PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Ashley R. Carter to receive 2026 PUI Faculty Award

2025-09-23
(Press-News.org) BETHESDA, MD – The Biophysical Society is pleased to announce that Ashley R. Carter, of Amherst College, USA, has been named the recipient of the 2026 PUI Faculty Award. Carter will be honored at the Society’s 70th Annual Meeting, being held in San Francisco, California from February 21-25, 2026.

Carter will be recognized for her remarkable contributions to biophysics research, mentoring of undergraduate students, and leadership in guiding the next generation of scientists to advance the field of biophysics.

“Ashley has clearly demonstrated excellence in undergraduate research mentorship throughout her career. Her dedication to her students is exemplary,” said BPS President Lynmarie Thompson of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “Her remarkable contributions to biophysics research and her dedication to mentoring undergraduate students embody the spirit and purpose of this prestigious award.”

About the Award – The PUI Faculty Award, introduced in 2025, honors excellence in academic research and mentoring by faculty at a primarily undergraduate institution (PUI).

###

The Biophysical Society, founded in 1958, is a professional, scientific society established to lead an innovative global community working at the interface of the physical and life sciences, across all levels of complexity, and to foster the dissemination of that knowledge. The Society promotes growth in this expanding field through its Annual Meeting, publications, and outreach activities. Its 6,500 members are located throughout the world, where they teach and conduct research in colleges, universities, laboratories, government agencies, and industry.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Air pollution and childhood myopia 

2025-09-23
Myopia, or short-sightedness, is on the rise worldwide and has become a major public health issue—especially in East Asia, where large numbers of school-aged children are affected. Traditionally, factors such as family history, intensive reading, heavy screen use, and limited time spent outdoors have been seen as the main causes. Hua Yan and colleagues suggests another possible cause: poor air quality. The authors studied nearly 30,000 children in Tianjin, China, using explainable automated machine learning tools ...

Wiener studying perception of time & memorability in the visual hierarchy

2025-09-23
Martin Wiener, Associate Professor, Psychology, College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHSS), received funding for the study: “CRCNS US-Israel Research Proposal: NSF-BSF: The Perception of Time and Memorability in the Visual Hierarchy.” Dr. Wiener is collaborating with Ayelet Landau, Associate Professor, Cognitive Science and Psychology, Hebrew University, and Yuval Benjamini, Associate Professor, Statistics and Data Science, Hebrew University.  Dr. Wiener will conduct research at George Mason in consultation with the co-principal investigators, who will be conducting their own ...

Wijesekera receives funding for operational technology digital twin & scanning support

2025-09-23
Duminda Wijesekera, Professor, Cyber Security Engineering, College of Engineering and Computing (CEC), received funding for: “Operational Technology Digital Twin and Scanning Support.” He will develop two simultaneous strands of work, that will be merged at the end: Conduct LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) mapping of a Steel Plant and specifically high-temperate Infrared ovens used for powder-coating on steel sheets that pass through the mill at high speed; and Develop a digital twin of the factory. Additionally, he will coordinate with Datalytica’s modeling team to optimize camera placement ...

Researchers find “protective switches” that may make damaged livers suitable for transplantation

2025-09-23
In a mouse model of liver transplantation, UCLA researchers have identified proteins that act as “protective switches” guarding the liver against damage occurring when blood supply is restored during transplantation, a process known as ischemia-reperfusion injury. The finding could increase the supply of donor organs by using molecular therapies to strengthen the liver’s protective pathways. By boosting this protection,  organs that would otherwise be discarded as damaged or suboptimal could be made suitable for transplantation and added to the donor pool, said Kenneth J. Dery, Ph.D, an associate adjunct professor of surgery in the division of liver and pancreas ...

Designing materials for next-generation propulsion systems

2025-09-23
The ability to reliably order groceries or takeout, have rapid package delivery, check the weather forecast, or follow GPS tracking is all a part of the US’s ever-growing satellite and space economy. The continued growth of this economy relies on advancements in propulsion technologies. One such breakthrough is the “Rotating Detonation Engine" (RDE). The RDE offers the ability to deliver satellites to precise orbits in outer space with greater robustness and reduced fuel consumption and emissions than with current conventional engines. However, there are many fundamental scientific challenges that remain ...

European colonizers altered the genetic ancestry of Indigenous peoples in southern Africa

2025-09-23
A genomic analysis of over 1,200 people from across South Africa reveals how colonial-era European, Indigenous Khoe-San peoples, and enslaved people contributed to the modern-day gene pool in South Africa. Publishing September 23 in the Cell Press journal The American Journal of Human Genetics, the study found that genes inherited from both colonial Europeans and enslaved people are most common in Cape Town and become less frequent with distance from the colony’s epicenter. The results also show that European ancestors were more likely to be male, ...

