science wire
Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Lausanne, EPFL
Results 51 - 100 of 1322.
Innovation - Economics - 02.09.2025

Health - Life Sciences - 25.08.2025

When we're healthy, activities like walking, sitting down, speaking and remembering things can be done with ease.
Event - Computer Science - 18.08.2025

The new method developed by researchers in collaboration with colleagues in Germany, is efficient, fast and inexpensive.
Mathematics - Computer Science - 14.08.2025

Researchers have developed a new way to design complex, curved three-dimensional shapes using flat materials such as paper, aluminum sheets or plastic, combining creative thinking with a new computational algorithm. Have you ever rolled a piece of paper into a cylinder, or tried to wrap aluminum foil around an object without making it crumple? Imagine being able to simply turn a piece of flat material into beautiful, strong furniture, lighting or even the buildings and bridges of the future.
Architecture & Buildings - 12.08.2025

For her PhD in architecture at EPFL, Chloé Joly-Pottuz researched construction methods, and in particular those for timber structures on Easter Island.
Life Sciences - Health - 08.08.2025

Innovation - Life Sciences - 06.08.2025

Life Sciences - Health - 30.07.2025

Memory loss, tremors, paralysis: when parts of the nervous system start to break down - or get broken - the consequences for human health can be staggering.
Microtechnics - 28.07.2025

Researchers are developing robotic beehive frames that help locate honey stores inside of beehives over time, without relying on cameras. The aim is to develop new observation tools to study honeybee behavior that better fit the bees' natural way to occupy space compared to current methods. Cyril Monette is fascinated by collective behavior.
History & Archeology - Innovation - 14.07.2025

Geography - Social Sciences - 03.07.2025
Immigration: from clichés to economic competitiveness
A joint study by EPFL and the University of Geneva takes a sweeping look at international migration in Switzerland from 1966 to the present day.
Microtechnics - Computer Science - 19.06.2025

Researchers have developed a customizable soft robotic system that uses compressed air to produce shape changes, vibrations, and other haptic, or tactile, feedback in a variety of configurations.
Environment - 16.06.2025

Scientists at EPFL have created MammAlps, a multi-view, multi-modal video dataset that captures how wild mammals behave in the Swiss Alps.
Innovation - Computer Science - 13.06.2025
Switzerland and AI: tiny but mighty
Health - Computer Science - 10.06.2025

Linguistics & Literature - 02.06.2025

A team of international researchers led by EPFL developed a multilingual benchmark to determine Large Language Models ability to grasp cultural context.
Innovation - 27.05.2025

Health - 26.05.2025

Researchers uncover a notorious cholera strain that contains sophisticated immune systems to fend off viruses, which potentially helped it fuel a devastating epidemic across Latin America. When we think of cholera, most of us picture contaminated water and tragic outbreaks in vulnerable regions. But behind the scenes, cholera bacteria are locked in a fierce, microscopic war-one that could shape the course of pandemics.
Computer Science - Politics - 21.05.2025
Staking out a path to trustworthy AI
Generative artificial intelligence (GenAI) suffers from several types of biases that reflect human failings.
Life Sciences - Chemistry - 19.05.2025

Organoids are a promising breakthrough that scientists have been exploring over the past 15 years. These three-dimensional tissue cultures grown from human stem cells stand to revolutionize some aspects of biomedical research, but they won't do away entirely with the need for animal testing.
Pedagogy - Campus - 16.05.2025
AI can help students learn better
Microtechnics - Innovation - 15.05.2025

Autonomous mobility already exists.. to some extent. Building an autonomous vehicle that can safely navigate an empty highway is one thing.
Microtechnics - 13.05.2025

A robotic hand developed at EPFL can pick up 24 different objects with human-like movements that emerge spontaneously, thanks to compliant materials and structures rather than programming. When you reach out your hand to grasp an object like a bottle, you generally don't need to know the bottle's exact position in space to pick it up successfully.
Environment - Pedagogy - 09.05.2025

Microtechnics - Environment - 08.05.2025

An edible robot made by scientists leverages a combination of biodegradable fuel and surface tension to zip around the water's surface, creating a safe - and nutritious - alternative to environmental monitoring devices made from artificial polymers and electronics. The boat-shaped robot takes advantage of the same phenomenon - the Marangoni effect - used by some aquatic insects to propel themselves across the surface of water.
Environment - 05.05.2025

EPFL atmospheric and climate scientists show that biological particles may induce rain events that could contribute to flooding and snowstorms, owing to their ability to precipitate ice formation in clouds. They call for an update of meteorological and climate models. Clouds form upon existing particles in the atmosphere, and extreme weather events like flooding and snowstorms are related to production of large amounts of ice in clouds.
Event - 02.05.2025

Microtechnics - Innovation - 14.04.2025

A Swiss Italian team has created RoboCake, an edible robotic wedding cake that illustrates the advances in robotic food research.
Computer Science - 11.04.2025

