The latest research news from Linköping University. Innovation is our only tradition.
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Using a so-called digital twin, it is possible to predict with greater precision than at present how much alcohol a person has consumed and at what time.
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Researchers at Linköping University have created a gel containing live cells that can be 3D printed into a skin transplant.
This technology may lead to new ways to treat burns and severe wounds.
What can a hidden language tell us about freedom, identity and survival?
Burak Alp Çakar, PhD at Department of Culture and Society, is studying Lubunca and explores the emancipatory power of words and how they can empower, protect and keep communities alive. #science
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What is data? How is it created? Can it be objective?
These are theoretical questions that interest Professor @MiriahMeyer.
But as AI development accelerates, she also wants to contribute practical knowledge that enables us to shape a better future.
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The large-scale investments of the tech giants are creating conflict, and an important question emerges: who has priority access to our electricity?
“Should electricity go to hospitals and homes or to generating AI images?” asks LiU researcher Julia Velkova.
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Wallenberg Clinical Scholar Markus Heilig @liu.se is pursuing new lines of research to develop more treatment options for #addictivedisorders But he also emphasizes the importance of disseminating and understanding that #addiction is a disease in which brain function is altered.
tinyurl.com/52cp2fac
Great to be back at @universeum.bsky.social for the opening of the new @liu.se Visualization Center C production “Once Upon the Moon.”
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#Semiconductors are a cornerstone of all electronics around which the modern world revolves. But they need to become much more energy efficient. Researchers at two Swedish universities are now investigating whether semiconductor materials with ultra-wide band gaps could be the solution.