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  • With nature as the client students at Umeå Institute of Design have explored new perspectives in design and forestry.

    Ecocentric design for future forestry

    Recently, students from Umeå Institute of Design at Umeå University, Sweden, completed a unique project in collaboration with the Cluster of Forest Technology along with several major stakeholders in the forest industry. But the intended client was not industry, but nature.

  • Emmanuelle Charpentier. Photo: Hallbauer & Fiorett

    The Nobel Prize in Chemistry is receiving digital attention

    On 10 December, the Nobel Prize Ceremony will take place at which Emmanuelle Charpentier and Jennifer A. Doudna will be awarded their Nobel Prizes in Chemistry. Emmanuelle Charpentier made the discovery of CRISPR-Cas9 when she worked at Umeå University.

  • Liquid gel in COVID patients’ lungs makes way for new treatment

    In some patients who died with severe COVID-19 and respiratory failure, a jelly was formed in the lungs. Researchers have now established what the active agent in the jelly is and thanks to that, this new discovery can now be the key to new effective therapies. This according to a new study at Umeå University, Sweden.

  •   Hahn et al., use advanced imaging tools to reveal new aspects on the most common model for diabetes research. The image depicts a mouse pancreas imaged by Optical Projection Tomography. Image: Max Hahn

    New research challenges the most common model for diabetes research

    Experimental models are key for understanding mechanistic aspects of diabetes and for developing better medicines. The probably most common diabetes disease model to date involves the destruction of insulin-producing cells in the pancreas. Researchers at Umeå University and the Karolinska Institute present new data that challenges important aspects of this model.

  • Mónica de Miranda, When Words Escape, Flowers Speak, 2017. Cortesy of the Artist.

    Ground Control – New Exhibition Opens at Bildmuseet

    Bildmuseet presents Ground Control, an exhibition with works by contemporary artists interested in plants and their political dimensions. Welcome to press previews – digital and on-site – on Thursday 24 September.

  • Huge swedish study of COVID-19 on Umeå University campus

    Huge swedish study of COVID-19 on Umeå University campus

    Region Västerbotten and Umeå University have been assigned by the Public Health Agency of Sweden to carry out the largest study to date in Sweden assessing the prevalence of active COVID-19 infection. The aim is to perform up to 20,000 tests on students and employees on Campus Umeå between 31 August and 10 September.

  • Eroding edge of permafrost peat plateau, Seida, Western Russian Arctic. Photo: Gustaf Hugelius

    Peatland carbon and nitrogen stocks vulnerable to permafrost thaw

    Northern peatlands hold large stocks of carbon and nitrogen and thus play a key role in global climate dynamics. However, their vulnerability to climate warming is uncertain, due in part to a lack of spatially explicit, observation-based peatland maps. This is shown in a study published in PNAS of among others researchers at Umeå University.

  • One of the new exhibtion is a Faith Ringgold retrospective with works from the 1960s to the 2000s. Photo: Mikael Lundgren.

    Bildmuseet reopens with Ringgold, Sansour and Cyrén

    Three new exhibitions are installed when Bildmuseet opens its doors: The first retrospective in the Nordics of the acclaimed artist and civil rights activist Faith Ringgold; Larissa Sansours evocative and thought-provoking Heirloom, Denmark's contribution to the Venice Biennale in 2019; and Swedish Picture Book of the Year / Marathon by Karin Cyrén.

  • Plant roots in soil stimulate microbial decomposition, a mechanism called the priming effect. It increases greenhouse gas emission from thawing permafrost, a study from among other researchers from Umeå University shows. Photo: Ive van Krunkelsven

    Plant roots increase carbon emission from permafrost soils

    A key uncertainty in climate projections is the amount of carbon emitted by thawing permafrost in the Arctic. Plant roots in soil stimulate microbial decomposition, a mechanism called the priming effect. An international research team shows that the priming effect alone can cause emission of 40 billion tonnes carbon from permafrost by 2100. The study was published today in Nature Geoscience.

  • How can biotech wearable help people suffering loss? That's the question for one of the degree projects presented during UID20 Design Talks and Degree Show. Photo: Umeå Institute of Design

    App for activists and biotech wearable for the grieving at UID20

    Peek into the future as design students from all over the world showcase their grad projects in the form of tomorrow's products and services. This year's grad show at Umeå Institute of Design offers a series of innovations ranging from a biotech wearable for people suffering loss and an app for young activists, to solutions for future firefighters in the wake of climate change.

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