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Outside CBMR
Biomedicine Field
CBMR researcher in interview to “90 Segundos de Ciência”
This research uncovered the cause behind the eclipse phase of pneumonia.
Paternal transmission of epigenetic memory
Study suggests that a father's experiences such as diet or environmental stress can influence the health and development of his descendants.
CBMR researcher discovers a new drug
The study may pave the way for future developments in the clinical management of infertile couples.
CDDF Workshop / November 2018
This workshop will focus on open exchange, learning and collaborative search for agreements from regulatory, academic and industry perspectives.
CBMR co-organizes 1º Meeting Computation in Science
What does computing mean in science? What kind of problems do we study? What methods are used? What are the capabilities and computational needs of re
Health
Artificial Intelligence can predict patients death
The tech giant has developed a data-hungry computer system that hoovers up health info – and spits out details about your mortality.
CBMR on Ciência 2018
The aim is to bring together scientists, techies, artists, and others, to create digital media based projects that communicate complex concepts in sci
CBMR on EMERGENCE HACKATHON in Science Communication
The aim is to bring together scientists, techies, artists, and others, to create digital media based projects that communicate complex concepts in sci
CBMR obtains eight projects approved by FCT
CBMR projects are in areas such breast cancer, cardiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative diseases, cognitive neurosciences and human fertility.
«It would be a ‘tragedy’ to pass up a revolutionary technology»
Bill Gates is advocating for the use of genetic editing tools like CRISPR.
Is poverty genetic?
Recent research discovered how growing up with scarce resources can actually cause genetic alterations.
It is possible to rewrite the book of life?
Do you know that it is already possible to edit our own genes in order to avoid developing certain diseases caused by "writing errors" in our genetic