Alumni Profile: Emily Boring (YC ’18)
Photo courtesy of Emily Boring, communicated by Paul-Alexander Lejas Although religion and science are frequently portrayed as conflicting forces, Emily Boring (YC ’18, DIV ’23)
Photo courtesy of Emily Boring, communicated by Paul-Alexander Lejas Although religion and science are frequently portrayed as conflicting forces, Emily Boring (YC ’18, DIV ’23)
Image Courtesy of Wannapik Studio. The use of hand gestures for communication has a long history, dating as far back as 5 B.C.E. in ancient
Image courtesy of Pixabay. In his book Performance All the Way Down, Yale curator and ornithologist Richard Prum champions intersectionality to explore evolutionary and developmental
Image Courtesy of Flickr. Had Nemo’s siblings survived, maybe there would’ve been a fight for dominance over his anemone. Alas, we’ll never know. Nemo and
Image Courtesy of Flickr. Elon Musk has blown up Twitter—sorry, X—again! On January 29, 2024, the multibillionaire investor and innovator announced that human trials for
Image Courtesy of Flickr. How did Ken and Barbie make their way into the genome? In the podcast Science Friday, “Science Diction” host and producer
Art Courtesy of Luna Aguilar. What do you think of when you hear the phrase ‘climate change’? Perhaps it’s magnificent glaciers melting away into nothingness,
Photo Courtesy of Fareed Salmon. Madhav Lavakare’s (YC ’25) dive into the world of assistive technology traces back to his junior year of high school,
Image Courtesy of Pexels. A groundbreaking study conducted by a team of researchers from Yale and Columbia University found that a pregnant woman’s experience of