New research finds that gender-fluid products overwhelmingly feature masculine markers— revealing how even inclusive trends can reflect old power dynamics.
Three new Tamer Fund for Social Venture awardees were selected after their participation in an application screening round, a due diligence process with student teams from a Columbia Business School course, and a final pitch to the fund’s investment board.
For many alumni, Columbia Business School is the foundation of a career, but for Sandy and Teri, it was also the foundation of a lifetime together. What began as a brief flirtation on college walk right in front of Alma Mater, eventually led to forty-five years of love. Today, they remain dedicated to each other and to CBS, the place where it all began. Their story serves as a beautiful reminder that the best investments we make are often in people.
Mental illness imposes recession-level costs on the economy. Columbia Business School professor Boaz Abramson explains how AI could potentially expand access to care.
At its core, AVO leverages AI to process patient data directly from the Electronic Health Record (EHR), maps that data against clinical best practices, and produces "copilots" that automate clinician workflows.
Despite leaps in medical technology, as many as 30 to 40 percent of surgical patients end up unsatisfied with their surgical outcomes due to lingering pain or mobility issues. AI-powered “digital twin” technology offers an opportunity to reduce the reliance on clinical heuristics—those experience-based shortcuts passed down through mentorship—for a more precise, bespoke approach to surgical care.