A system developed at EPFL uses augmented reality (AR) to help carpenters make extremely precise timber cuts without having to measure or mark up beams.
Computer Science - Innovation - 10.04.2025
Trustworthy AI without Trusted Data
Researchers developed a ground-breaking new tool to help build safer AI. Today, almost everybody has heard of AI and millions around the world already use, or are exposed, to it - from ChatGPT writing our emails, to helping in medical diagnosis.
Health - Innovation - 07.04.2025

Small language models are more reliable and secure than their large counterparts, primarily because they draw information from a circumscribed dataset.
Life Sciences - Microtechnics - 04.04.2025

Researchers at EPFL's Neuroengineering Laboratory, led by Pavan Ramdya, aim to replicate the workings of the brain of the common fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster.
Computer Science - 01.04.2025

Physics - Computer Science - 27.03.2025

To get around the constraints of quantum physics, researchers have built a new acoustic system to study the way the minuscule atoms of condensed matter talk together.
Health - Life Sciences - 26.03.2025

The microorganisms in our intestines play an important role in many bodily processes, from digestion to emotions, and are a key factor in our overall health.
Innovation - Environment - 24.03.2025
Can energy-hungry AI help cut our energy use?
It takes ten times more electricity for ChatGPT to respond to a prompt than for Google to carry out a standard search.
Physics - 19.03.2025

Researchers, working with the Centre de Physique des Particules de Marseille, have developed a new method for identifying neutrinos using data from CERN's NA62 experiment-which recently observed the rarest particle decay ever recorded. Particle physics explores the smallest building blocks of nature, particles so tiny that trillions of them pass through us unnoticed every second.
Health - Life Sciences - 13.03.2025

Scientists at.Neurorestore (EPFL/CHUV/UNIL) have developed an approach that combines rehabilitation robotics with spinal cord stimulation to restore movement in people with spinal cord injuries. The technology enhances rehabilitation and enables activities like cycling and walking outdoors. Spinal cord injuries are life-altering, often leaving individuals with severe mobility impairments.
Environment - Architecture & Buildings - 11.03.2025

Campus - Life Sciences - 06.03.2025

Health - Mathematics - 03.03.2025
A new cryptography framework for secure genomic studies
Developed from EPFL research, in collaboration with MIT and Yale, the combination of secure computation and distributed algorithms opens a new era for data collaborations in medical research.
Physics - Computer Science - 24.02.2025
When quantum computing meets the real world
Quantum computing could be one of the big technological revolutions of the coming decades. At EPFL, scientists are at the forefront of harnessing quantum technologies to address real-world issues, aligning their efforts with the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
Life Sciences - Campus - 11.02.2025
Designing life with artificial intelligence
"Designing Life with AI" is a cross-disciplinary MAKE A total of eight research labs are involved. Our body has some 20,000 different kinds of proteins: collagen, insulin, hemoglobin and many more.
Environment - Innovation - 07.02.2025

To support environmental conservation efforts, an EPFL start-up has developed a smart microphone system that can record and analyze the sounds made by animals.
Life Sciences - Health - 04.02.2025

Campus - 17.01.2025

Life Sciences - Chemistry - 14.01.2025

DNA sequencing was revolutionized after scientists discovered a new bacterium in the hot springs of Yellowstone National Park, and today it's a common research technique.
Computer Science - Pedagogy - 10.01.2025

A researcher at EPFL working at the crossroads of neuroscience and computational science has developed an algorithm that can predict how surprise and novelty affect behavior.
Computer Science - Innovation - 07.01.2025

Researchers have developed 4M , a next-generation, open-sourced framework for training versatile and scalable multimodal foundation models that go beyond language.
Life Sciences - Health - 23.12.2024

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.
Pharmacology - Today
GSK, University of Oxford and Imperial College London launch centre to create computer models of lungs, liver, kidneys and cartilage
GSK, University of Oxford and Imperial College London launch centre to create computer models of lungs, liver, kidneys and cartilage

Innovation - Today
India's new wave of Hindu Religious Entrepreneurship is reshaping our interpretation of success
India's new wave of Hindu Religious Entrepreneurship is reshaping our interpretation of success
Veterinary - Today
New RVC study challenges common beliefs on desirable behaviours in designer 'Doodle' crossbreeds
New RVC study challenges common beliefs on desirable behaviours in designer 'Doodle' crossbreeds

Agronomy & Food Science - Today
Bird Flu Risk to Danish Cattle - New Tool Can Warn Farmers Before Infection Spreads
Bird Flu Risk to Danish Cattle - New Tool Can Warn Farmers Before Infection Spreads
Chemistry - Today
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 - Today
Analysis: Trying your best in a second language? Here's why native speakers seem so rude
Analysis: Trying your best in a second language? Here's why native speakers seem so rude
Computer Science - Mar 18
SDU is part of global initiative to bring mathematical certainty to modern computing and artificial intelligence
SDU is part of global initiative to bring mathematical certainty to modern computing and artificial intelligence







