CAS Connection - Sep 2025

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Table and chairs in the room

Fascinated with Fractals

Physics Professor Richard Taylor blends art and science to create award-winning nature-inspired designs for indoor environments.

By Nicole Krueger

Experiential Learning  |  Research & Innovation  |  Community Impact  |  Career Preparation  |  Teaching Excellence  |  21st Century Liberal Arts  |  Building Community  |  Good Vibes  |  CAS Spotlights  |  All Stories  |  Past Issues
 

a bee with a qr code

Research & Innovation

AI Tracks Endangered Bees

Biologist Lauren Ponisio and collaborators are using the technology in place of lethal capture.

By Leila Okahata

i voted stickers

Research & Innovation

Ballot Measures Are Booming

Some states are seeing an increase in ballot measures as voters act, in a way, as lawmakers.

By Grace Connolly

The James Miller Theatre Complex on the University of Oregon campus

Experiential Learning

New Season Spotlights Humanity

University Theatre’s 2025-2026 season is full of human stories with emotion, energy, and imagination.

By Leo Brown

a white van in front of a simpsons mural

Community Impact

The Economics of Well-being

Study found crisis de-escalation program that started in Eugene saves cities money and reduces arrests.

By Henry Houston

Cinama Studies Alumni, Natalie Jacobsen and husband

CAS Spotlights

CAS Alum Merges Interests for a Career with Impact

For Natalie Jacobsen, the path from the University of Oregon to becoming director of marketing and communications at Airlink, a humanitarian aviation nonprofit, has been anything but linear. Still, it brings together a lifetime of passions, including writing, activism, and global service.

Get to Know Natalie

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UO College of Arts & Sciences (@uocas) • Instagram photos and videos

CAS News

EARTH SCIENCES - CRESCENT wrapped up its first-ever cohort for the Geoscience Education and Inclusion (GEI) Twinning Program. Students worked with mentors on fully funded research projects, developing practical skills and presenting their findings to fellow scientists. The program manager, Shannon Fasola, said it offered a unique opportunity because students could focus on research without having to worry about finances.
SOCIOLOGY - As part of the University of Oregon’s Museum of Natural and Cultural History summer field school, the students are spending a month immersed in Indigenous cultural landscapes while studying archaeology, history and ecology and, at the same time, helping restore oyster beds. They’re learning vital career skills while helping usher in a new era of archaeology with Gabe Sanchez, a CAS assistant professor of sociology.
PSYCHOLOGY - A new study led by researchers at the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences in collaboration with Google Research found little evidence linking smartphone use with mental well-being in adults. Researchers analyzed more than 250,000 days of smartphone usage from more than 10,000 U.S. adults ages 18 and up.

All news »


From the Media

The first protein shake was a concoction of "melted-down beef hides and carcasses." Now, consumers have various options, some that could be on a dessert menu. Hannah Cutting-Jones, a food studies assistant professor in the College of Arts and Sciences Schnitzer School of Global Studies and Languages, spoke with The Guardian about the earliest protein shakes.
The Hollywood Walk of Fame is a who's who of the Silver Screen, stretching over 18 blocks in Los Angeles. But the city also boasts another walk of fame that highlights stars from the adult film industry. SF Gate spoke with Peter Alilunas, associate professor of cinema studies at the University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences. “You get this moment where adult films start to have premieres, and they start to have publicity, and they start to take themselves seriously,” Alilunas says. “And so they start to form themselves into an industry in the sense of all the trappings that go with that,” he adds, including critics’ associations, award shows. And walks of fame."
Landslides in Oregon are becoming more frequent and more unpredictable than earthquakes. CAS Earth scientist Josh Roering spoke with the Eugene Register-Guard about the past few decades of landslides. "Over the last couple decades, the landslides and the surface processes and surface hazards that I've been working on have become much more prominent, primarily due to climate change and humans inhabiting more areas in hazardous terrain," said Josh Roering, a professor of earth sciences at the University of Oregon who studies weathering, erosion and landslide processes.

All media news »

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