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Environment - Innovation - 01.12.2023
Waterloo tackles antagonism in academia one talk at a time

Innovation - Economics - 01.12.2023
Perfected pitches shine at Velocity Pitch Competition

Astronomy / Space Science - Innovation - 01.12.2023
ESA’s highlights in 2024

Environment - 01.12.2023
Communicating soil biodiversity to kids around the globe
Communicating soil biodiversity to kids around the globe
Inspiring children around the globe to learn about soil diversity - that is the aim of an initiative launched by Malte Jochum, an ecologist at the University of Würzburg.

Astronomy / Space Science - Campus - 01.12.2023
The Marsh Observatory to train astronomers of the future

Politics - Pedagogy - 01.12.2023
University of Manchester selected to offer highly regarded Parliamentary Studies Module

Health - 01.12.2023
Cancer and love: How relationships, sexuality and the desire to have children can succeed despite treatment

Pharmacology - Environment - 01.12.2023
VUB launches new alcohol and drugs policy

Physics - Innovation - 01.12.2023
Austria's quan­tum sci­ence is taking off
Austria’s quan­tum sci­ence is taking off

Environment - 01.12.2023
Climate change and... forests
Climate change and... forests
Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL Climate change will significantly alter the Swiss forests.

Health - Pharmacology - 01.12.2023
Researchers translate hypothesis into personalized treatment for cancer
Researchers translate hypothesis into personalized treatment for cancer
Idea generates local and national collaborations, a philanthropic gift toward a new research centre and an entrepreneurial opportunity Dr. Franz Zemp, PhD, gets chills talking about how his idea to target a specific cancer cell has evolved. "I never thought I'd be that close to a patient. I never thought anything that I would build, or design would be in a clinical trial," says Zemp, an adjunct assistant professor at the Cumming School of Medicine (CSM).

Social Sciences - 01.12.2023
Caught in the middle
Women with disabilities who experience intimate-partner violence face substantial barriers when they decide to leave their partners.

Health - Pharmacology - 01.12.2023
A patch of protection against Zika virus
A patch of protection against Zika virus
A simple-to-apply, needle-free vaccine patch is being developed to protect people from the potentially deadly mosquito-borne Zika virus.

Environment - 01.12.2023
Opinion: Why are people still flying to climate conferences by private jet?
Opinion: Why are people still flying to climate conferences by private jet?

Campus - Career - 01.12.2023
Burchard Scholars gather to network, connect, and learn
The Burchard Scholars dinner series helps create conversations between academic disciplines. The  Burchard Scholars Program  pairs expert faculty with promising MIT sophomores and juniors who have demonstrated excellence in the humanities, arts, or social sciences.

Linguistics / Literature - History / Archeology - 01.12.2023
3 Questions: Wiebke Denecke on a landmark project for Chinese literature
3 Questions: Wiebke Denecke on a landmark project for Chinese literature
The Hsu-Tang Library of Classical Chinese Literature brings six centuries of classic texts to the world, in bilingual editions.

Health - 30.11.2023
Wellcome Trust funds study of innate immune cells role in intestinal health and disease

Politics - 30.11.2023
What is ’limitarianism’- Professor Ingrid Robeyns explains

Environment - Innovation - 30.11.2023
Expert insight: COP28: How 7 policies could help save a billion lives by 2100
Expert insight: COP28: How 7 policies could help save a billion lives by 2100
Each policy will help reduce carbon emissions, preventing concomitant climate change and premature deaths In a recent review of more than 180 peer-reviewed articles - which I conducted with fellow res

Social Sciences - Career - 30.11.2023
Empowering growth for Waterloo staff

Microtechnics - Materials Science - 30.11.2023
Lightweight insulating building elements from a 3D printer
Lightweight insulating building elements from a 3D printer
A doctoral researcher studying architecture at ETH Zurich is using 3D printing to produce lightweight insulation building components from cement-free mineral foams derived from recycled industrial waste. These could cut heating and cooling costs for buildings, and encourage more efficient use of construction materials.

