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9578 results for: ‘帝国CMS7.0仿小游戏站✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.TPrEZTRiCyPK’

  • Critical gaps in antenatal care identified in cases of term stillbirths

    A new study launched today has revealed key steps for hospitals to improve care for pregnant mums and babies.

  • Talking points a range of topics tackled by academics 16 April

    Dr Heather Brunskell-Evans from the Centre for Medical Humanities has contributed an article to The Conversation looking into research by NSPCC Childline suggesting that in a poll of nearly 700 12 to 13-year-olds in the UK, one in five had viewed pornographic images...

  • Earth history opens a new chapter

    An international group of scientists has proposed that fallout from hundreds of nuclear weapons tests in the late 1940s to early 1960s could be used to mark the dawn of a new geological age in Earth history – the Anthropocene.

  • Chemical in red grapes may help prevent bowel cancer

    Resveratrol, a chemical found in red grapes, is more effective in smaller doses at preventing bowel cancer in mice than high doses, according to new research published in the journal Science Translational Medicine.

  • How Twitter users can work together to defuse social tensions

    A report co-authored by Dr Paul Reilly (pictured) from the Department of Media and Communication has found that social media sites such as Twitter can be useful in keeping the peace and defusing tensions during times of social unrest.

  • Study suggests hippocampal neuron responses are associated with memory distinctions

    The hippocampus is a small region of the brain that forms part of the limbic system and is primarily associated with memory and spatial navigation.

  • Japanese Princess completes year of study at Leicester

    Our School of Museum Studies is celebrating the achievement of a Japanese Princess who has successfully completed all her classes and handed in her final coursework. She now returns to Japan to await her final results before graduation in January 2016.

  • Forensics course explores how science helps police to solve crimes

    A popular free course offered by our University showcasing how police use forensic science to solve crimes will be running for its fourth time starting from 3 October 2016.

  • Leicester astronomers observe star reborn in a flash

    An international team of astronomers using Hubble and led by our University has been able to study stellar evolution in real time. Over a period of 30 years dramatic increases in the temperature of the star SAO 244567 have been observed.

  • Leicester and Cerner in new research partnership to improve healthcare

    Our University is partnering with Cerner, a global health informatics service provider, to understand how the integration of environmental data into a Population Health management system can help improve patient outcomes and communities’ health.

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