202 search results for “cancer preparation” in the Student website
-
Vincent Smit -
Yvette van der Linden -
Joan Hendrik Veelken -
Arnoud Sonnenberg -
Karin de Visser -
Rob Pelger -
Hans Vasen -
Gerard Mulder -
Jelle Wesseling -
J Morreau -
Jannie Keyser-Borst -
Sibel Bahtiri -
Preparing for the Worst: Japan and a Taiwan Strait Crisis
Lecture
-
Prepare Yourself for the virtual Bio Science Park Excursion
Career and apply for jobs
-
Prepare Yourself for the Bio Science Park Excursion
Career and apply for jobs
-
University flag travels to Mount Everest and back again
Leiden PhD candidate Mona Shahab climbed Mount Everest two years ago to raise money for the education of disadvantaged children in Egypt. She made it to the top and posed there with the University flag. She recently presented the flag to Rector Carel Stolker.
-
Silver and light: a powerful combination with the potential to save lives
Packages of DNA strands containing silver, measuring just two or three nanometres in size. Leiden physicists Donny de Bruin and Dirk Bouwmeester create these packages, which can enter living cells on their own. They then activate the silver with light, causing the cells to break down. This could, in…
-
Azeb AmhaAfrika-Studiecentrum
-
Marije Niemeijer -
Tessa Hagens -
Hein Putter -
Gregorius Luyten -
Henri Versteeg -
Corrie Marijnen -
Pancras HogendoornFaculty of Humanities
-
Jerry Braun -
Koos van der Hoeven -
Jos Jonkers -
Peter ten Dijke -
Fijs van Leeuwen -
Sjaak Neefjes -
Manfred Wuhrer -
Bart van Hoek -
Johanna Meijer -
Henricus Verspaget -
Frits Koning -
Sylvia Le Dévédec -
From research to practice: Leiden researchers awarded European grant
Various Leiden researchers have been awarded a European grant to explore the commercial or societal potential of previous research.
-
Leiden technology research receives funding from NWO and businesses
A CT scanner to treat eye cancer, energy-efficient software for the future and a test to identify male chick eggs. Three projects by researchers from Leiden University are to receive funding from research funder NWO’s Open Technology programme, to which the business sector also contributes.
-
Ten Leiden students receive prize for outstanding achievement
Ten Leiden students have received a prize from the Royal Holland Society of Sciences and Humanities (KHMW). They were nominated by their degree programme. Who are these students?
-
What does a cell eat? This new tool makes it visible
What if you could watch a single cell eat in real time? This could answer questions about diseases such as cancer. PhD candidate Yixuan Wang has developed a glowing chemical tool that makes this possible, revealing how living cells take in nutrients.
-
New professor Suzan Verberne aims to bring large language models and search engines closer together
Suzan Verberne has been appointed professor of Natural Language Processing at the Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer Science (LIACS) from 1 October. Verberne has been at LIACS since 2017 as group leader of the Text Mining and Retrieval group.
-
Leiden scientists join national effort to advance nanomedicine
A Dutch consortium has received €6.7 million to accelerate the development of nanomedicines together with patients. Researchers from Leiden University play a key role in the project.
-
Five Leiden contributions to NWO Perspectief projects
Five consortia within the Perspectief programme that include Leiden researchers have received funding to start their research projects. These projects focus on (further) developing technological innovations, with societal and economic impact at their core.
-
From nanoscale to whole organism: at the Cell Observatory, researchers study life in detail
About forty microscopes, various laboratories, and some 15,000 zebrafish: that’s Sylvia le Dévédec's workplace. She is one of the managers of the Leiden Cell Observatory, a unique facility accessible to all researchers.
-
Mini organs-on-chips: an alternative to drug testing on animals
Mini organs-on-chips allow us to study how diseases develop and how drugs work. Although the technology is not new, it is becoming increasingly advanced. PhD candidate Bart Kramer hopes it will eliminate animal testing in the future.
-
How ‘sleeping’ microorganisms can determine the fate of a population
Microorganisms that temporarily ‘go to sleep’ play an important role in the evolution and survival of a population. Mathematician Shubhamoy Nandan conducted research on the effect of this characteristic called ‘dormancy’ in a novel mathematical model.
-
Serkan Aslan -
Olaf Dekkers -
Adam Cohen