Art and Design - History / Archeology - 30.11.2023
Revealed: this is what this 15th-century painting looked like before it was painted over
Revealed: this is what this 15th-century painting looked like before it was painted over
Frequin was one of three speakers on the Paleissymposium Assistant Professor Sanne Frequin was one of the three speakers at the Paleissymposium, with King Willem-Alexander as host.

Health - Pedagogy - 30.11.2023
Despite pressures facing young families, parents take precious moments to play with their babies
Despite pressures facing young families, parents take precious moments to play with their babies
Four in five primary caregivers of nine-month-old babies reported cuddling, talking and playing with their little one several times a day, in the first national long-term study of babies in over two decades, led by UCL.

Social Sciences - 30.11.2023
Under-represented STEM students most at-risk of not completing degrees, report finds
Students from under-represented backgrounds such as working class or racially minoritised people record the highest rates of degree non-completion, particularly in subjects such as computing, finds a new study led by UCL researchers.

History / Archeology - 30.11.2023
An ancient winery on the banks of the Rhône at Laveyron (Drôme)
At Laveyron, Inrap archaeologists have uncovered a wine-making facility built in the 1st century AD, on top of large buildings dating from the 1st century BC.

Health - Pharmacology - 30.11.2023
Teddy bear hospital: Hospital for cuddly toys reopens in Vienna from December 5 to 7, 2023
Teddy bear hospital: Hospital for cuddly toys reopens in Vienna from December 5 to 7, 2023

Environment - 30.11.2023
Expert Comment: Catchy headlines do not lead to action and change. It looks likely we will overshoot 1.5 C

Sport - 30.11.2023
Eindhoven student associations to collectively reduce alcohol consumption
Eindhoven student associations to collectively reduce alcohol consumption

Life Sciences - Health - 30.11.2023
Projet NeuroSonoGene wins ERC Synergy Grant 2023
25 000 students 193 bachelor degrees 192 master degrees 13 campuses Congratulations to the NeuroSonoGene project team comprising Serge Picaud (Director of the Institut de la Vision at Sorbonne Univer

Environment - Life Sciences - 30.11.2023
The University of Valencia participates in a project of the Horizon Europe programme to reduce marine megafauna bycatch
The University of Valencia participates in a project of the Horizon Europe programme to reduce marine megafauna bycatch

Physics - Campus - 30.11.2023
Universities are critical to emerging fusion industry
Fusion's success as a renewable energy depends on the creation of an industry to support it, and academia is vital to that industry's development.

Campus - Social Sciences - 30.11.2023
Provost’s update: Innovation, disruptive thinking and the culture of a university

Campus - Career - 30.11.2023
Four bachelor programmes celebrate Top-rated status in Keuzegids Universiteiten

Environment - Earth Sciences - 30.11.2023
Travelogue Greenland, part 2
Travelogue Greenland, part 2
Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL SLF biologist Christian Rixen writes about his expedition to Greenland in the footsteps of historical botanists - and climate change.

Innovation - 30.11.2023
Technology and knowledge transfer for the energy transition at municipal level
Technology and knowledge transfer for the energy transition at municipal level
Under the motto "Idea generation and co-creation processes to promote technology transfer", around 60 participants from research, business, cantons and municipalities discussed innovative approaches to the energy transition at Empa in Dübendorf on 24 November.

Environment - 30.11.2023
Climate change and... avalanches
Climate change and... avalanches
Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research WSL Climate change is having an impact on avalanche activity. Wet snow avalanches can be expected earlier and more frequently, while instabilities in dry snowpack are becoming less common. Unexpected changes in the weather, such as rain in midwinter, will continue to make the work of avalanche warning services and rescue workers challenging, not only in open terrain but also in ski resorts.

