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Economics - Innovation - 30.12.2024
Coming AI-driven economy will sell your decisions before you take them, researchers warn

Life Sciences - 28.12.2024
Urgent action needed to protect the Parma wallaby
Urgent action needed to protect the Parma wallaby

Campus - Life Sciences - 27.12.2024
Three Faculty Promotions in 2024
Three Faculty Promotions in 2024

Health - Chemistry - 24.12.2024
Six times Imperial pushed the boundaries of AI in 2024
Six times Imperial pushed the boundaries of AI in 2024
This is how we continued push the boundaries of artificial intelligence (AI), breaking new ground in fields ranging from healthcare to climate science Here are six ways AI research at Imperial made an impact in 2024.

Physics - Materials Science - 24.12.2024
Twisted Edison: Bright, elliptically polarized incandescent light
Filaments curling at the micro and nanoscale produce light waves that twirl as they travel Study: Bright, circularly-polarized black-body radiation from twisted nanocarbon Filaments ( adq4068) Bright

Astronomy / Space - Health - 24.12.2024
MIT in the media: 2024 in review
MIT community members made headlines with key research advances and their efforts to tackle pressing challenges.

Health - 23.12.2024
Wellness influencers on social media were more likely to oppose COVID-19 vaccination
Study: Wellness Influencer Responses to COVID-19 Vaccines on Social Media: A Longitudinal Observational Study Wellness influencers showed higher rates of vaccine opposition on social media compared to other users' accounts, according to a new University of Michigan study.

Economics - 23.12.2024
Private equity’s influence on Dutch childcare: costs, quality, and market dynamics
A new study by Dyaran S. Bansraj of Erasmus School of Economics, together with Dong Xu (Bayes Business School), delves into the profound impacts of private equity (PE) ownership in the Dutch da

Health - 23.12.2024
Glasgow project to investigate long-standing cancer mystery
Scientists are seeking participants in Glasgow to help solve one of the longest standing mysteries in cancer - how and why it can take decades for mesothelioma to develop after exposure to asbestos. The Cancer Research project, Meso-ORIGINS led by researchers at the University of Glasgow, aims to find a way to detect and treat mesothelioma earlier and investigate if the disease can be prevented in the first place.

Environment - Linguistics / Literature - 23.12.2024
New Research Group Investigates Varieties of English Worldwide
New Research Group Investigates Varieties of English Worldwide
The German Research Foundation (DFG) is funding a new research group at the University of Hamburg.

Health - 23.12.2024
The supramolecular path to growing human and plant cells
The supramolecular path to growing human and plant cells
Maritza Rovers became a microscale scaffold builder for her PhD research as she sought ways to regenerate and grow eye, nerve, and plant cells.

History / Archeology - Social Sciences - 23.12.2024
Social Work prof brings Nana Yaa Asantewaa of Ghana to life through a graphic novel and documentary
Social Work prof brings Nana Yaa Asantewaa of Ghana to life through a graphic novel and documentary

Social Sciences - 23.12.2024
The top ANU Reporter stories of 2024
The top ANU Reporter stories of 2024

Life Sciences - Health - 23.12.2024
Top 10 EPFL news articles from 2024
Top 10 EPFL news articles from 2024
Here are the most widely read scientific, academic, student and institutional news items of the past 12 months, broken down by faculty and the institution. Stimulating hypothalamus restores walking in paralyzed patients Researchers at EPFL and Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV), led by Grégoire Courtine and Jocelyne Bloch, have achieved a major milestone in the treatment of spinal cord injuries.

Career - 23.12.2024
Why open secrets are a big problem
Philosopher Sam Berstler diagnoses the corrosive effects of not acknowledging troubling truths. Imagine that the head of a company office is misbehaving, and a disillusioned employee reports the problem to their manager.

Environment - Innovation - 23.12.2024
Helping students bring about decarbonization, from benchtop to global energy marketplace
Helping students bring about decarbonization, from benchtop to global energy marketplace
Professor Jessika Trancik's course helps students understand energy levers for addressing climate change at the macro and micro scales.

Computer Science - Environment - 22.12.2024
New collaboration to transform the performance and sustainability of AI models

Pedagogy - 20.12.2024
Researchers and school children team up to tackle online safety

Health - 20.12.2024
Christmas gift: Brother donates kidney to sister in transplant at UI Health

Media - 20.12.2024
Media Invitation: ESA Director General’s Annual Press Briefing

Health - Veterinary - 20.12.2024
New research from the RVC identifies impact of owner perceptions on brachycephalic dog welfare reforms
One in seven owners of extreme brachycephalic dogs stated that 'nothing' could put them off buying a brachycephalic dog.

Life Sciences - 20.12.2024
Sensors for the 'charge' of biological cells
Sensors for the ’charge’ of biological cells
Biosensors show the ratio of NADPH to NADP+ in real time / Insights into the evolution of the protective function of cells Biological cells have many vital functions in the organism. For example, they produce proteins, carbohydrates and fats. But they are also responsible for detoxifying harmful molecules and transmitting signals and immune defence steps.

Environment - 20.12.2024
Big Ten expansion will double carbon emissions from U-M football team

Politics - 20.12.2024
Consumer outlook on the rise, despite worries with policy shifts under new presidency

Health - Pharmacology - 20.12.2024
A Tropical Disease in Switzerland: Call for Coordinated Action on Chagas Disease
The Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH), in collaboration with the World Health Organization and other partners conducted a comprehensive review of Chagas disease in Switzerland.

