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Health - 19.03.2026
Cambridge cancer expert leads development of new NICE guideline on kidney cancer

Agronomy & Food Science - 19.03.2026
Bird Flu Risk to Danish Cattle - New Tool Can Warn Farmers Before Infection Spreads
VIRUS Bird flu can infect both cows and humans. Researchers from the University of Copenhagen have developed a tool that can predict where and when the risk of infection is highest. Sudden drop in milk production, thickened milk, and cows under movment restrictions. Since 2024, American farmers have had bitter experiences with the feared bird flu (H5N1), which in several cases has been introduced to cattle - and then spread rapidly among cattle herds.

Chemistry - Innovation - 19.03.2026
Leipzig University and Center for the Transformation of Chemistry conclude collaboration agreement
Leipzig University and Center for the Transformation of Chemistry conclude collaboration agreement

Psychology - Social Sciences - 19.03.2026
Analysis: Trying your best in a second language? Here’s why native speakers seem so rude
Writing for The Conversation, Dr Irini Mavrou (UCL Ioe) details her research on why both native speakers and second language speakers can come across as rude when speaking to one another.

Health - Pharmacology - 19.03.2026
Analysis: What going to nursery means for catching colds
Dr Lucy van Dorp (UCL Genetics Institute), along with a colleague, explains in an article for The Conversation how illnesses contracted by toddlers at nursery can help strengthen their immune systems in the long term. There's no nice way to put it: small children are snotty. A research study  that tested children for multiple respiratory viruses every week for a year found that under-fives are carrying one or more viruses 50% of the time.

Architecture & Buildings - 19.03.2026
Preparing for UCL’s spring closure 2026

Health - Life Sciences - 19.03.2026
TU Graz Presents Neuroadaptive VR System for the Treatment of Arachnophobia
Based on EEG data and heart rate, the system adjusts the intensity of the exposure to the anxiety level of the participants.

Social Sciences - Innovation - 19.03.2026
This game-inspired innovation is empowering collaboration across Australia
This game-inspired innovation is empowering collaboration across Australia
Dice, cards and tokens usually belong on the kitchen table on game night. But what if they could also be used to help improve collaboration in the workplace?

Social Sciences - 19.03.2026
The hushed-up history of activism by people of colour

Environment - Social Sciences - 19.03.2026
World Water Day: 'Where water flows, equality grows'
World Water Day: ’Where water flows, equality grows’

Environment - 19.03.2026
TU Dublin, GAP Ireland and Fingal County Council mark three years of impact

Environment - Chemistry - 19.03.2026
Reducing the environmental cost of lab work

Life Sciences - Health - 19.03.2026
Spiderman of our cells, which traps viral genomes in its web
In the same way Spiderman shoots his web to ensnarl his enemies, scientists have discovered a way in which our cells defend our bodies from the early stages of viral infection by synthesising a sticky 'web' to trap viral genomes.

Campus - Economics - 18.03.2026
Celebrating the Women of TU Dublin: Dr Swarna Jaiswal

Health - Psychology - 18.03.2026
Major step towards a first global system to track health before pregnancy
The key health and social indicators needed for a new global system to monitor people's health before pregnancy have been identified for the first time by researchers at University College London and the University of Southampton. As more women are becoming pregnant with health conditions that can complicate pregnancy and childbirth, such as obesity, diabetes and mental illness, pre-pregnancy health has been thrown into the spotlight.

Health - 18.03.2026
Frequent infections in nursery help toddlers build up immune systems
Young children who attend nursery get sick more often than those who don't, but they will go on to have fewer illnesses during early school years, finds a new review of evidence by a group of parent-scientists involving UCL researchers. All five authors of the new Clinical Microbiology Reviews paper are parents of young children, who are also researchers or clinicians at UCL, the University of Cambridge, Cornell University and North Middlesex University Hospital.

Campus - 18.03.2026
Impressive rise in Quota 2 applications
Impressive rise in Quota 2 applications

Computer Science - Innovation - 18.03.2026
SDU is part of global initiative to bring mathematical certainty to modern computing and artificial intelligence

Environment - 18.03.2026
Short film ’The Climate Fighters’ wins prestigious Golden Heron Award

Sport - Life Sciences - 18.03.2026
Creatine, electrolytes, protein powder: Do you really need supplements for exercise?
Creatine, electrolytes, protein powder: Do you really need supplements for exercise?

Environment - Physics - 18.03.2026
Nine ideas shaping a cleaner, safer and more resilient world
Dutch greenhouse gas emissions rose again last year, our energy supply needs to become more resilient, and in Overijssel there are already warnings of potential power outages.

Event - Environment - 18.03.2026
Plant Knowledge
Plant Knowledge

Astronomy & Space - Environment - 18.03.2026
Satellite development begins for EUMETSAT Polar System - Sterna
Satellite development begins for EUMETSAT Polar System - Sterna

Health - 18.03.2026
Bilingual forms improve cancer treatment understanding among people with limited English
People with limited English are significantly more likely to understand the true aim of cancer treatment when given a bilingual consent form, with understanding rising from 35% to 60%, a new study finds.

Health - Innovation - 18.03.2026
Entourage AI comes of age with $5m pre-seed launch investment

Astronomy & Space - Physics - 18.03.2026
How Two Dim Stars Came Together to Shine Brightly
Brown dwarfs get a bad rap in the stellar world, often labeled as "failed stars" for their inability to sustain nuclear fusion at their cores. The mass of these objects falls between planets and stars, ranging from 13 to 80 times the mass of Jupiter. Because they aren't massive enough to sustain fusion, they are far fainter and cooler than their stellar comrades.

