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International Conference of Women in Engineering postponed until 2021

It was announced in May last year (2019) that the University of Warwick has won the bid to plan, organise and host the 18th International Conference of Women Engineers and Scientists (ICWES18) for September 2020, however due to the current COViD-19 pandemic the event has been pushed back to 2021.

The conference was previously held at Warwick (ICWES9) in 1991, ICWES18 will now return to Warwick on 1-4 September 2021.

Mon 13 Jul 2020, 10:31 | Tags: women, Engineering, Coventry, School of Engineering, STEM, Sciences

Warwick Moto superbike designs unveiled

Warwick Moto team have unveiled the plans for how their electric superbike, called Aurora will look when she’s ready to race.


Warwick Engineering Professor works with Association of British Chinese Professors to buy PPE equipment for 10 UK hospitals

Professor Jihong Wang, from the School of Engineering at the University of Warwick, has been working with the Association of British Chinese Professors (ABCP), where she is Vice President for Finance, to raise funds to purchase personal protection equipment (PPE) for ten UK hospitals to support the NHS in its response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Wed 22 Apr 2020, 09:24 | Tags: China, Engineering, School of Engineering, coronavirus, Sciences

Female Engineer elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts

Professor Wanda Lewis, from the School of Engineering at the University of Warwick has been elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

In 2004, she was elected a Fellow of the Institution of Civil Engineers, which means that she is one of a very few, if not the first female to hold Fellowships at both the Institution of Civil Engineers and the Royal Society of Arts.


Explained: Why water droplets ‘bounce off the walls’

University of Warwick researchers can now explain why some water droplets bounce like a beach ball off surfaces, without ever actually touching them. Now the design and engineering of future droplet technologies can be made more precise and efficient.


Artificial Intelligence (AI) can detect low-glucose levels via ECG without fingerprick test

A new technology for detecting low glucose levels via ECG using a non-invasive wearable sensor, which with the latest Artificial Intelligence can detect hypoglycaemic events from raw ECG signals has been made by researchers from the University of Warwick.

Mon 13 Jan 2020, 10:28 | Tags: diabetes, Engineering, School of Engineering, Sciences

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