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  • Anders Schogster and Jonas Hansson from the Police Education Unit together with Juan Carlos Nieves Sanchez, Associate Professor of Computing Science, are collaborating in a unique project. Photo: Victoria Skeidsvoll

    AI for future policing now being developed in Umeå

    Police officers will be able to use AI and new mixed-reality technology to test and develop ways to improve situational awareness in critical situations such as gang violence and shootings. "Our responsible AI research will be directly useful for police officers in the field," says Juan Carlos Nieves Sanchez, Associate Professor and Research Leader in Computing Science at Umeå University.

  • Increased risk of heart rhythm disruption after COVID-19

    Increased risk of heart rhythm disruption after COVID-19

    Individuals infected with COVID-19 are also at an increased risk of suffering from heart rhythm disturbances, such as atrial fibrillation. This is shown in a new study at Umeå University, Sweden, which is one of the largest studies of its kind in the world.

  • Holding a conversation with humans can be a challenge for robots. Photo: Pixabay

    Researchers give robots better tools to manage conflicts in dialogues

    A new thesis shows how robots can manage conflicts and knowledge gaps in dialogues with people. By understanding the reasons behind dialogues that don't unfold as expected, researchers at Umeå University have developed strategies and mechanisms that could be important when living side by side.

  • In his doctoral thesis Naresh Kumar Wagri investigates how lime kiln are affected when fueled with biofuels. Photo: Charlie Ma

    Increased understanding of corrosion in lime kilns fired with biofuel

    To reduce carbon dioxide emissions from lime kilns, there is a growing interest in introducing bio-based fuels as an alternative to fossil fuels. Naresh Kumar Wagri, Department of Applied Physics and Electronics, Umeå University, shows in his thesis that this presents challenges due to the different chemical and physical properties of biofuels.

  • Pierrick Bru, PhD student at the Department of Plant Physiology and Umeå Plant Science Centre. Photo: Alexis Brun

    A sun protection mechanism helps plants to survive

    Just like people can get sunburned, plants can also suffer from too much sunlight. To stay healthy, they use an internal “sun protection mechanism”. Pierrick Bru, a PhD student working with Alizée Malnoë at Umeå Plant Science Centre and Umeå University, has been studying a special component of this mechanism, called qH, and has found that it is quite adaptable.

  • Scientists at Umeå University has pressure cooked birch leaves picked on campus to produce carbon particles that can be used as raw material in organic semiconductors. Photo. Mattias Pettersson

    Birch leaves as raw material for the production of organic semiconductors

    Today, petrochemical compounds and rare metals are usually used to produce semiconductors for optoelectronics, such as organic LEDs for super-thin TV and mobile phone screens. By pressure-cooking birch leaves picked on the Umeå University campus, the scientists behind this study produced carbon particles that can be used as raw material for organic semiconductors.

  • Stefan Larsson, Lund University, and Teresa Cerratto Pargman, Stockholm University, are the scientific leaders of this year's WASP-HS conference "AI for Humanity and Society 2023." Photo: Hanna Nordin

    Media Invitation: AI Research Will Be Further Developed at International Conference

    Researchers have made significant progress in understanding how artificial intelligence (AI) impacts our daily lives and the society we live in today, but the assumptions made in research must be regularly questioned. This will be discussed by experts during the international conference "AI for Humanity and Society 2023." The event is open to the public and will take place in Malmö between Novembe

  • In the sea, phytoplankton are the first step when methylmercury is absorbed into the food web. The image was taken under a microscope and shows a spring bloom of phytoplankton in the Bothnian Sea. Photo: Marlene Johansson

    Uptake of methylmercury by phytoplankton is controlled by thiols

    Methylmercury is one of the chemicals that poses the greatest threat to global public health. People ingest methylmercury by eating fish, but how does the mercury end up in the fish? A new study shows that the concentrations of so-called thiols in the water control how available the methylmercury is to living organisms.

  •  Silvia Remeseiro, lead author of the study. Image: Mattias Pettersson.

    DNA organization influences the growth of deadly brain tumours in response to neuronal signals

    A pioneering study at Umeå University, Sweden, has unveiled that the 3D organization of DNA can influence the progression of the aggressive brain tumour known as glioblastoma. Having identified the factors that glioblastoma uses to respond to neurons by growing and spreading, this discovery paves the way for further research into new treatments for brain tumours.

  • Virginia Dignum is one of 38 experts in UN's new high-level advisory body on artificial intelligence. Photo: Johan Gunséus

    Umeå professor new member of the United Nations AI Body

    Virginia Dignum, Professor at the Department of Computing Science, Umeå University, has, as the only Swedish representative, been appointed as a member of the United Nation’s High-Level Advisory Body on Artificial Intelligence, AI. The tasks of the body are to provide advice and propose solutions for the governance and management of AI at the global international level.

  • Tropical cloud forests have a unique biodiversity. Researchers from Umeå are investigating how plant and animal life is affected by climate change. Foto: Amy Grist

    Major grant will put Umeå at the forefront of tropical climate research

    The biodiversity of rainforests is threatened by climate change. Researcher Daniel Metcalfe conducts large-scale experiments to predict the consequences – but was ready to shut down when the funds ran out. Now, he has been awarded a major government grant from Formas to continue and expand the work.

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