Plant biologist Corn茅 Pieterse has been elected to join EMBO, a European research network for leading scientists in life sciences. This membership is a significant honor and opens up new opportunities for collaboration and sharing ideas.
What is it like to live with a regenerative implant? How do you tailor a treatment to the patient鈥檚 wants and needs? And how do we make implants accessible to everyone who needs them?
Project raised awareness among citizens, schoolchildren and students of soil decomposition processes that play a significant role in climate and biodiversity .
Patient鈥檚 own bone has long been used for transplantation, but this method is not optimal. Instead, special grains of artificial bone may be a better option.
The EU-funded IHEN project has been launched. IHEN will develop a roadmap for future exposome research, provide tools and training opportunities and increase the impact of future studies in this field.
Seed funding has been awarded to an EWUU Preventive Health project to learn how professionals and public servants can better assist the socioeconomically vulnerable.
The MILAGRO project is financed by the European Union and aims to create activities, tools and opportunities to build an intercultural dialogue between locals and migrants.
Lena Hartog, climate activist and author, releases her latest book, offering readers practical advice and inspiration to tackle the climate crisis head-on.
The DRIVE-RM consortium has been awarded 鈧37.5 million under the prestigious NWO SUMMIT program. The collaboration focuses on smart materials that assist the body in healing.
Smart innovations like organs-on-a-chip and virtual humans take our science to the next level, while reducing or replacing animal testing. In Utrecht we work on animal-free innovations.
Researchers from Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 and UMC Utrecht have received a grant of 936,587 euros from the ZonMw, for research into a serious heart condition that affects both humans and dogs.
Researchers will train AI-models to identify publications relevant to the IMPROVE project, which seeks to improve how healthcare utilizes patient-generated health data.
A promising immunotherapy for rheumatoid arthritis is proving successful in mouse models. Rheumatoid arthritis has so far had no effective treatment. This research is a step in the right direction.