Tracking the evolution of Taylor Swift’s dialect

2025-09-23
WASHINGTON, Sept. 23, 2025 -- Taylor Swift is one of the biggest pop singers in history, influencing millions of fans with her music. Thanks to years of recorded interviews, she is also influencing how we understand the ways that people adopt accents and regional dialects. In JASA, published on behalf of the Acoustical Society of America by AIP Publishing, a pair of researchers from the University of Minnesota analyzed years of Swift’s recorded interviews to track how her dialect has evolved. Authors ...

International team publishes framework for study of ‘Earth engineers’

2025-09-23
An international team of scientists, led by the University of Nebraska–Lincoln’s S. Kathleen Lyons, is providing a new framework — Earth system engineering — for examining how organisms, including humans, have fundamentally altered ecosystems on a global scale across hundreds, thousands or millions of years. The framework was published in Trends in Ecology and Evolution and builds on ecosystem engineering, which describes how organisms change their physical environment to thrive. Earth system engineering is a novel approach that distinguishes ...

Applied Microbiology International joins forces with microbiology leaders to launch Global Climate Change Strategy

2025-09-23
In a bold step toward climate action, leading microbiology societies and organizations have unveiled their first joint global strategy to harness the power of microbial science in addressing the climate crisis. This landmark strategy has been published across 6 scientific journals, including FEMS Microbiology Ecology, mBio, Microbiology Australia, Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Research, Sustainable Microbiology and The ISME Journal. On May 23, 2025, leaders from microbiology organizations from around the world gathered in Washington, D.C., for the Global Strategy Meeting on Microbes and Climate Change. The goal was to unite ...

Running dry – a new study warns of extreme water scarcity in the coming decades

2025-09-23
A new study published in the journal Nature Communications by researchers from the IBS Center for Climate Physics (ICCP) at Pusan National University in the Republic of Korea reveals that Global Warming is accelerating the risk of multi-year droughts that can lead to extreme water scarcity, threatening water demands in cities, agriculture, and livelihoods worldwide, already within the coming decades. The study uses the latest generation of climate model simulations to determine the time when local water demands will exceed the regional water supply from precipitation, rivers, and reservoirs. This time is commonly referred to as the Day Zero Drought ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

New multi-registry study highlights ocrelizumab’s superior relapse control in multiple sclerosis

Wonhwa Cho to receive Biophysical Society’s 2026 Award in the Biophysics of Health and Disease

Future generations: NSF-funded project explores how nanoplastics are transmitted to offspring

Erdinc Sezgin to receive 2026 Early Independent Career Award

Charles L. Brooks III to receive 2026 Klaus Schulten and Zaida Luthey-Schulten Computational Biophysics Lecture Award

Jie Xiao to receive 2026 Carolyn Cohen Innovation Award

Elizabeth Hinde and Jorge Alegre-Cebollada to receive 2026 Michael and Kate Bárány Award

Nuria Assa-Munt to receive 2026 Rosalba Kampman Distinguished Service Award

Yifan Cheng to receive 2026 Anatrace Membrane Protein Award

A. Joshua Wand to receive the 2026 Ignacio Tinoco Award

Sarah Veatch to receive 2026 Agnes Pockels Award in Lipids and Membrane Biophysics

The Italian Communist Party and the pursuit of revolutionary science

Study warns pest resistance threatens corn industry's newest biotech defense

Ethical robots and AI take center stage with support from National Science Foundation grant

USC researchers win $8 million NIH grant to pursue novel Alzheimer’s drug

New research identifies educational strategies that fuel lifestyle medicine adoption across health systems

Provider misperceptions, not knowledge or profit, drive inappropriate antibiotic overprescribing for child diarrhea in India

Biophysical Society announces 2026 Society Fellows

Yiechang Lin and Kai Sheng to receive 2026 Outstanding Doctoral Research in Biophysics Award

Hawa Racine Thiam to receive the 2026 Margaret Oakley Dayhoff Award

Ken A. Dill to receive Biophysical Society’s 2026 Founders Award

Ashley R. Carter to receive 2026 PUI Faculty Award

Air pollution and childhood myopia 

Wiener studying perception of time & memorability in the visual hierarchy

Wijesekera receives funding for operational technology digital twin & scanning support

Researchers find “protective switches” that may make damaged livers suitable for transplantation

Designing materials for next-generation propulsion systems

European colonizers altered the genetic ancestry of Indigenous peoples in southern Africa

Tracking the evolution of Taylor Swift’s dialect

International team publishes framework for study of ‘Earth engineers’

[Press-News.org] Ashley R. Carter to receive 2026 PUI Faculty Award