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Children are disproportionately affected by online advertising

Published 16 January 2017 Nils Holmberg (Photo: Gunnar Menander) Children aged 9 are several times more sensitive to disruptive advertising than adults. This is shown by studies conducted at Lund University in Sweden, in which children’s eye movements were measured. Together with the Lund University Humanities Lab, media and communications researcher Nils Holmberg has developed a combination of me

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/children-are-disproportionately-affected-online-advertising - 2025-01-19

The first archive of iPS cells from Parkinson’s patients

Published 17 January 2017 Laurent Roybon The Stem Cell Laboratory for CNS Disease Modeling (CSC Laboratory) in Lund, has created one of the largest iPSC biobanks from patients diagnosed with familial and idiopathic PD, and associated synucleionopathies. iPSCs are obtained by reprogramming patient’s somatic cells into pluripotent stem cells. This unique technique, which allows generating embryonic

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/first-archive-ips-cells-parkinsons-patients - 2025-01-19

How solvents affect the skin

Published 17 January 2017 Emma Sparr (Photo: Gunnar Menander) Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have developed a method that makes it possible to see how individual molecules from solvents in skin creams, medicated ointments and cleaning products affect and interact with the skin’s own molecules. In the study, the researchers have examined how molecules added to the skin through various liq

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/how-solvents-affect-skin - 2025-01-19

Boys with more physical education in school had better grades

Published 19 January 2017 Jesper Fritz Previous research has shown that there may be a connection between daily physical education and improved study performance. A new extensive study from Lund University in Sweden has shown the same connection, but for boys in particular. The project involved several primary school classes in which the pupils participated in physical education on a daily basis,

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/boys-more-physical-education-school-had-better-grades - 2025-01-19

Lund University once again the top choice in Sweden for international applicants

Published 19 January 2017 Lund University is once again the most popular choice for international students wanting to study their Master’s degree in Sweden, with 1/3 of all applicants from the latest application round choosing Lund University programmes. Of the total 74,620 students who applied to autumn 2017 Master’s degree programmes at Swedish universities, 26,223 chose Lund University programm

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/lund-university-once-again-top-choice-sweden-international-applicants - 2025-01-19

Transplanted neurons incorporated into a stroke-injured rat brain

Published 23 January 2017 Zaal Kokaia Today, a stroke usually leads to permanent disability – but in the future, the stroke-injured brain could be reparable by replacing dead cells with new, healthy neurons, using transplantation. Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have taken a step in that direction by showing that some neurons transplanted into the brains of stroke-injured rats were incorp

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/transplanted-neurons-incorporated-stroke-injured-rat-brain - 2025-01-19

How plant cells regulate growth shown for the first time

Published 23 January 2017 The meristem. The photo was taken using confocal microscopy. (Photo: Arun Sampathkumar and Yassin Refahi) Researchers have managed to show how the cells in a plant, a multicellular organism, determine their size and regulate their growth over time. The findings overturn previous theories in the field and are potentially significant for the future of agriculture and forest

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/how-plant-cells-regulate-growth-shown-first-time - 2025-01-19

WATCH: Rare meteorites challenge our understanding of the solar system

Published 23 January 2017 Researchers have discovered minerals from 43 meteorites that landed on Earth 470 million years ago. More than half of the mineral grains are from meteorites completely unknown or very rare in today’s meteorite flow. These findings mean that we will probably need to revise our current understanding of the history and development of the solar system. WATCH VIDEO STORYThe di

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/watch-rare-meteorites-challenge-our-understanding-solar-system - 2025-01-19

How 1 000 new genetic variants were discovered in blood groups

Published 26 January 2017 Mattias Möller (Photo: Åsa Hansdotter) 1 000 new mutations in the blood group genes: that is what physician and former programmer Mattias Möller found in his research study in which he developed new software and investigated blood group genes in 2 504 people. This discovery from Lund University in Sweden was published recently in the journal Blood Advances. Genomes from 2

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/how-1-000-new-genetic-variants-were-discovered-blood-groups - 2025-01-19

Museum of Artistic Process and Public Art to open in a new guise

Published 27 January 2017 Photo: Johan Persson On Saturday 28 January, after extensive renovation work, Skissernas Museum – Museum of Artistic Process and Public Art in Lund, Sweden, will open its doors once again. WATCH VIDEO STORYThe inauguration will coincide with the opening of four temporary exhibitions of contemporary artists and architects: Swoon, Charlotte von Poehl, Andreas Eriksson and E

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/museum-artistic-process-and-public-art-open-new-guise - 2025-01-19

