CAS Connection - Nov 2025 Issue

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Research report feature story

Celebrate Research Progress

Researchers in the College of Arts and Sciences secured $83 million in sponsored grants to fund 199 research projects across the three divisions: Humanities, Natural Sciences, and Social Sciences. This year’s annual report provides a glimpse into the curious minds of researchers and their work.

Explore CAS Research

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

Eric Torrence, physics professor

Research & Innovation

Professor is cracking the cosmos

Eric Torrence, physics professor, will spend 18 months monitoring the mysteries of our universe.

By Leo Brown

Pop-culture trends like Labubus become a global phenomenon

Good Vibes

What is behind the Labubu craze?

Professor Alisa Freedman explains how pop-culture trends like Labubus become a global phenomenon.

By Laurel Hamers

cinema studies student, Elle Thompson, internship story

Experiential Learning

Student casts her future

This cinema studies student thought she wanted to go into casting, so she found an internship to confirm it.

By Harper Wells

Assistant Professor Yu Wang's (right) research involves using machine learning to model enormous sets of data to link data

CAS Spotlights

Professor links the world’s data

Yu Wang’s research moves us toward a world where accurate information for every problem is easily found.

By Evan Ney


CAS Spotlight

Alum’s joy fuels her career

For political science alum Sarah Koski, breaking from the expected path after graduation helped her discover what she really wanted to do: help people feel seen and heard, and to make real change in the unhoused community.

By Grace Connolly

Meet Alum Sarah Koski

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

CAS News

PHYSICS - A supermassive black hole with a case of cosmic indigestion has been burping out the remains of a shredded star for four years — and it’s still going strong, new research led by University of Oregon College of Arts and Sciences astrophysicist Yvette Cendes. Cendes and her team published findings about this one-of-kind black hole in the Feb. 5 issue of Astrophysical Journal Astrophysicists.
PHYSICS - Fascinated by the unexplored corners of the universe since childhood, physicist Tien-Tien Yu has made dark matter the pillar of her research career. In her quest to understand, she’s co-founded a major experiment in collaboration with physicists at other institutions, all of whom are trying try to bring light to the dark.
ANTHROPOLOGY, POLITICAL SCIENCE - College of Arts and Sciences alumni were among the 200 alumni who gathered for the 10th annual UO Board Summit. The alumni that attended included Natalie Poole, BA '80 (political science) who is a senior vice president at Wells Fargo Capital Finance and triple Duck David Lewis, PhD, '09 (anthropology) who serves as an assistant professor at Oregon State University.

All news »


From the Media

The New York Times included College of Arts and Sciences food studies expert Hannah Cutting-Jones in a roundup of experts about the claim that protein is a nutrient that keeps people satiated. Cutting-Jones said that the idea that protein is uniquely satiating and helpful for weight loss goes back decades.
People generally consume two species of coffee bean — robusta and arabica, explains Christopher Hendon, a College of Arts and Sciences associate professor of chemistry and a leading coffee scientist. Hendon spoke with the Daily Mail about coffee beans.
Across sports like long-distance running, cycling, and triathlon, athletes are using science-backed interventions to push the limits of what the human body can do. Men's Journal interviewed College of Arts and Sciences human physiology researcher Brad Wilkins about which strategies tap into the basic physiological principle of improving the body’s ability to deliver oxygen efficiently.

All media news »

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