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

A. Joshua Wand to receive the 2026 Ignacio Tinoco Award

2025-09-23
(Press-News.org) BETHESDA, MD – The Biophysical Society is pleased to announce that A. Joshua Wand, of Texas A&M University, USA, will receive the 2026 Ignacio Tinoco Award. Wand will be honored at the Society’s 70th Annual Meeting, being held in San Francisco, California from February 21-25, 2026.

Wand is being recognized for pioneering contributions to understanding the structural and mechanistic bases of biomolecular function.

“Josh is an outstanding scientist. His recognition aptly honors the legacy of Ignacio “Nacho” Tinoco, who challenged our community to continually push our fundamental understanding of biophysics,” said BPS President Lynmarie Thompson of the University of Massachusetts Amherst. “By using cutting-edge NMR approaches, Josh has been able to answer a broad range of critical biological questions, and we are honored to recognize him with this award.”

About the Award – The Ignacio "Nacho" Tinoco Award of the Biophysical Society honors the scientific contributions, work, and life of an outstanding biophysical chemist. Tinoco’s contributions to the spectroscopic, thermodynamic, structural, and single-molecule study of biopolymers consistently deepened our understanding of fundamental biophysical principles, constantly moving this field toward new frontiers. This award is intended to recognize meritorious investigators who make important contributions to the physical chemistry of macromolecules.

###

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:

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

2025-09-23
BETHESDA, MD – The Biophysical Society is pleased to announce that Sarah Veatch, of the University of Michigan, USA, will receive the 2026 Agnes Pockels Award in Lipids and Membrane Biophysics. Veatch will be honored at the Society’s 70th Annual Meeting, being held in San Francisco, California from February 21-25, 2026. Veatch is being honored for foundational scientific research understanding the miscibility phase transition and associated critical phenomena in membranes and for the rigorous application of these biophysical ...

The Italian Communist Party and the pursuit of revolutionary science

2025-09-23
Although scholarship has demonstrated the inextricability of the history of science from the histories of industry and politics, little attention has been paid to the role of political parties in the shaping of scientific inquiry. A new article in Isis, “The Political Elaboration on Science and Technology of the Italian Communist Party Between the 1960s and the 1980s,” investigates how political parties mediate social change and scientific progress, using the Partito Comunista Italiano as its object of analysis. After WWII, the leadership of the PCI, mostly predominated by humanists and social scientists, considered ...

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

2025-09-23
Corn rootworms, pests responsible for billions of dollars in yearly crop losses, are evolving resistance that weakens even the latest biotechnology controls, according to a new study published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.  Drawing on decades of data across multiple states, University of Arizona entomologists found that field-evolved resistance to Bacillus thuringiensis, or Bt, is undermining the effectiveness of corn that targets rootworms with the combination of Bt and RNA interference, or RNAi, a new biotech control that turns the rootworms' own genetic instructions against them. The research ...

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

2025-09-23
Ethical robots and AI take center stage with support from National Science Foundation grant September 15, 2025 — Virginia Tech researchers received a grant worth more than $500,000 from the National Science Foundation to expand robot theater, an after-school program that helps children explore robotics through performance-based learning. In a world where human-robot interaction is constantly evolving, grade school children gain firsthand experience collaborating with robots using art as a medium. They spend ...

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

2025-09-23
Backed by the combined expertise of three USC schools, scientists are developing a new drug aimed at a previously unexplored biological target in Alzheimer’s disease, aided by an $8 million grant from the National Institutes of Health. The team, led by Hussein Yassine of the Keck School of Medicine of USC, is investigating why some carriers of the APOE4 gene — the strongest genetic risk factor for Alzheimer’s — develop dementia while others remain cognitively healthy. “Our lab has identified an enzyme that predisposes the brain to inflammation,” Yassine said. “The challenge ...

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

2025-09-23
Expanding access to lifestyle medicine education opportunities—such as continuing medical education (CME) courses, professional certification, webinars, mentoring and peer-to-peer connections, and conference participation—can facilitate the adoption of the medical specialty across health systems, according to a new study published in Translational Behavioral Medicine. This qualitative study conducted by the American College of Lifestyle Medicine (ACLM) found that intentional educational strategies are critical to the adoption and growth of lifestyle medicine programming and facilitate deepening of clinicians’ knowledge, skills, and confidence in delivering ...

