UB’s climate captains came together on Earth Day to discuss the changes the university will need to make in order to reach its goal of net-zero emissions by 2030.
A genome-wide association study (GWAS) on 120 primary studies including 1.65 million participants including nearly 350,000 participants from non-European ancestries, shows including participants of diverse ancestries facilitates the identification of genomic variants that are more strongly associated with cardiovascular diseases. The authors noted, trans-ancestry GWAS will help identify effector genes and allow for accelerated biological insight and identification of potential drug targets.
As part of an effort to "mitigate the effects of global warming," The Washington Post on Thursday tweeted out an alternate menu, and it is truly bizarre. It’s a complicated dynamic: