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Lund University welcomes 800 new international students

Tuesday 9 January is Arrival Day, when international students arrive at Lund University from around the world. The University receives students from over 130 countries. During the spring semester, approximately 800 new international students are expected to start their studies at Lund University. On Arrival Day, some 450 students are expected to arrive.These students include:About 550 exchange stu

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/lund-university-welcomes-800-new-international-students - 2025-12-20

A step closer to treatment for severe bacterial infections and sepsis

The development of a new treatment strategy for bacterial infections and sepsis is being led by researchers at Lund University. In a study the researchers demonstrate how they, by mimicking a substance naturally present in the body, can neutralize toxic substances from bacteria and thereby mitigate harmful inflammation that could otherwise lead to sepsis. “Despite decades of research, there are cu

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/step-closer-treatment-severe-bacterial-infections-and-sepsis - 2025-12-20

Donations help highlight Ravensbrück art

An upcoming book featuring reproductions of artworks from the Ravensbrück concentration camp tells the story of the horrific reality its female inmates had to endure. The book has been published entirely thanks to private donations.  In spring 1945, around seven thousand women, survivors of the Nazi concentration camp in Ravensbrück, came to Sweden as part of a Swedish-Danish rescue operation. Amo

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/donations-help-highlight-ravensbruck-art - 2025-12-20

French President Emmanuel Macron visits Lund University

During a French state visit to Sweden, President Emmanuel Macron visited Lund University on Wednesday, where he spoke directly with students at Studentafton. The President addressed challenges, possibilities and the future of the European cooperation. It was a long wait for vice-Chancellor Erik Renström and the audience inside the main University building. Finally, President Macron and his wife Br

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/french-president-emmanuel-macron-visits-lund-university - 2025-12-20

Scandinavia’s first farmers slaughtered the hunter-gatherer population

Following the arrival of the first farmers in Scandinavia 5,900 years ago, the hunter-gatherer population was wiped out within a few generations, according to a new study from Lund University in Sweden, among others. The results, which are contrary to prevailing opinion, are based on DNA analysis of skeletons and teeth found in what is now Denmark. The extensive study has been published as four se

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/scandinavias-first-farmers-slaughtered-hunter-gatherer-population - 2025-12-20

The brain is 'programmed' for learning from people we like

Our brains are "programmed" to learn more from people we like – and less from those we dislike. This has been shown by researchers in cognitive neuroscience in a series of experiments. Memory serves a vital function, enabling us to learn from new experiences and update existing knowledge. We learn both from individual experiences and from connecting them to draw new conclusions about the world. Th

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/brain-programmed-learning-people-we - 2025-12-20

Unique manufacturing method produces more appealing vegan meat

Vegan food is often sidestepped due to its rubbery consistency. Food technology researchers at Lund University in Sweden have now developed a way to make vegan food more appetising by using new combinations of raw materials. So far, the research field for plant-based meat imitations, known as meat analogues, has been very small - but is now set to “explode”. The team at Lund is among those that ha

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/unique-manufacturing-method-produces-more-appealing-vegan-meat - 2025-12-20

Destruction of Gaza monitored from space

Physical geographer Lina Eklund is tracking the destruction of Gaza week by week using satellite images. Her analyses could be significant if, once the fighting between Israel and Hamas is over, questions of possible war crimes are raised at the International Court of Justice in The Hague. Lina Eklund, associate senior lecturer at the Department of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science and rese

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/destruction-gaza-monitored-space - 2025-12-20

Recommendations for young children’s screen time do more harm than good

Recommendations from the WHO on limiting screen time for children under the age of five are almost impossible to follow, and risk causing unnecessary anxiety and stigmatisation of parents of young children. This according to a study from Lund University in Sweden on the digital media habits of young children. Instead, the researchers recommend that parents support their children by exploring digit

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/recommendations-young-childrens-screen-time-do-more-harm-good - 2025-12-20

Will carbon capture stored in basalt be a climate savior?

Léa Lévy, researcher in engineering geology at Lund University, is receiving SEK 5.1 million from the Marianne and Marcus Wallenberg Foundation to investigate how much hope can be placed in capturing carbon dioxide directly from the air and storing it in the rock basalt. Can you tell us a bit about your project, what you are researching?“More and more technologies are developed and discussed as pa

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/will-carbon-capture-stored-basalt-be-climate-savior - 2025-12-20

New insights on how galaxies are formed

Astronomers can use supercomputers to simulate the formation of galaxies from the Big Bang 13.8 billion years ago to the present day. But there are a number of sources of error. An international research team, led by researchers in Lund, has spent a hundred million computer hours over eight years trying to correct these. The last decade has seen major advances in computer simulations that can real

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/new-insights-how-galaxies-are-formed - 2025-12-20

