03/19/2024
Ta-dah! Welcome to Carnegie Science's new brand and visual identity!
At Carnegie Science, we empower the world's leading researchers to explore big questions and expand bold ideas that transform understanding of ourselves, our world, and the universe around us.
The new look and feel that we're rolling out today communicates the bold, trailblazing work that our scientists are undertaking across our research divisions.
Bold. Boundless. Wondrous. Carnegie Science launches new visual identity
Introducing Carnegie Science's new visual identity!
06/05/2023
2023 Mini-Symposium: How Cells Decide Their Fate.
Register here 👉 bit.ly/43Jd40Z
The organisms that inhabit the world around us, from plants to humans to bacterial biofilms, are composed of millions to trillions of different cells, each with specialized roles. This year's mini-symposium will focus on the mechanisms that allow these cell types to form, cooperate, and regenerate.
Our featured speakers use cutting-edge biological systems and technologies to make new discoveries about cell fate determination. Join us on June 23 to learn more!
03/21/2023
We're proud to announce that our own Phillip Cleves is part of Pew Environment's 2023 Pew Marine Fellows! https://pew.org/3LsmOH2
12/08/2022
This is a great spotlight on Johns Hopkins grad student Kent Kotaka! As a member of our Ludington Lab, Kent hopes to shed light on what makes a microbiome stable over time. His work could help gut bacterial communities recover from chronic disruptions.
Achieving Biological Balance
Kent Kotaka ’22 works in William Ludington's lab examining how two groups of bacteria, Acetobacter and Lactobacillus, get along in the guts of a special bree...
09/12/2022
Our 2022/23 seminar season kicked off today with "Exploring the Evolution of Hawaiian Corals," presented by Dr. Debashish Bhattacharya of Rutgers University!
Seminars are held on Mondays at 12pm Est. Join us in person in Baltimore, MD — or watch via Zoom! Visit https://emb.carnegiescience.edu/seminars for the full schedule.
07/12/2022
Exciting news from the Kostova Lab!
Congrats to Carnegie's Liewei “Leo” Yan, who was awarded a prestigious and highly selective fellowship from the Jane Coffin Childs Memorial Fund for Medical Research. The three-year grant will bolster his efforts to determine how different types of ribosomes guide complex biological processes, such as embryogenesis and cancer development.
Read: https://bit.ly/3og7D7f
05/12/2022
We're thrilled to have such an incredible line-up of scientists for our mini-symposium on June 2! Our first speaker, Carey Nadell of Dartmouth College, will present "Bacterial Biofilm Architecture & Predator-prey Ecology at Cellular Resolution" at 9:30am ET.
Join us in person or watch via Zoom! Register here (free): https://mailchi.mp/carnegiescience.edu/2022-mini-symposium
05/10/2022
On behalf of the 2022 Postdoc Symposium Committee, we wish to invite you to our 36th annual Mini-Symposium: "Structure and Organization in Biology."
Join us in person on June 2nd, or watch via Zoom! Register now (free): https://mailchi.mp/carnegiescience.edu/2022-mini-symposium
From a single molecule to an entire ecosystem, structure informs function. This year’s mini-symposium focuses on this central idea and explores how structure and organization shape biological interactions. The featured speakers study diverse areas of biology, both in scale and kingdom, enabling a unique, multi-perspective discussion.
04/14/2022
Today at 6pm Eastern! You're invited to a Carnegie Embryology Science in the Neighborhood public lecture with Dr. Alexandria Forbes, President & CEO of clinical-stage gene therapy company MeiraGTx. Free, but registration is required: https://carnegiescience.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ZmJ2XniGS2OJhdhjYyotcQ