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Tulane researcher wins funding for major initiative to advance imaging technologies tulane.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tulane.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Tulane professor to lead NIH group developing advances in brain science tulane.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from tulane.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A team of Tulane University researchers has launched a study to better understand how children are affected by skin and hair-type discrimination as they develop into adulthood. Researchers from the Tulane School of Social Work and the Department of Psychology in the Tulane School of Science and Engineering are conducting an anonymous online survey asking adults to recall childhood experiences of acceptance or rejection based on their skin tone and hair type. Marva Lewis, an associate professor of social work and the principal investigator of the study, said that while colorism and hair-type discrimination are pervasive and widely depicted in the media, little research has been done on the socioemotional impact of such experiences on children. ....
A team of Louisiana researchers, including a group from the Tulane University School of Science and Engineering, has developed a smart quantum technology that could have real-world applications to quantum networks and future quantum communications systems used in the military. Ryan Glasser, an associate professor of physics at Tulane, and his team in the Department of Physics, collaborated on the study with researchers from Louisiana State University. The study was featured on the cover of the March 2021 issue of “Recent developments in optical technologies have resulted in extremely high information transfer rates using the spatial properties of light i.e. images (and more complex structured beams),” Glasser said. “However, a difficulty in such communications using light through free-space is that turbulence can severely distort the beams, resulting in errors in the communication.” ....