290 search results for “biomarker discovery” in the Staff website
-
A podium for science
Rector Magnificus Carel Stolker will retire on 8 February. If there’s one theme running through his career, it’s the links between the University and society. In this series of pre-retirement discussions, Stolker will talk one last time to people from within and without the University. This edition…
-
‘Cancer treatment should be a six-week life event’
When internist Christian Blank made his very first discovery, his field of immunotherapy was the underdog of cancer research. Now, over 20 years later, Blank has been appointed Professor By Special Appointment of Internal Medicine for his clinical research into immunotherapy and will give his inaugural…
-
Nobel Prize in Literature awarded to Annie Ernaux - a reading list
The 2022 Nobel Prize in Literature has been awarded to French writer Annie Ernaux (1940). In an explanation, the Swedish Academy praises Ernaux 'for the courage and clinical acuity with which she uncovers the roots, estrangements and collective restraints of personal memory'.
-
IBL Spotlights - Development & Disease
Lecture
-
“Mobile” Afterworlds in the Western Capital of the Liao Dynasty
Lecture, also on line with Zoom
-
Women in Data Science (WiDS)
Conference
-
Planetary Atmospheres and the Search for Signs of Life Beyond Earth
Lecture
-
DUSANE: Dutch Symposium of the Ancient Near East 2023
Symposium
-
On quantum transport in flat-band materials
PhD defence
-
Science & Cocktails: Why do People Fight?
Lecture
-
Chinese Cinema Meets Digital Humanities
Lecture
-
Portrait/Figure drawing
Arts and leisure, Arts and leisure
-
Uncovering the Secrets of the Universe with Observational Cosmology
Lecture
-
Fundamental Research on the Voltammetry of Polycrystalline Gold
PhD defence
-
Regulation of autophagy-related mechanisms during bacterial infection
PhD defence
-
Random Erasing
Lecture
-
The Need for Teaching a More Accurate and Inclusive History of Science: The Case of Islamic Contributions to Math and Sciences
Debate
-
Lithium-ion batteries and the transition to electric vehicles
PhD defence
-
Lessons of Democracy: Mothers’ Education and Learning Activities in late-1950s Japan,
Lecture
-
Super-Earth Atmospheres
PhD defence
- IBL Symposium 2022
-
Violence and the State: Perspectives from Ancient India
Lecture, VVIK Lecture
-
Extinction, Extraction, Emergence: Plantation Necrobiopolitics on the West Papuan Oil Palm Frontier
Lecture
-
Beyond the trenches
PhD defence
-
Food stories and the microbiome
Workshop
-
Unravelling cell fate decisions through single cell methods and mathematical models
PhD defence
-
‘Prehistory holds up a challenging mirror to us’
Leiden alumnus Luc Amkreutz is a curator at the National Museum of Antiquities. His exhibition about the submerged landscape of Doggerland highlights what we can learn from prehistory. ‘Just like the people of Doggerland, we are confronted with climate change, but we are responsible for the speed of…
-
ESA presents first crystal-clear Euclid photos of the cosmos
The first full-colour images of the cosmos from ESA's space telescope Euclid were presented today. Never before has a telescope been able to take such crystal-clear astronomical images of such a large part of the sky and so far into the deep universe. The five images illustrate Euclid's full potential;…
-
Willem van der Does sheds new light on the at times pitch-black history of psychiatry
Piercing through the skull with an ice pick, administering electric shocks without an anaesthetic, or applying leeches to the uterus: these may seem like medieval methods of torture, but they are in fact therapies used in medicine. Willem van der Does writes about all of them in his new book. ‘Physicians…
-
3 October University: from Russian DNA to drug-related violence
In prehistoric times there was a huge wave of migration, from the steppes in Russia and Ukraine to West Europe. The newcomers’ genes began to dominate. Archaeology research in Leiden into burial mounds in the Veluwe and Utrechtse Heuvelrug areas of the Netherlands yielded this spectacular conclusion.…
-
No exams or lectures, but building a radio telescope with empty paint cans
No more lectures and exams for the Radio Astronomy course taught by Michiel Brentjens. The corona crisis is a moment of reflection that has changed his whole way of teaching. Instead of being in front of the class, he lets his students build a radio telescope with paint cans.
-
Late Ottoman Istanbul Meets Cinema: Social Impacts of the First Encounter
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Colonial and Global History Seminar
Lecture, COGLOSS
-
Today’s experimental quantum research at Leiden University: from the microscopic to the macroscopic
Lecture, Studium Generale
-
Faculty of Archaeology launches dinosaur-focused research
Many an archaeologist, at some point in their career, is asked what type of dinosaur they discovered. Instead of once again patiently explaining that we do not do dinosaurs, the Faculty Board has now decided to listen to society’s call. ‘It is clear that the general public feels that dinosaurs are relevant…
-
Vedic mantras and rituals and their Avestan parallels: Toward the reconstruction of Indo-Iranian formulae and liturgical structures
Lecture, VVIK lecture
-
Grotian Law and Modernity at the Dawn of a New Age - International Conference
On the occasion of the 400th anniversary of the first publication of De jure belli ac pacis by Hugo Grotius in 1625, an international conference will be organized by the Grotiana Foundation, the Paul Scholten Centre for Jurisprudence at the University of Amsterdam, the Grotius Centre for International…
-
Opening Academic Year
Academic ceremony
-
SAILS event: Showcasing AI Research @ Humanities
Conference, Mini symposium
-
Conference Museums, Collections and Society
Conference