Page 4 of 144Results 31 to 40 of 1434, 04 December 2024 - 22 January 2025
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Can AI ease the pressure in front line emergency care?
Alongside Queen Mary University of London, Barts Health NHS Trust, and London's Air Ambulance, The University of Aberdeen is looking at how AI can support clinical decision-making in emergency care.
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Regular use of common medication is putting older people at risk
Regular use of certain medications by older people can increase their risk of falls, heart attacks, dementia and even death.
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Her Majesty The Queen visits University of Aberdeen
Her Majesty Queen Camilla visited the University of Aberdeen - where she holds the role of Chancellor - to learn more about the University's initiatives in community building, including its long-standing partnership with Aberdeen Football Club Community Trust and its outreach into Aberdeen schools.
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Engineers deliver carbon capture masterclass for Chinese delegation
A bespoke training programme on carbon capture and storage technologies was delivered to a delegation of the China National Petroleum Corporation (CNPC) by engineering academics last week (January 9-10).
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Aberdeen professor to lead British Society of Soil Science
The University of Aberdeen's Professor Paul Hallett has been appointed president of the British Society of Soil.
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Just Transition Lab's work credited in Commission's annual report
The Just Transition Commission has published its third annual report, highlighting some of the work being carried out by the University's Just Transition Lab in order to deliver Scotland's climate transition in the fairest way.
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Aberdeen geoscientist receives prestigious honour from national society
Professor John Underhill, Director of the Interdisciplinary Centre for Energy Transition at the University of Aberdeen, has been made an Honorary Member of the Geoscience Energy Society of Great Britain (GESGB).
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PE Limited donate over 4 million pounds in software licences
The School of Geosciences is pleased to announce that PE Limited have provided the University of Aberdeen with £4,579,520.43 worth of software licences for staff and students to access their IPM and Move suite of programs. This donation allows users of the software to undertake research projects in structural geology and...
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Conservation measures to save Atlantic salmon in Scottish rivers 'could do more harm than good'
Scottish river restoration schemes which are currently receiving large sums of public funding are unlikely to be successful, are based on weak scientific evidence and risk significant degradation of salmon habitat, a leading scientist has warned.
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Far from 'fussy eaters' - first neuroimaging study demonstrates significant changes in the brains of
For many years those with Avoidant/Restrictive Food Intake Disorder (ARFID) have been labelled as extreme 'fussy eaters'.