2018.12.06 |
AIAS Fellow Doug Speed, together with David Balding, University of Melbourne, have created SumHer, a new software for analyzing results from genetic association studies. The results are published this week in ‘Nature Genetics’.
2018.12.04 |
What will the internet of the future look like in an increasingly digital everyday life? What impact does fake news have on democracy? Two Horizon 2020 projects will be addressing some of the digital societal challenges facing Europe.
2018.12.03 |
Interview with AIAS Fellow Samia Joca in ‘PsyPost’ about her research in the drug cannabidiol (CBD) that may have the potential as a faster-acting antidepressant than conventional medications.
2018.11.29 |
With an ERC Consolidator grant of €1,9 million, AIAS-COFUND fellow Isabelle Torrance will be studying classical influences on Irish culture.
2018.11.28 |
In the new book ‘Ruler Visibility and Popular Belonging in the Ottoman Empire, 1808-1908’, Stephanov argues that periodic ceremonial intrusion into the everyday lives of people across the Ottoman Empire had multiple, far-reaching and largely unexplored consequences.
2018.11.27 |
Associate Professor and Physicist Nikolaj Thomas Zinner has been appointed new Deputy Director at AIAS and will commence his position on 1 January 2019.
2018.11.16 |
Whales, dolphins, and porpoises have all evolved to use similar narrow beams of high intensity sound to echolocate prey. Far from being inefficient, this highly focused sense may have helped them succeed as top predators in the world's oceans. This is the finding in a new study in Current Biology co-published by AIAS Fellows Frants H. Jensen and…
2018.10.24 |
As a very promising young researcher in the field of cognitive neuroscience, AIAS Fellow Micah Allen has received a DKK 10 million grant from the Lundbeck Foundation to investigate gut feelings and how the neural mechanisms of brain and body interact.
2018.10.12 |
AIAS Former Fellow Toke T. Høye receives prize for the original research idea of the year by the Independent Research Fund Denmark for his project that combines climate research with big data and machine learning.
2018.10.12 |
For men, physical strength and political attitudes are linked. This is not the case for women. New research by AIAS Fellow Michael Bang Petersen and Lasse Laustsen from Dept. of Political Science shows that ancestral human instincts affect men’s political reflections.