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  • © Aron Landahl, from the picture book Alla äter alla [Everybody Eats Everybody], 2023. Courtesy of the artist.

    Swedish Picture Book of the Year / Everybody Eats Everybody

    On 15 March, an exhibition opens with Aron Landahl’s original paintings for Alla äter alla [Everybody Eats Everybody], selected as the year’s best Swedish picture book. The opening will take place during Bildmuseet’s Art Friday with Littfest – Umeå International Literature Festival.

  • © Elias Crespin, Circualineados 248, 2019. Courtesy of the artist.

    Elias Crespin / Chronomorphosis

    Elias Crespin's mobile sculptures move slowly and gracefully in intricate, precise formations, seemingly floating freely in the air in a mesmerising exhibition on Bildmuseet’s top floor. Chronomorphosis opens at Bildmuseet on 15 March during Art Friday with Littfest – Umeå International Literature Festival.

  • © Matti Aikio, Peurakaira (still from the video), 2024. Courtesy of the artist.

    Eight Degrees / Contemporary Art on the Forest

    Featuring photography, film, sculpture, drawing, textiles, sound and installations, including new commissions, the group show Eight Degrees opens on 15 March at Bildmuseet's Art Friday with Littfest – Umeå International Literature Festival.

  • Bildmuseet in Umeå is one of three nominees to the Swedish Museum of the Year award. Photo: Erik Hillbom.

    Bildmuseet nominated to Swedish Museum of the Year

    Every year, the prestigious award Swedish Museum of the Year is presented. This year the prize could go to Bildmuseet, which is one of three nominated finalists. The award is given to the museum that has demonstrated courage, creativity, and excellence. The purpose of the award is to highlight exemplary museum work and to inspire other museums to innovative activities of the highest quality.

  • Aerial view of an unmodified boulder-bed stream showing the density of boulders and the diverse habitats these create. Photo: Richard Mason and Jens Andersson

    Clues from the ice age can help restore Swedish streams

    Human intervention has destroyed critical habitats for salmon and trout in Swedish streams. Researchers at Umeå University have discovered crucial clues to help restore the streams to their natural state. "To understand the processes that shape them, we need to think more about how glaciers function, rather than streams,” says Lina Polvi Sjöberg.

  •   Alexandre Bartel, Professor at Umeå University, has, in collaboration with European research colleagues, studied major weaknesses in one of the world's largest programming languages. Image: Mattias Pettersson

    Major security flaws in Java applications – European researchers warn

    Alexandre Bartel, Professor of Software Engineering and Security at Umeå University, in collaboration with several European researchers, has extensively analysed weaknesses in software written in one of the world's most widely used programming languages. “This involves flaws in the processes that retrieve and recreate information – such as customer accounts, transactions, or patient records.

  • 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.

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