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Moonhorns (transl. from German ‘Mondhorn’ ) are late bronze age ceramic objects found particularly in Switzerland. They look like crescent moons or bull horns, hence their German name - Mondhorn.
The aim of these datasets is to foster research in the area of automatic affect recognition for real-life application, with a specific focus on body movement, touch and physiological signal ...
Led by Dr Karen Schucan Bird (UCL), artists Jonathan Hogg and Andy D’Cruz (Output Arts), alongside survivors of domestic abuse, Time for Tea is an innovative project that blends art, research, and ...
What is a Medical Device? A medical device is an instrument, apparatus, appliance, software (including AI), or other article intended for human use that performs a medical purpose, such as diagnosing, ...
The Horniman Museum’s Anthropology collection is home to around 1,500 Egyptian objects dating from the Palaeolithic to the 21st century, with a large proportion from Flinders Petrie’s excavations with ...
Young people in the UK who lived in polluted areas during their early years are more likely to report worse general health than their peers at age 17, finds research led by Dr Gergo Baranyi (IOE, ...
Prof Gilbert's appointment to the Holocaust Educational Foundation of Northwestern University (HEFNU) is a six-year term beginning in July 2025. The Holocaust Educational Foundation of Northwestern ...
Academically high-achieving teenagers from the most deprived backgrounds in England are five times more likely to be arrested and cautioned or sentenced than their peers from the wealthiest ...
“We try and look at drivers: Poverty, coercion, desperation, mental health, social circumstance, legal, or something more sinister,” said Professor Lorraine Sherr (UCL Institute for Global Health) on ...
“Allow your dogs to come into the house, even if they’re a little dirty,” Professor Graham Rook (UCL Infection & Immunity), recommending that some contact with dirty dogs can help boost human immune ...
Dr Cath Mummery (UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology) is leading clinical trials to test a new generation of drugs aimed at slowing down the progress of young-onset Alzheimer’s.
“They’ve done a great job if they’ve managed to put that together for an individual patient that needs treatment in the first few months of life,” said Professor Waseem Qasim (UCL Great Ormond Street ...
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