The award funds innovative but inherently risky research endeavors that have the potential to overturn existing scientific paradigms or create new ones.
Weill Cornell Medicine researchers have found that removing protected class regulation from Medicare prescription drug policies could greatly reduce the United States' prescription drug spending, potentially saving $47 billion between 2011 and 2019.
Researchers have uncovered perplexing states in a nanomaterial as it changes its atomic structure, a discovery that could advance materials with tailored properties for renewable energy and quantum computing.
The U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments today on whether the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) should be barred from enforcing its 2022 rule regulating “ghost guns” as firearms, but there is no question they are firearms says Cornell University’s Brooks School of Public Policy professor Max Kapustsin.
Edwin “Ed” Baum ’81 and his wife, Holly Wallace, are supporting the New York City High Road initiative by funding stipends, subsidizing housing and providing robust program support.
“Rowan Ricardo Phillips is a renowned sportswriter, and has written extensively on baseball, soccer, and tennis. He is, however, first and foremost a poet of the highest order."
Weill Cornell Medicine researchers found that the possibility of parental disclosure through online patient portals led older adolescents to hesitate in sharing complete health information with doctors.
Cheryl Strauss Einhorn, an adjunct professor at the Cornell SC Johnson School of Business, shares the four types of active listening and how utilizing them can support decision-makers.