Both accelerator and brake are required for normal movement

Published 27 January 2017 Illustration: Angela Cenci Nilsson In order to drive a car, you need a good balance between accelerator and brake. The same applies to a part of the brain – the striatum - that controls our movements. Research at Lund University in Sweden has led to new findings on the interaction between the “accelerator” and the “brake” in the striatum. These findings may guide the deve

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/both-accelerator-and-brake-are-required-normal-movement - 2025-01-19

Having your first child will cost you, study finds

Published 30 January 2017 Petter Lundborg (Photo: Kennet Ruona) Having children has major long-term effects on mothers’ salaries. This has been shown in a study from the Lund University in Sweden, by using data from some 20 000 women undergoing in vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment in Denmark. The first child causes the greatest impact on salary, while the effects of a second child are short term

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/having-your-first-child-will-cost-you-study-finds - 2025-01-19

Unique mapping of methylome in insulin-producing islets

Published 30 January 2017 Charlotte Ling (Photo: Stig-Åke Jönsson, Malmöbild) Throughout our lives, our genes are affected by the way we live. Diet, exercise, age and diseases create imprints that are stored in something called methylome. Now, for the first time, researchers at the Lund University Diabetes Centre in Sweden have been able to map the entire methylome in the pancreatic islets which p

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/unique-mapping-methylome-insulin-producing-islets - 2025-01-19

An Innovative Medicines Initiative Project for Precision Medicine in DKD

Published 6 February 2017 Maria Gomez (Photo: Kennet Ruona) LAUNCH OF BEAt-DKD – 6 FEBRUARY 2017 BEAt-DKD (“Biomarker Enterprise to Attack Diabetic Kidney Disease”), a unique public private partnership funded by the Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI), member companies from the European Federation of Pharmaceutical Industries and Associations (EFPIA), the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation (J

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/innovative-medicines-initiative-project-precision-medicine-dkd - 2025-01-19

The oxygen content increased when the Earth was covered in ice

Published 7 February 2017 Ice landscape (Photo: Svante Björck) In the beginning, planet Earth was a very inhospitable place with no oxygen and only single-celled bacteria as inhabitants. According to a new study, the oxygen content in the air began to increase about 2.4 billion years ago, at the same time as the global glaciation and when all continents were gathered in a single huge landmass, or

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/oxygen-content-increased-when-earth-was-covered-ice - 2025-01-19

Watch: Students develop vegan, gluten-free mud cake mix

Published 7 February 2017 Jitesh Jayakumar, Anna Telfser and Iliana Karasa A group of engineering students at Lund University in Sweden noticed that there were no vegan cake mixes available on the Swedish market. They set to work and came up with a dry mix that only requires the addition of oil and water. The final product contained no eggs or wheat flour, making it vegan as well as gluten-free –

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/watch-students-develop-vegan-gluten-free-mud-cake-mix - 2025-01-19

Lund University awards honorary doctorate to Mary Kelly

Published 7 February 2017 Mary Kelly (Photo: Aasa Lunden) Artist Mary Kelly will receive an honorary doctorate degree from the Faculty of Fine and Performing Arts at Lund University in Sweden at a doctorate conferment ceremony in May. Mary Kelly is a legendary artist, feminist and educator. Her Post-Partum Document (1973–79) is one of the first research-based works in an international context. It

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/lund-university-awards-honorary-doctorate-mary-kelly - 2025-01-19

Watch: Malaria mosquitos sensitive to horseradish

Published 9 February 2017 Picture: Sabeen Survery and Urban Johanson Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have taken an important step on the road to understanding the underlying mechanism of how and why animals can feel pain in connection with cold or heat. However, according to the study, temperature is just one triggering factor – horseradish, mustard, cinnamon and wasabi have a similar eff

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/watch-malaria-mosquitos-sensitive-horseradish - 2025-01-19

Gut bacteria may play a role in Alzheimer’s disease

Published 10 February 2017 Frida Fåk Hållenius New research from Lund University in Sweden has shown that intestinal bacteria can accelerate the development of Alzheimer’s disease. According to the researchers behind the study, the results open up the door to new opportunities for preventing and treating the disease. Because our gut bacteria have a major impact on how we feel through the interacti

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/gut-bacteria-may-play-role-alzheimers-disease - 2025-01-19

Those who help each other can invade harsher environments

Published 20 February 2017 Photo: Yitzchak Ben Mocha Through cooperation, animals are able to colonise harsher living environments that would otherwise be inaccessible, according to a new study from Lund University in Sweden, together with researchers in England and USA. The research community has long believed this was the other way around - that species in tough environments had to cooperate to

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/those-who-help-each-other-can-invade-harsher-environments - 2025-01-19