The College of Arts and Sciences invites you to participate in the 2025 CAS Research Week Poster Session. This event will showcase and celebrate the outstanding work of CAS undergraduate, graduate, ...
April 9, 2025 9:30 am to 11:30 am About this event Celebrate undergraduate research and researchers by visiting the Spring 2025 Undergraduate Research Symposium Engineering and Physical Sciences ...
Please carefully review the requirements to create a printed poster presentation. Your poster serves as a "visual aid" to your 1-2 minute verbal explanation of your research to audience members. It is ...
LabRoots is pleased to announce the 10th Annual Laboratory Animal Science Virtual Conference which will take place on February 10, 2021. This is a premier online-only conference that will bring ...
UW computer science students Shirley Xue (left) and Dilini Nissanka wearing low-powered wireless earnings they helped develop that could be an alternative to smartwatches and other wearable health ...
A recently hosted research day, through departmental collaboration within the Faculty of Health Sciences, brought together ...
The Fall Undergraduate Research Symposium is a Charles Center signature event that showcases hundreds of diverse research projects completed both by students receiving Charles Center summer research ...
The College of Arts and Sciences is hosting a poster session in 3423 and 3433 Dunbar Hall. Over 30 posters from various departments will be on display for the public. Faculty and students will be in ...
Labroots is proud to present the 13th Annual Cancer Research & Oncology Virtual Event Series, taking place on October 1, 2025. This free, online conference brings together global experts in cancer ...
Bio Research Day is an annual event hosted by the Department of Biological Sciences to showcase our student and faculty research. The event is a celebration of the outstanding work conducted within ...
Each year, scientists present countless research posters at conferences, symposia and academic gatherings, making the poster one of the most common—and most visible—forms of scientific communication.