Law - 30.11.2023
ChatGPT and the law: a useful but imperfect tool
Generative artificial intelligence tools such as ChatGPT raise questions about how it can be used and controlled in the field of law, say two UdeM professors.

Economics - Health - 30.11.2023
Waterloo alumni named among Forbes 30 Under 30

Campus - Social Sciences - 30.11.2023
Celebrating the inaugural recipients of the Western Research Excellence Awards 
Celebrating the inaugural recipients of the Western Research Excellence Awards 

Transport - Environment - 30.11.2023
What roads would have to look like for more e-bikes than cars
What roads would have to look like for more e-bikes than cars
What happens when cities gear their road space primarily to the needs of cyclists and e-bikers? On a new popular-science website, researchers use examples from the city of Zurich to show what such an "E-Bike City" could one day look like. What would the streets look like if a city took half its traffic space and gave it to cycling and e-biking?

Innovation - Computer Science - 30.11.2023
A year of ChatGPT: U-M experts available to comment
EXPERTS ADVISORY A year ago, OpenAI launched ChatGPT, a chatbot built on the large language model GPT-3.

Life Sciences - Health - 30.11.2023
Ultrasound Enables Less-Invasive Brain-Machine Interfaces
Brain-machine interfaces (BMIs) are devices that can read brain activity and translate that activity to control an electronic device like a prosthetic arm or computer cursor. They promise to enable people with paralysis to move prosthetic devices with their thoughts. Many BMIs require invasive surgeries to implant electrodes into the brain in order to read neural activity.

Astronomy / Space Science - 30.11.2023
NASA's 6-Pack of Mini-Satellites Ready for Their Moment in the Sun
NASA’s 6-Pack of Mini-Satellites Ready for Their Moment in the Sun
The six satellites that make up NASA's SunRISE mission are each only about the size of a cereal box, flanked by small solar panels.

Astronomy / Space Science - Environment - 30.11.2023
Google's 'A Passage of Water' Brings NASA's Water Data to Life
Google’s ’A Passage of Water’ Brings NASA’s Water Data to Life
The international Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite, as shown in this illustration, is the first global mission surveying Earth's surface water.

Computer Science - Campus - 30.11.2023
Six students use computing power to tackle complex problems

Computer Science - Campus - 30.11.2023
High school students gain skills by working on digital learning materials
MIT Digital Learning Lab and Empowr pilot a new internship program. For Thomas Esayas, now a high school senior in Texas, the shift to virtual learning in the earlier days of the Covid-19 pandemic provided an opportunity to dive further into his interests in computer science.

Microtechnics - Computer Science - 30.11.2023
A new optimization framework for robot motion planning
MIT CSAIL researchers established new connections between combinatorial and continuous optimization, which can find global solutions for complex motion-planning puzzles. It isn't easy for a robot to find its way out of a maze. Picture the machines trying to traverse a kid's playroom to reach the kitchen, with miscellaneous toys scattered across the floor and furniture blocking some potential paths.

Life Sciences - 30.11.2023
Distinct brain activity triggered by memories of trauma
Distinct brain activity triggered by memories of trauma
Recollections of traumatic events among people with PTSD trigger markedly different brain activity than when remembering sad or -neutral- experiences. It is well known that people who have lived through traumatic events like sexual assault, domestic abuse, or violent combat can experience symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), including terrifying flashbacks, severe anxiety, and uncontrollable thoughts about the incident.

Health - 30.11.2023
Night shift workers need support to manage weight and metabolic health conditions: study
Work based policies must be designed to target barriers that night shift workers face when managing weight and metabolic health conditions, a Monash University-led review has found. Making up 13-27 per cent of the workforce, there are no systems in place to assist night shift workers to make healthier lifestyle choices, despite having an increased risk of weight gain, and a higher risk of weight related conditions such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease.

Research Management - Social Sciences - 30.11.2023
Q&A: Phillip Sharp and Amy Brand on the future of open-access publishing
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