History / Archeology - 20.12.2024
Stonehenge may have been built to unify the people of ancient Britain
Stonehenge may have been built to unify the people of ancient Britain
The recent discovery that one of Stonehenge's stones originated in Scotland supports a theory that the stone circle was built as a monument to unite Britain's early farmers nearly 5,000 years ago, according to a new study by researchers at UCL and Aberystwyth University.

Sport - 20.12.2024
Records and awards mark successful season for SFU Athletics and Recreation
Records and awards mark successful season for SFU Athletics and Recreation

Environment - Innovation - 20.12.2024
From researcher to entrepreneur: A conversation with Arthi Gopalakrishnan of PEACH DACquiri Inc
From researcher to entrepreneur: A conversation with Arthi Gopalakrishnan of PEACH DACquiri Inc

Politics - Campus - 20.12.2024
Record number of ANU students ready to leave lasting mark in Indo-Pacific
Record number of ANU students ready to leave lasting mark in Indo-Pacific

History / Archeology - 20.12.2024
Modem history: how ANU helped Vietnam connect to the internet

Politics - Innovation - 20.12.2024
Making e-voting safer from coercion and vote buying
As we come to the end of a year in which half the world's population went to the polls, researchers developed and field-tested a groundbreaking new technology to protect remote electronic voting or e-voting from voter coercion and vote buying.

Astronomy / Space - Environment - 20.12.2024
NASA's New Deep Space Network Antenna Has Its Crowning Moment
NASA’s New Deep Space Network Antenna Has Its Crowning Moment

Astronomy / Space - 20.12.2024
Avalanches, Icy Explosions, and Dunes: NASA Is Tracking New Year on Mars
Avalanches, Icy Explosions, and Dunes: NASA Is Tracking New Year on Mars
Instead of a winter wonderland, the Red Planet's northern hemisphere goes through an active - even explosive - spring thaw.

Campus - Career - 20.12.2024
MIT-Kalaniyot launches programs for visiting Israeli scholars

Microtechnics - Innovation - 20.12.2024
Startup's autonomous drones precisely track warehouse inventories
Startup’s autonomous drones precisely track warehouse inventories
Corvus Robotics, founded by Mohammed Kabir '21, is using drones that can navigate in GPS-denied environments to expedite inventory management.

Music - Linguistics / Literature - 20.12.2024
Carnegie Mellon Students Collaborate on Experimental ’Auld Lang Syne’ Project
Ring in the New Year with this new take on a holiday tradition.

Health - Campus - 19.12.2024
Terence Ketter dies at 74

Campus - Health - 19.12.2024
Five books to help you disagree productively in 2025

Agronomy / Food Science - Life Sciences - 19.12.2024
Early warning tool will help control huge locust swarms
Early warning tool will help control huge locust swarms
A new tool that predicts the behaviour of desert locust populations will help national agencies to manage huge swarms before they devastate food crops in Africa and Asia.

Physics - Career - 19.12.2024
King’s working visit to MESA+ Nanolab University of Twente

Innovation - Economics - 19.12.2024
Empowering teenagers and simplifying organic certification for farmers

Politics - 19.12.2024
Power-motivated social media users disproportionately spread misinformation
People motivated by power and the desire to influence others are more likely to share fake news posts on social media, according to a new study led by a UCL researcher. In a series of experiments, power-motivated social media users were found to share more misinformation on a simulated social media platform, and fake news constituted a larger proportion of what they shared.

Health - 19.12.2024
Today’s Lonely Youth Are Tomorrow’s Lonely Elderly

Health - Pharmacology - 19.12.2024
Tailored Cancer Treatment: VUB Research Predicts Which Patients Benefit from Immunotherapy
A team of scientists led by researchers from the Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB) and the Flemish Institute for Biotechnology (VIB) has developed a new technology to precisely predict and monitor cancer patients' responses to immunotherapy. Immunotherapy is a type of cancer treatment that stimulates a patient's immune system to attack tumors.

Environment - Agronomy / Food Science - 19.12.2024
O Christmas tree! Growing climate solutions for farmers
O Christmas tree! Growing climate solutions for farmers

Innovation - Environment - 19.12.2024
TU Graz Develops Modular Timber High-Rise Building for Resource-Efficient Construction
TU Graz Develops Modular Timber High-Rise Building for Resource-Efficient Construction

Environment - Health - 19.12.2024
Author of major new global report talks about human survival and biodiversity

Economics - Environment - 19.12.2024
Sustainability not an important criterion in top executives’ remuneration
A study by an international team of researchers from the University of Tübingen and the HEC business school in Paris has shown that the payment of bonuses to executive board members in large European

Environment - 19.12.2024
Prospects for milk production: More protein and a healthier environment through grass feeding
Prospects for milk production: More protein and a healthier environment through grass feeding
Grass-based and low-concentrate cow feed increases protein turnover and reduces environmental impact   How can milk production be made more sustainable? And how does feeding concentrates influence sustainability? Researchers at the University of Göttingen and the Kassel Institute for Rural Development have investigated protein utilisation on dairy farms and shown that grass-based and low-concentrate feeding of dairy cows ultimately produces more protein for human consumption.

Environment - Campus - 19.12.2024
Forest Finance conference held at USI
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