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News archive for Faculty of Science and Technology

Although source of intense investigations, the origins of type 2 diabetes and obesity remain unclear.
Humans are daily exposed to many environmental pollutants. What are the health consequences of such exposures?
We welcome Thomas Karlsson as a PhD student starting 01.06.2012!
A boycott of the publishing house Elsevier shows that the researchers have power over the publishers if they are able to organise themselves.
Marianne GORIS has startet her master project in our lab, entitled "Protein-phosphoinositide interaction networks in adipocyte differentiation"
Title: "Lipid Signalling and Function in the Cell Nucleus" See https://www.uib.no/biomedisin/en/seminar/2012/03/bbb-seminar-aurelia-e.-lewis
Nil Irvali defended her PhD thesis Thursday 29. March 2012.
At the Department of Informatics in Bergen you can study together with some of the best ICT-researchers in Norway. According to the international expert committee which evaluated the ICT research in Norway on behalf of the Norwegian Research Council, the Department of Informatics in Bergen is the best in the country.
A project led by prof. Alexander Vasiliev has recently won a grant of the Research Council of Norway
Three new participants joined our group recently.
After the 3-month stay in Stockholm, at the Mittag-Leffler institute, the members of the Analysis group finally got back to Bergen and are ready to start dealing with new mathematical challenges again.
In December 2011 Journal of Magnetic Resonance came with a special issue where some of the groundbreaking papers in NMR are presented.
Centre leader Rolf Birger Pedersen was part of a team of international experts aboard the RRS James Cook spring 2010.
Are Nylund says that wild salmon in British Columbia (BC) waters have been found to carry what a federal scientist believes may be a new strain of the infectious salmon anemia (ISA) virus, which has afflicted fish farms in eastern Canada, Chile and Europe.
Friday 25. November 2011, Ronghua Wang defended her PhD-thesis at Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen
Two billion year old rocks are providing information about a period of extreme carbon cycle disruption and the Great Oxidation Event – both critically important to our understanding of Earth’s geological and biological history.

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