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

2025-09-23
Durham, NC — 23 September 2025 — Researchers from USC and Duke report that the persistent “know-do gap” — where clinicians know guidelines but practice differently — is the primary driver of antibiotic overprescribing for pediatric diarrhea in India’s private sector, not lack of knowledge, point-of-sale profits, or stockouts of clinically recommended treatments such as oral rehydration salts (ORS). In a sample of 2,282 private providers across 253 towns, 70 percent prescribed antibiotics without signs of bacterial infection, and among those who knew antibiotics ...

Biophysical Society announces 2026 Society Fellows

2025-09-23
BETHESDA, MD – The Biophysical Society is proud to announce its 2026 Society Fellows. This award honors the Society’s distinguished members who have demonstrated excellence in science and contributed to the expansion of the field of biophysics. The Fellows will be honored at the Biophysical Society’s 70th Annual Meeting, being held in San Francisco, California from February 21-25, 2026. The 2026 Fellows are: Kenneth J. Breslauer, Linus Pauling Distinguished Professor, Rutgers, The State ...

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

2025-09-23
BETHESDA, MD – The Biophysical Society is pleased to announce that Yiechang Lin, of Australian National University, Australia and Kai Sheng, of Scripps Research, USA, have been named recipients of the 2026 Outstanding Doctoral Research in Biophysics Award. Lin and Sheng will be honored at the Society’s 70th Annual Meeting, being held in San Francisco, California from February 21-25, 2026. Lin will be recognized for advancing our understanding of how lipid-protein interactions affect function and Sheng will be recognized for pioneering new approaches to elucidate the mechanism of bacterial ribosome ...

Hawa Racine Thiam to receive the 2026 Margaret Oakley Dayhoff Award

2025-09-23
BETHESDA, MD – The Biophysical Society is pleased to announce that Hawa Racine Thiam, of Stanford University, USA, will receive the 2026 Margaret Oakley Dayhoff Award. Thiam will be honored at the Society’s 70th Annual Meeting, being held in San Francisco, California from February 21-25, 2026. Thiam is being recognized for being a trailblazer of subcellular biophysics and unveiling new paradigms of biophysical immunology through her dynamic measurements of physical forces on organelles in real time. “I am delighted that Hawa Racine’s name will be added to the list of remarkable women in biophysics,” said BPS President ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

A new way to trigger responses in the body

Teeth of babies of stressed mothers come out earlier, suggests study

Slimming with seeds: Cumin curry spice fights fat

Leak-proof gasket with functionalized boron nitride nanoflakes enhances performance and durability

Gallup and West Health unveil new state rankings of Americans’ healthcare experiences

Predicting disease outbreaks using social media 

Linearizing tactile sensing: A soft 3D lattice sensor for accurate human-machine interactions

Nearly half of Australian adults experienced childhood trauma, increasing mental illness risk by 50 percent

HKUMed finds depression doubles mortality rates and increases suicide risk 10-fold; timely treatment can reduce risk by up to 30%

HKU researchers develop innovative vascularized tumor model to advance cancer immunotherapy

Floating solar panels show promise, but environmental impacts vary by location, study finds

Molecule that could cause COVID clotting key to new treatments

Root canal treatment reduces heart disease and diabetes risk

The gold standard: Researchers end 20-year spin debate on gold surface with definitive, full-map quantum imaging

ECMWF and European Partners win prestigious HPCwire Award for "Best Use Of AI Methods for Augmenting HPC Applications” – for AI innovation in weather and climate

Unearthing the City of Seven Ravines

Ancient sediments reveal Earth’s hidden wildfire past

Child gun injury risk spikes when children leave school for the day

Pennington Biomedical’s Dr. Leanne Redman recruited to lead the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney

Social media sentiment can predict when people move during crises, improving humanitarian response

Through the wires: Technology developed by FAMU-FSU College of Engineering faculty mitigates flaws in superconducting wires

Climate resilience found in traditional Hawaiian fishponds

Wearable lets users control machines and robots while on the move

Pioneering clean hydrogen breakthrough: Dr. Muhammad Aziz to unveil multi-scale advances in chemical looping technology

Using robotic testing to spot overlooked sensory deficits in stroke survivors

Breakthrough material advances uranium extraction from seawater, paving the way for sustainable nuclear energy

Emerging pollutants threaten efficiency of wastewater treatment: New review highlights urgent research needs

ACP encourages all adults to receive the 2025-2026 influenza vaccine

Scientists document rise in temperature-related deaths in the US

A unified model of memory and perception: how Hebbian learning explains our recall of past events

[Press-News.org] A. Joshua Wand to receive the 2026 Ignacio Tinoco Award