully.
How Stress & Mother’s Abuse Affect Infant Brain
A new NYU School of Medicine study shows the effects of an abusive mother–child relationship, especially during the pivotal first weeks of life.