Category: Spring 2020

  • The unique journey of finding a cure for HIV

    The unique journey of finding a cure for HIV

    By Nicole Xu   HIV, or human immunodeficiency virus, is a tedious, lifelong disease. It spreads through bodily fluids and attacks the immune system, specifically the T cells, so that the body can no longer protect itself from other infections. There is no official cure for HIV, but treatment usually involves a continuous prescription of…

  • Skincare: how much should we really care?

    Skincare: how much should we really care?

    By Stephanie Jue Skincare has become all the rage –– Vogue skincare routines plaster YouTube homepages and bottles of similarly-branded products advertising the same age-reducing effects line the shelves of local stores. It seems like brands are always coming up with more and more permutations of the same ingredients you might religiously rub into your…

  • Organic batteries: an unexpected potential renewable energy source

    Organic batteries: an unexpected potential renewable energy source

    By Daniel Cui   Imagine Tesla car company’s incredible renewable and sustainable energy capabilities jammed into a battery that’s smaller than the width of a single strand of your hair. This is exactly what the Liang Li and other researchers at the Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences have been trying to achieve, albeit in…

  • A new partnership: deep learning and the path to Alzheimer’s diagnostic medicine

    A new partnership: deep learning and the path to Alzheimer’s diagnostic medicine

    By Liane Albarghouthi Nowadays, you can unlock your phone just by glancing at the screen thanks to cutting-edge facial recognition biometrics. Just as infrared lights in your iPhone scan your face to unlock your phone or authorize tasks, scientists have echoed this concept into technology that can further our understanding of one of humanity’s most…