Skip Navigation

OU Experts In the News

NEWS

OU EXPERTS IN THE NEWS

Our experts are making headlines


The BBC logo.

Michael Biggerstaff, a professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Oklahoma, has deployed Shared Mobile Atmospheric Research and Teaching (SMART) radar systems into 14 hurricanes since 2001.

A logo for NBC News.

Most existing funds are in small countries with money they made by exporting oil. Says Bill Megginson, professor of finance at the University of Oklahoma.

A logo for NBC News.

“We’re seeing a lot of heart failure,” said Dr. Joanne Skaggs, associate chief medical officer of adults at OU Health University of Oklahoma Medical Center, said, as well as “a significant amount of patients who are dehydrated and feeling dizzy” in emergency departments.

The New York Times logo.

Studies show that climate change has caused more rapid shifts between extreme heat and cold, said Royce Floyd, a professor of engineering at the University of Oklahoma.

2024

When Will The Milky Way Smash Into The Andromeda Galaxy? It May Already Be Underway, Say Scientists

According to a new study led by Nikole Nielsen from the University of Oklahoma, our Milky Way galaxy may have already begun colliding with the closest giant galaxy, Andromeda.

'I wouldn't wish it on my worst enemy': The people who work inside the eye of a hurricane

Michael Biggerstaff, a professor of atmospheric sciences at the University of Oklahoma, has deployed Shared Mobile Atmospheric Research and Teaching (SMART) radar systems into 14 hurricanes since 2001.

How the Left Exploits 'Christian Nationalism'

Samuel Perry, a sociologist at the University of Oklahoma, in a New Yorker cover article by Eliza Griswold, said, "The greatest ethnic dog whistle the right has ever come up with is 'Christian' because it means 'people like us,' it means white."

The Education Exchange: What Can Be Done to Prevent the Next School Shooting?

Daniel Hamlin, an assistant professor at the University of Oklahoma, joins Paul E. Peterson to discuss Hamlin’s research school shooting prevention strategies and its relationship to shootings in America.

Kamala Harris Has a Massive Lead Among Black Voters. It May Not Be Enough.

Andrea Benjamin, a professor at the University of Oklahoma, told Newsweek that neither candidate should take Black voters for granted, and that Harris should emphasize issues that matter most to Black voters, such as the cost of housing, reproductive rights and voting rights.

Climate Change Can Cause Bridges to ‘Fall Apart Like Tinkertoys,’ Experts Say

Studies show that climate change has caused more rapid shifts between extreme heat and cold, said Royce Floyd, a professor of engineering at the University of Oklahoma.

Extreme heat worsens chronic health conditions in millions of Americans

“We’re seeing a lot of heart failure,” said Dr. Joanne Skaggs, associate chief medical officer of adults at OU Health University of Oklahoma Medical Center, said, as well as “a significant amount of patients who are dehydrated and feeling dizzy” in emergency departments.

How Brazil’s Experiment Fighting Fake News Led to a Ban on X

“The world looks at Brazil now and sees something is being done there to push back,” Fábio de Sá e Silva, a professor of Brazilian studies at the University of Oklahoma, said. “It might encourage some other countries to do the same.”

The U.S. Fentanyl Challenge

Donna Nelson, professor of chemistry at the University of Oklahoma, dives into the numbers of the opioid crisis on the Academic Minute.

This Philly doctor credits her Apple Watch with saving her life during heart emergency

Stavros Stavrakis, cardiologist at the Heart Rhythm Institute of the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center and a member of the American Heart Association, weighs in on the accuracy of Apple Watch health readings.

Endometrial cancer patients see new hope as FDA approves 'transforming' immunotherapy drug

Kathleen N. Moore, M.D., co-director of the Stephenson Cancer Center at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, provides insight to Fox News.

Artificial intelligence gives weather forecasters a new edge

Rapid AI weather forecasts will aid scientific discovery, said Amy McGovern, a professor of meteorology and computer science at OU who directs an AI weather institute. In The Economic Times. 