Event - Health - 18.03.2026
Ketan Ganar wins Research Award for the best scientific article

Environment - Life Sciences - 18.03.2026
Past intensive whaling threatens the future of bowhead whales
Past intensive whaling threatens the future of bowhead whales
DNA Commercial whaling has left the bowhead whale vulnerable for many generations to come. A unique collection of prehistoric bowhead whale bones, dating back 11,000 years, reveals a previously untold story of the relative impacts of humans on nature. The time series of ancient fossils show that commercial hunting of bowhead whales, which spanned 400 years and ceased less than a century ago in 1931, has left irreversible destructive traces in the species' genetics.

Health - Life Sciences - 18.03.2026
Intratumoural microbiota and the immune system: a new study from the EOC-USI Institute for Translational Research
The Host-Microbiota Dynamics laboratory at the Institute for Translational Research (EOC-USI), led by Professor Giandomenica Iezzi, has published a new study in the scientific journal Cell Host & Microbe .

Linguistics & Literature - 18.03.2026
How to make the most of your Spring Break at UCL in 2026

Earth Sciences - 18.03.2026
SDU tests rescue drones in the Arctic

Life Sciences - Health - 18.03.2026
How can we keep our brains healthy?
The modern workplace demands that our brains perform at their best every day. A campaign offers information and advice for work and daily life to help maintain a healthy mind and memory.

Life Sciences - Health - 18.03.2026
UCalgary researchers receive federal funding boost for genomics research
UCalgary researchers receive federal funding boost for genomics research

Media - Politics - 18.03.2026
Musk's Twitter takeover highlights danger of owner-dominated social media platforms
Musk’s Twitter takeover highlights danger of owner-dominated social media platforms

Health - Social Sciences - 18.03.2026
Young cancer patients set Canada's top research priorities
Young cancer patients set Canada’s top research priorities
UCalgary researchers co-lead study with the community to find out what adolescents and young adults want scientists working on Researchers at the University of Calgary have developed 10 priorities for working with young people facing cancer.

Materials Science - Physics - 18.03.2026
Record efficiency for perovskite-silicon triple-junction solar cells
Record efficiency for perovskite-silicon triple-junction solar cells
EPFL and CSEM researchers have achieved a record 30% efficiency for triple-junction solar cells, which combine two thin-film perovskite cells and one silicon cell on a single device. The milestone could advance affordable next-generation solar technologies for space and terrestrial applications. Researchers from the Photovoltaics and Thin-Film Electronics Laboratory ( PV-Lab ) in EPFL's School of Engineering and CSEM have developed a new solar cell that combines exceptional voltage, high efficiency, and scalable manufacturing.

Health - Innovation - 18.03.2026
Tackling health inequalities across West Yorkshire

Health - 17.03.2026
Bionic foot that restores a natural walking pattern

Environment - Social Sciences - 17.03.2026
Ethnic land rights fail to provide Afro-Colombians with economic security

Health - 17.03.2026
'Junk DNA' may help defend against colorectal cancer, London study finds
’Junk DNA’ may help defend against colorectal cancer, London study finds
Western and London Health Sciences Centre Research Institute investigate mechanism that may protect against tumour formation For decades, large portions of the human genome were labelled "junk DNA-.

Economics - Environment - 17.03.2026
New tools help businesses safeguard global supply chains
New tools help businesses safeguard global supply chains

Event - Electroengineering - 17.03.2026
CEA Leti to Showcase Integrated Expertise In Microelectronics Reliability at IRPS 2026
CEA-Leti to Showcase Integrated Expertise In Microelectronics Reliability at IRPS 2026 -Seven Papers Present Early-Stage Insights to Guide Technology Developers And Circuit Designers Toward Robust,

Health - Innovation - 17.03.2026
At home in two worlds
At home in two worlds

Health - Career - 17.03.2026
AI was supposed to ease doctors’ workload - instead they spend hours correcting errors
AI AI-powered clinical documentation was meant to streamline work at Danish hospitals.

History & Archeology - 17.03.2026
What's in a Name? - The Unknown Faces of History
What’s in a Name? - The Unknown Faces of History

Health - Career - 17.03.2026
First-of-its-kind dental scheme tackles hidden barrier to work
First-of-its-kind dental scheme tackles hidden barrier to work

Chemistry - Environment - 17.03.2026
The unique chemistry of French Guiana's army ant venom
The unique chemistry of French Guiana’s army ant venom

Computer Science - Economics - 17.03.2026
How to Spot Disinformation: Tips from a Cybersecurity Expert
How to Spot Disinformation: Tips from a Cybersecurity Expert

Pharmacology - Health - 17.03.2026
International trial finds rapid diagnostic testing alone does not reduce antibiotic prescribing for respiratory infections
Two international studies, a clinical trial led by the University of Oxford and University of Utrecht, and a qualitative study led by the University of Oxford and University of Antwerp, report that point-of-care diagnostic testing, when used alone is unlikely to reduce antibiotic prescribing for respiratory tract infections in primary care.

Life Sciences - Environment - 17.03.2026
Two million ancient DNA switches controlling plant genes
An international project has uncovered millions of ancient DNA 'switches' that have been regulating plant genes for up to 300 million years - a discovery that could pave the way for more precise engineering of crop traits.