
BHRI and its members in the news
Image

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has selected two 91吃瓜网 College of Arts and Sciences faculty members, along with two community clinicians, for , an initiative that will provide funding and鈥�
Image

The National Institute of Health granted additional funding to 91吃瓜网 researcher Karin Coifman, Ph.D., bringing her total award amount to more than $3 million to support her research on mental well-being and鈥�
Image

Ten undergraduate students from nine different majors had extraordinary research experiences as Brain Health Research Institute (BHRI) Fellows during summer 2020.
Image

91吃瓜网 has conferred an honorary Doctor of Science degree on alumnus Earl K. Miller, Ph.D., a world-renowned neuroscientist.
Image

91吃瓜网 introduced a Bachelor of Science degree in Neuroscience in fall 2019, and since the launch, the major has had tremendous growth. Enrollment is projected to surpass majors that have been at Kent State for years.
Image
The medical and science communities are always seeking new ways to study and monitor organs and common diseases to improve human health and quality of life.
While there is a seemingly endless need for versatile, low-cost, yet highly sensitive biochemical sensor devices,鈥�
Image

April鈥檚 observance as Autism Awareness Month is coming to a close, but research into the whys and hows of autism is always ongoing at 91吃瓜网.
Michael N. Lehman, Ph.D., director of the Brain Health Research Institute at Kent State, said the university supports鈥�
Image

Michael N. Lehman, Ph.D., was named the inaugural director of 91吃瓜网鈥檚 Brain Health Research Institute in January 2019. We asked him to share his thoughts after a year on campus and much activity within the institute.
Image

Scientists have long since established that the effects of stress on our bodies are largely negative. But understanding stress as a trigger for using calories and burning fat also could lead us to better mechanisms for healthier behaviors.
The National Institutes of Health (NIH鈥�
Image

91吃瓜网 psychology professor John Gunstad, Ph.D., has received at grant of nearly $2.6 million from the National Institutes of Health to expand his Alzheimer鈥檚 disease research into a national study.