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Pivoting to COVID research during lockdown – an interview with Professor Rudo Römer, theoretical physicist

The worldwide COVID pandemic was a crisis unparalleled in recent history. The efforts of scientists and researchers around the world in mobilising to find vaccines, treatments, and explanations were equally unparalleled. In this article, we tell the story of one such research collaboration using their collective expertise in protein-modelling to help build a picture of the SARS-CoV-2 virus structure. Moreover, using modern collaborative writing tools, they were able to write up and publish their work during the height of the pandemic.

Tue 02 May 2023, 11:24 | Tags: Press, Staff and Department

New Warwick research is helping scientists preserve cells

New technology, covered in JACS AuLink opens in a new window, could improve the cryopreservation of cells, tissue culture and 3D cells models used in a variety of applications, including research, medical therapies and agriculture. Read moreLink opens in a new window

Tue 02 May 2023, 11:10 | Tags: news Research news

Spotlight on Newton Fund Research at Warwick

A Warwick case study, "Advanced materials for future energy and environmental applications in Indonesia" features in a British Council e-book highlighting innovative and collaborative Newton Fund funded research.

Fri 28 Apr 2023, 15:11 | Tags: news Research news Impact

Journal of Consumer Policy Editors’ Meeting at Warwick Law School

The editors of the Journal of Consumer PolicyLink opens in a new window (JCP) held their annual meeting (the first in-person meeting since 2019) at Warwick Law School on 21 April 2023. Editors discussed current submissions and plans for forthcoming issues, as well as socialising and sightseeing in Coventry and its surrounding towns.

Fri 28 Apr 2023, 10:00 | Tags: Research, Staff in action

Lacuna Magazine publishes student story on the impact of Black role models and Black creative spaces

Xaymaca Awoyungbo, a final year undergraduate student studying History at the University of Warwick, has written an article for our Lacuna magazine titled: "If you can see it, you can be it: The impact of Black role models and Black creative spaces." Xaymaca speaks with author Sandra A Agard and explores Britain’s young Black creative networks.

Thu 27 Apr 2023, 11:12 | Tags: Student Achievement, Lacuna

Professor Celine Tan contributes to consultation on JET-IP

Professor Celine Tan from Warwick Law School contributed to the South Africa Presidential Climate Commission (PCC) Consultation on the Just Energy Transition Plan (JET-IP). The JET-IP is part of a multi-country funding initiative, the Just Economic Transition Partnership (JETP), by a coalition of developed countries to support a number of developing countries' transition away from dependence on coal and other fossil fuels.

Wed 26 Apr 2023, 12:37 | Tags: Research, Staff in action

The European World 1500-1800: An Introduction to Early Modern History Fourth Edition

Drawing on Warwick’s longstanding core module for the period, numerous early modernists have collaborated on a textbook which first appeared in 2009. Now in its fourth edition, The European World 1500-1800: An Introduction to Early Modern History (London: Routledge, 2023) has been adopted by many universities and used by generations of students across the globe.

The European World 1500-1800 

To mark the latest updates, which include two new chapters – on ‘Environments’ and ‘Food & Drink Cultures’, a fresh ‘all colour’ look and additional print as well as online features, Beat Kümin (editor) and William Rupp (assistant / website editor) have recorded a teaser & full video introduction at the historic church of Berkswell just a few miles from campus.

We hope that it will whet your appetite to find out more about The European World on the Routledge homepage and our companion website!

Wed 26 Apr 2023, 10:30 | Tags: Announcement Publication

Thursday 4th May 2023 - Public Lecture "Three Puzzles about Pricing and Geometry"

Renato Paes Leme, Google Research New York

Thursday 4th May 2023 - MS.01 Zeeman building, at 18:15

As the famous Graham-Buffet quote says “price is what you pay; value is what you get" and every business success or failure is driven by the match or mismatch of the two. We will discuss a simple question in pricing algorithms: how to adjust prices over time to learn a buyer's valuation while minimizing revenue loss. This is a nice puzzle with a surprising solution. We will discuss the Kleinberg-Leighton algorithm and how to generalize it to multi-dimensional settings. There, we will do a detour to convex geometry and the theory of intrinsic volumes. We will also discuss how to measure the length of a potato.

Free attendance

There will be a reception after the lecture

Main contact point: K.G.Latuszynski@warwick.ac.uk

Mon 24 Apr 2023, 11:41 | Tags: STEM

HRC Doctoral Fellowship Competition - Winners

We are pleased to announce the winners of the HRC Doctoral Fellowship Competition as follows:

Gennaro Ambrosino & Kerry Gibbons (SMLC) - ‘Archaeology, Psychoanalysis and Colonialism: The Return of the Repressed in European Culture in the Modern Age’  

Ambika Raja & Ruth-Anne Walbank (English) - ‘Divine disasters: Exploring distressed landscapes in literature and theology’ 

Yue Su (Film & TV Studies) - ‘Forms and Feelings of Kinship in the Contemporary World’

Mon 24 Apr 2023, 08:00 | Tags: Humanities Research Centre News

GibsonGroup discover material to prevent phage infection

Bacteriophage (phage) are present wherever their bacteria hosts are. Phage have huge biotechnological potential, but lytic phages can also cause complete loss of bacterial cultures. For example in the food industry, or in every research laboratory, where rigorous sterile handing is the primary containment strategy. For industrial biotechnology using microorganisms to enable sustainable of chemicals, materials and drugs, phage infection must be addressed. In our latest (patent pending) work, in collaboration with the SagonaLab at Warwick, and Cytiva, we discovered that a simple polymer can prevent phage infection of bacteria when applied to the growth media. This process is simple, requires no change to working practises and prevents phage infections. We are still investigating the mechanistic aspects, but this is virustatic (inhibitory) rather than virucidal.

Read the press release here.
Read the paper here.

Fri 21 Apr 2023, 09:49 | Tags: BMS BMS_newpub

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