The four alumni, who all previously studied abroad in Japan, will begin their new positions in the fall.
Three research projects were selected to receive up to $50,000 in seed funding.
The UT San Antonio project explores how to regenerate muscle with nanotherapy that targets fat.
UT San Antonio was founded on the principles of opportunity and affordable access. President Taylor Eighmy discusses how those principles continue to shape the university’s growth today.
The UT San Antonio students will spend eight weeks this summer in classroom-based and experiential learning experiences at the University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health and area internships.
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Researchers in the UT San Antonio Seshu Lab are developing a product that could stop the spread of tick-borne pathogens.
Aspiring neuroscience researcher Ana Catalina Vallejo Chapa will pursue her master’s degree in France.
The project, called Vision, helped the UT San Antonio team land a spot as a one of 15 national finalists in the 2026 Red Bull Basement competition.
Beginning Aug. 17, Corey Pashea will lead development efforts supporting the university’s academic health center.
New master’s program will support rapid expansion of Texas’s film industry.
Civil engineer Marcio Giacomoni discusses flash flooding and how communities can better prepare in a new episode of Launchpad: Voices of Innovation.
Using data science, researchers find dangerous dosing trends behind semaglutide-related poison control center reports.
In new Best Global Universities rankings, U.S. News and World Report affirms UT San Antonio as a world leader in research.
Health innovations
In Other News
With the investment, UT San Antonio will deliver more flexible and responsive support to meet the unique needs of military-affiliated students.
As global food demands intensify, the USDA-funded initiative will prepare students to enhance farming approaches through AI and robotics.
Findings from a UT San Antonio lab’s preclinical study improve the understanding of why stress-related disorders appear more frequently in women than in men.
Public health professor Jeffrey Howard discusses accelerated aging in the latest episode of Launchpad: Voices of UT San Antonio.
As smart devices become more ubiquitous, researchers are providing police the tools to investigate a new generation of digital evidence.