Science Closing in on Mystery of Age-Related Memory Loss, Says UAB Neurobiologist
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CAS News
May 06, 2010
The world’s scientific community may be one step closer to understanding age-related memory loss, and to developing a drug that might help boost memory. In an editorial published May 7 in Science, J. David Sweatt, Ph.D., chair of the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) Department of Neurobiology, says that drugs known as histone deacetylase inhibitors are showing great promise in stopping memory loss – and even in boosting the formation of memory in animal models.
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Learn about colorblindness at UAB’s AEIVA in SeptemberHear “The Science of Color Vision” lecture Sept. 9, and get screened for colorblindness Sept.
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Theatre UAB announces new season of plays, plus free showcasesSet for this season are “Dead Man’s Cell Phone,” “A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder,” “Don’t Ask,” “Murder on the Orient Express,” and “Dear Evan Hansen” with Red Mountain Theatre.
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Do you have a secret to share? This UAB professor’s invention sets the standard on how to do it safely.Inspired by a police press conference, Yuliang Zheng, Ph.D., chair of the Department of Computer Science, developed a way to prove that digital files are authentic while obscuring secret information. His work is now an International Standard in cybersecurity, paving the way for large-scale adoption by tech companies.