Can You Stop A Tornado? Atmospheric Scientists Reveal the Truth About the Biggest Plot Point in ‘Twisters’

Cameron Homeyer, interim director of the School of Meteorology at the University of Oklahoma, tells Inverse the technology doesn’t exist to even begin to attempt to manipulate the processes that operate in tornadic storms.

'Twister' gave rise to a generation of storm chasers. Here's what they hope to see in the sequel

“A few years after ‘Twister,’ enrollment numbers at the University of Oklahoma’s School of Meteorology – applications doubled,” Dr. Harold E. Brooks, an affiliate professor at the university and senior research scientist at NSSL, said.

An Ominous Hurricane Season Will Test New AI Weather Forecasting

Amy McGovern, OU professor and director of the NSF AI Institute for Research on Trustworthy AI in Weather, Climate, and Coastal Oceanography (AI2ES), comments on hurricane season.

What Twisters gets right — and wrong — about tornado science

Sean Waugh and Kevin Kelleher from the US National Severe Storms Laboratory at the University of Oklahoma share how the film used accurate data and images.

Gastrointestinal issues a common but overlooked symptom of COVID

A study from the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine found a connection between COVID-19 and gastrointestinal symptoms. Dr. William Tierney, who led the study, said there is “clear evidence” linking the two.

China outpacing U.S. in nuclear power development, report finds

Hank Jenkins-Smith joins CBS News to examine why the U.S. is falling behind China when it comes to nuclear power development.

A new exhibit asks you to reconsider how much you hate brutalism

OU's Angela Person collaborated with architectural photographyer Ty Cole to curate the exhibit Capital Brutalism at the National Building Museum.

Oklahoma law to allow resentencing for incarcerated domestic violence survivors

Dr David McLeod contributes his decades of expertise to coverage after Govenor Kevin Stitt signed Senate Bill 1835.

Scientists hope to improve hurricane forecasting with new government investment

Xuguang Wang spoke with Marketplace Morning Report about hurricane forecasting and the Consortium for Advanced Data Assimilation Research and Education.

Africa's wet forests have seen an alarming rise in wildfires

Michael Wimberly, Ph.D., explains the necessity of rethinking how we view the relationship between climate change and fire in tropical forests.

From dark constellations to solar observatories: How pre-Hispanic America contemplated the cosmos

“The Incas not only saw the kind of constellations that we see, they also saw dark constellations in the black spots of the Milky Way,” says Professor Dr. Steven Gulberg, an astronomer at the University of Oklahoma noted for his studies of astronomical alignments at various Inca archaeological sites in the Andes.

IVF Treatment in the U.S. May Be at Risk, Scientists Warn

Jennifer Holland explains why it’s not clear how far anti-abortion groups will go to campaign to restrict IVF.

Early Adopters of NASA’s PACE Data to Study Air Quality, Ocean Health

 Marcela Loría-Salazar is one of NASA's PACE Early Adopter program.

Weather, rainbows and pots of gold: What's at work here?

Dr. Jason Furtado, professor in the School of Meteorology, explains the science of rainbows to Fox News.

Google AI could soon use a person’s cough to diagnose disease

Ali Imran, an engineer at the University of Oklahoma in Tulsa, says that the sheer volume of data used by Google lends significance to the research. “It gives us the confidence that this is a reliable tool,” he says.

Lower your risk of irritable bowel syndrome by adopting a healthy lifestyle, new study suggests

Dr. Beverley Greenwood-Van Meerveld contributes to a CNN article on irritable bowel syndrome.

Are you happy? New film follows a Bhutan bureaucrat who asks 148 questions to find out

NPR

The statement came as globalization loomed over the long-isolated country, says Michael Givel, a comparative political scientist at University of Oklahoma who has done research in Bhutan. – College of Arts & Sciences

‘Overshadow Gaza crimes’: World reacts to US attacks on Iraq and Syria
Al Jazeera

Joshua Landis, associate professor and director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, told Al Jazeera that politicians in Washington are pressuring Biden for a stronger response as the US presidential election looms.

