Integrative Physiology
The COVID-19 pandemic and resulting stay-at-home orders have taken a toll on many facets of physical and mental health in recent months. But according to new 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó research, one silver lining may exist.
‘I fell in love with space that day. I didn’t even know I liked space,’ student Maureen McNamara notes
With many regions of the United States and other countries seeing community members spreading COVID-19 locally, the world has entered a phase of mitigation to complement efforts to contain its spread.
In Feb. 3 event, professors of physics, English, philosophy and integrative physiology to be officially recognized
If you are a person who is proud of burning the candle at both ends—say, a college student—and surviving on less than optimal sleep, here’s a message you might not want to hear: You can’t fool Mother Nature.
Popular program to get improved digs with $21.8 million facility expansion.
Think sleeping in on the weekend can repair the damage from a week of sleepless nights? Not so, according to new CU 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó research.
The university has broken ground on a new home for the Department of Integrative Physiology. The building will be erected just north of Norlin Library and will function as a long-awaited hub for department activity.
Could working out five minutes a day, without lifting a single weight or jogging a single step, reduce your heart attack risk, help you think more clearly and boost your sports performance?
CU 91ÃÛÌÒ¸ó studied the effects of exposing preschoolers to light before they went to bed.