Completely recycled viscose for the first time

At present, viscose textiles are made of biomass from the forest, and there is no such thing as fully recycled viscose. Researchers at Lund University in Sweden have now succeeded in making new viscose – from worn-out cotton sheets. Old textiles around the world end up at the rubbish tip and are often burned. In Sweden, they are generally burned to produce district heating. Extensive development w

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/completely-recycled-viscose-first-time - 2025-12-20

World Happiness Report: Why we might be measuring happiness wrong

Many of us know that Finland is steadily ranked as the happiest country in the world. The basis for this is the annual World Happiness Report, which is based on a simple question about happiness asked to people around the world. However, a new study led by Lund University in Sweden suggests that it makes people think more about power and wealth. Using the same question to measure happiness over ti

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/world-happiness-report-why-we-might-be-measuring-happiness-wrong - 2025-12-20

Lund University’s Wallenberg Scholars are announced

Twelve researchers at Lund University have been appointed Wallenberg Scholars, a programme funded by the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation that supports excellent basic research, primarily in medicine, technology and the natural sciences. The total funding amounts to SEK 239 million. The grants, which are for a five-year period, are worth up to SEK 18 million each for researchers in theoretical

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/lund-universitys-wallenberg-scholars-are-announced - 2025-12-20

Fokus: När immunterapi mot allergi inte fungerar

När vanliga allergimediciner inte hjälper, kan vissa allergiska personer få immunterapi – ”allergivaccination”. Behandlingen pågår i flera år och är krävande, särskilt för dem som varje gång måste ta sig till en allergimottagning för att få sin spruta. Nu undersöker forskare vid Lunds universitet om man tidigt kan identifiera vilken effekt behandlingen tros kunna få – och därmed ringa in de person

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/fokus-nar-immunterapi-mot-allergi-inte-fungerar - 2025-12-20

Ny markör i blodet visar mängden Alzheimer i hjärnan

Forskare vid Lunds universitet och Washington University har upptäckt en blodmarkör som visar hur mycket av Alzheimers sjukdom man bär på i hjärnan. Fynden kan hjälpa att se vem som kan ha mest nytta av de nya läkemedlen som godkänts i bland annat USA, Japan och Kina – och som är på väg att godkännas i Europa. Studien i korthet:En nyupptäckt markör (MTBR-tau243) i blodet kan avslöja hur mycket alz

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/ny-markor-i-blodet-visar-mangden-alzheimer-i-hjarnan - 2025-12-20

Nu invigs Lunds ATMP-infrastrukturer

Den 9 april invigs Lunds universitets Pre-GMP-facilitet och Skånes universitetssjukhus ATMP-centrum – en gemensam forsknings- och utvecklingsmiljö där nya behandlingar med cell- och genterapier tas fram. Målet med samarbetet är att föra forskningen närmare sjukvården och göra avancerade terapiläkemedel (ATMP) tillgängliga för fler patienter. Detta är en gemensam nyhet från Lunds universitet och Sk

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/nu-invigs-lunds-atmp-infrastrukturer - 2025-12-20

AI bedömer knärörelser bra – men har svårare för fotens rörelser

Forskare vid Lunds universitet har undersökt hur artificiell intelligens (AI) kan användas för att analysera kroppens hållning och rörelser under en enbensknäböjning – en övning som ofta används inom idrottsmedicin och rehabilitering. Studien visar att AI kan matcha experternas bedömningar i flera moment. Studien är publicerad i den vetenskapliga tidskriften JOSPT Methods, och visar att AI-baserad

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/ai-bedomer-knarorelser-bra-men-har-svarare-fotens-rorelser - 2025-12-20

Grattis till hjärt-lungforskare vid Lunds universitet som får dela på 76 miljoner

Över två miljoner människor, bara i Sverige, lever med sjukdom kopplat till hjärta och lungor. Framgångsrik forskning har bidragit till att färre dör, men hjärt-lungsjukdomar är fortfarande bland de vanligaste dödsorsakerna. Nu delar Hjärt-Lungfonden ut 76 miljoner kronor till forskning vid Lunds universitet. Fyra av de 37 forskarna som får projektanslag i denna omgång är:  Henrik Engblom, adjunge

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/grattis-till-hjart-lungforskare-vid-lunds-universitet-som-far-dela-pa-76-miljoner - 2025-12-20

Ny studie: Föräldrars metaboliska egenskaper kan påverka barnets hälsa över tid

Forskning vid Lunds universitet visar att de biologiska föräldrarnas gener påverkar barnets insulinfunktion samt förmågor att reglera blodsockernivåer och blodfetter på olika sätt. Med hjälp av sådan kunskap kan det bli möjligt att utveckla förebyggande behandlingar som minskar barnets risk att utveckla typ 2-diabetes och hjärt-kärlsjukdom. Tidigare forskning av diabetesforskaren Rashmi Prasad har

https://www.medicin.lu.se/artikel/ny-studie-foraldrars-metaboliska-egenskaper-kan-paverka-barnets-halsa-over-tid - 2025-12-20