US launches retaliatory strikes on Iran-backed targets in Iraq and Syria
The National News

Joshua Landis, director of the Centre for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, said it was important the US response not be overly antagonistic towards Iraq.

Microbial research unravels a global nitrogen mystery
Phys.Org

Novel research led by Wei Qin, an assistant professor of microbiology at the University of Oklahoma, that significantly changes the understanding of ammonia oxidation, a critical component of the global nitrogen cycle, has been published in the journal Nature Microbiology.

1st-century villa discovered near Mount Vesuvius may be where Pliny the Elder watched catastrophic eruption
Live Science

"Naturalis Historia remains a classic today, with some arguing it is the first encyclopaedia ever written," Sue Alcock, an archaeologist at the University of Oklahoma, told Live Science in an email.

How mapping ‘heat islands’ can help cities prepare for extreme heat

NPR

Oklahoma City's Office of Sustainability, in partnership with the University of Oklahoma, and other environmental organizations, recruited volunteers to act as "citizen scientists" to help researchers gather key data.

Experts fuse agents to boost microscopic pancreatic cancer screening
Interesting Engineering

Recently, researchers from the OU Health Stephenson Cancer Center at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences successfully developed a new method to ‘improve the detection of a deadly disease — pancreatic cancer.’

Study examines use of MSOT for detecting pancreatic cancer, improving surgery
Health Imaging

Pancreatic cancer outcomes remain among the worst for patients, but researchers at the University of Oklahoma Health’s Stephenson Cancer Center hope to change that by improving early detection of the disease.

OU Health Researchers Unveil Breakthrough Pancreatic Cancer Detection Method
Tech Times

OU research focuses on innovative combination of imaging techniques to detect pancreatic cancer
News Medical

Plagues in Roman Italy Linked to Climate Change, Scientists Say
Newsweek

"In short, climate affects the biology of the pathogen, ecosystems (including animal hosts and insect vectors), and human societies (causing migration, war, social crisis, and above all food shortages that make populations vulnerable to infection," co-author Kyle Harper, a professor of classics and letters at the University of Oklahoma, told Newsweek.

The dollar stabilizes in anticipation of US data and focus on the European Central Bank meeting
West Observer

According to Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma, these “economic punches” come at a bad time for these countries, as economic activity across the Middle East and North Africa has already declined, falling to 2 percent in 2023. From 5.6 percent the previous year.

 

Nuclear data unveils the secrets of the microbial ecosystem
Interesting Engineering

In a study of seven-years, the University of Oklahoma has successfully shown the intricate dynamics of microbial communities in groundwater, shedding light on their responses to environmental stress and opening avenues for potential bioremediation strategies.

Scientists translate nuclear waste site data into microbial ecosystem insights
The Microbiologist

A flagship seven-year study led by the University of Oklahoma that explores how environmental stresses influence different ecological processes shaping the composition and structure of microbial communities in groundwater has been published in the journal Nature Microbiology.

War Has Already Hurt the Economies of Israel’s Nearest Neighbors
New York Times

The latest economic gut punches could not come at a worse time for these countries, said Joshua Landis, director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma.

Cities are trying to understand how concrete stores heat – with interesting results
NPR

Hongwan Li researches air quality at the University of Oklahoma. Last year, Oklahoma City joined over a dozen cities in a national heat mapping project. Community members just like Li helped record data that could be used to help cities understand the impacts of extreme heat. – College of Public Health  

How Trump Captured Iowa’s Religious Right
The New Yorker

According to Samuel Perry, a sociologist at the University of Oklahoma who studies conservative Christianity, Jerry Falwell’s Moral Majority, which helped define the Christian right in the eighties, had promoted the notion that America was under attack by internal forces that sought to sever the country from Biblical principles. – Department of Sociology