PMR is located within the UO Division of Advancement and part of the Office of Public and Government Affairs.
Other affiliated offices are:
UO researchers and private industry have access to high-tech microcopes through the Center for Advanced Materials Characterization in ORegon (CAMCOR).
Find out how technology transfer works at the UO, whether you are a researcher or in search of technology your company can use.
Grow your company in partnership with the University of Oregon. Find out more.
Technology-based companies can collaborate with UO researchers and have a home, too, in the
Visit PMR's SciBlog, an informal look at research news.
Newest Addition: July 25 -- The Sociological Quarterly has just published a study co-authored by University of Oregon sociologist Richard York is co-author on a study with an Oklahoma State colleague on an article in The Sociological Quarterly. The study finds that that citizens of poorer nations are just as concerned about environmental quality as their counterparts in rich nations.
Looking for the latest research news in the Northwest? Collaborating science writers at the leading Northwest research institutions now have a clearinghouse dedicated to the region's major institutions. The Pacific Northwest National Laboratory now hosts Science Northwest. Check it out!
What makes the University of Oregon a special and unique place? How do we share this information with the rest of the world?
These are the questions the university’s Integrated Marketing and Strategic Communications Task Force (IMSC) has been charged with answering. Read more about the effort HERE.
On Sept. 10, the first beam ever will be sent through and around the Large Hadron Collider, a brand new particle accelerator, in Geneva, Switzerland.
University of Oregon physicists have key roles in this international endeavor. Come to campus for a free evening event to learn more about the "first beam" and how the LHC will advance the quest of physics to learn about the fundamental nature of the universe.
Speakers: Jim Brau, Graham Kribs and Eric Torrence … Friday, Sept. 12, 7 p.m., Columbia Hall, Room 150 … MORE DETAILS.
(Anyone with an interest in science will get a bang out of this event!)
Physicists, including the UO's Daniel Steck, have created a laser barrier that lets atoms through only in one direction -- the barrier stuffs the gas into a smaller volume with only a minute increase in its temperature. The Science News, online, presents feature coverage of Steck's work, which was published in the June 20 issue of the journal Physical Review Letters. (Read Story)