Students need to have good information skills to be able to write reliable papers or theses. The library helps lecturers with information literacy education.
The Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 focus area Migration and Societal Change invites you to submit a proposal for a panel or an individual paper for our conference in June 2023.
[Interview] The computer program OceanParcels shows how plastic, bacteria and other particles move around the ocean. Research engineers added a unique feature.
The Programming Caf茅 is held every last Wednesday of the month between 3 and 5 p.m. at Utrecht Science Park. Researchers give insights in why they join the Programming Caf茅 of RDM Support.
Many researchers at Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 make recordings of interviews for their research. To transcribe these recordings, you can from now on use the tool Amberscript.
Virtueel ballonnen opblazen. Dit is een nieuw experiment voor deelnemers van 12-16 jaar van het YOUth-onderzoek.聽Met een VR-bril wanen de jongeren zich in een labruimte waarin ze virtueel ballonnen opblazen om punten te verdienen.
We are honored to announce that the 鈥楿nspoken Stories鈥 Photography Exhibition will be hosted at the Living Lab of the 木瓜福利影视 Library at Utrecht Science Park
Minder delinquent gedrag en minder recidive, zo concluderen de wetenschappers die de langetermijneffecten van de ouderinterventie Betere Start onderzochten.
The Global Education Lab flagship at UGlobe partners with societal partners from around the world to address inequalities in education globally. Four sub-projects provide an update on their activities.
Laura A. Weiss and Tina Venema were awarded Pathways to Sustainability seed funding for the project 鈥楽aving the climate and being happy 鈥 Can we have it all?鈥.
Maykel Verkuyten has very recently retired from Utrecht 木瓜福利影视/ISW/ERCOMER. As a farewell gift, Jochem Thijs and Anouk Smeekes have composed a Liber Amicorum which takes the form of an edited volume titled: 鈥淢igration and Ethnic Relations".
What makes inappropriate behaviour in the workplace so persistent? Distinguished professor and social psychologist Naomi Ellemers seeks to answer this question in her new book.