CAS Connection

UO researchers study how cleats could contribute to disproportionate number of ACL tears in female athletes

Emily Karolidis, a PhD candidate and lead researcher in the study, and Mike Hahn, professor of human physiology at UO, are currently studying the relationships between soccer cleat composition and risk of injury in female versus male athletes. The CAS researchers spoke with Oregon Public Broadcasting about their work.

As advances in training, technology and technique continue, how close are we to setting records that are impossible to break?

Ahead of the 2024 Summer Olympics, human physiology professor Brad Wilkins spoke with the Washington Post about advances in training and breaking records. “It’s part of who we are as a species to push limits and to push beyond what we think we’re capable of doing,” Wilkins said. “It’s probably part of why our species survived as a species — because we were driven to go further and build things and do things our Neanderthal counterparts weren’t able to do. I do believe a human is limited. But humans are not.”

The Eruption of Mt. Vesuvius Wasn’t Pompeii’s Only Killer

Kevin Dicus, an archaeologist in the College of Arts and Sciences's Classics and Humanities Program, spoke to the New York Times about recent research published in the journal Frontiers in Earth Science that offers proof that Pompeii was simultaneously wrecked by a massive earthquake. “The evidence is always there — it just takes new questions, and new eyes, to look for it,” he said. “Archaeology shouldn’t be an entirely insular profession.”

Many Americans think they're insulated from climate change. Their finances indicate otherwise

In addition to negative effects on human health, wildfire smoke also reduces earnings for workers in sectors like manufacturing, crop production, utilities, health care, real estate, administration and transportation, according to a 2022 study by economists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the University of Oregon. Eric Zou's research is mentioned in this article by NBC-Los Angeles.

University of Oregon professor trains AI to distinguish between real and fake Jackson Pollock paintings

Richard Taylor, a College of Arts and Sciences professor of physics, psychology, and art has been using computers for more than 25 years to analyze Jackson Pollock’s paintings and help authenticate canvases of uncertain origin. He spoke with Oregon Public Broadcasting's Think Out Loud program about his work and the role AI could play in the art world.

Kari Lake campaigns in front of Confederate flag, and AZ GOP rival Mark Lamb stay silent

Chandler James, an assistant professor of political science at the University of Oregon, tells USA Today researched norm-violating behavior in the Trump era. He said the Confederate flag may not be significant to all of Kari Lake’s supporters, but it does signal to them that she is willing to push her politics in a way they want.