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Health - Pharmacology - 18.12.2025
Triple targeted therapy inhibits growth in preclinical models of treatment-resistant breast cancer
Triple targeted therapy inhibits growth in preclinical models of treatment-resistant breast cancer
Danish-Australian study shows that the effect of triple combination therapy depends on genetic changes in the tumour's signalling pathways. Hormone receptor-positive (ER+) breast cancer is the most common type of breast cancer worldwide. Patients with this typer of cancer in advanced stages are treated with a combination of hormone therapy and CDK4/6 inhibitors, which often inhibits tumour growth.

Life Sciences - Environment - 16.12.2025
Your Christmas decorations may be hiding a tiny bit of badger and toad
Your Christmas decorations may be hiding a tiny bit of badger and toad
Biodiversity Researchers at the University of Copenhagen have discovered that moss acts as a natural trap for environmental DNA. This discovery opens the door to using moss as a simple, gentle and inexpensive method of monitoring biodiversity - from birds and mammals to fungi, insects and microbes. Right now, many of us have a bit of moss sitting in our Christmas decorations at home.

Life Sciences - Innovation - 15.12.2025
Researchers revive old pea varieties in huge seed collection: 'An untapped gold mine for the future'
Researchers revive old pea varieties in huge seed collection: ’An untapped gold mine for the future’
AI and plants Using a new AI method, researchers from the University of Copenhagen have rediscovered 51 old pea varieties that are no longer used in agriculture but may prove promising for the production of plant-based foods. The method is a shortcut to finding new resources in the green treasure troves that gene banks' enormous seed collections represent.

History & Archeology - Physics - 08.12.2025
Archaeologists use lasers to locate ancient settlements and artefacts on Greek Islands
Archaeologists use lasers to locate ancient settlements and artefacts on Greek Islands
Archaeology A group of scientists are studying the Cyclades, an island group in Greece's Aegean Sea, looking for signs of early human activity. They are using technology such as laser scanning and magnetometry, which may be more effective and non-invasive than traditional archeological methods. The Cyclades are an island group in the Aegean Sea, southeast of mainland Greece.

Economics - 04.12.2025
Most of us miss out on financial opportunities
Most of us miss out on financial opportunities
Economics Passivity in financial choices is not due to specific personality traits - but depends on the context. This is the conclusion reached by researchers from CEBI and Danmarks Nationalbank in a new study. Are people who fail to adjust their pension contributions in response to policy reforms the same people who do refinance their mortgages when interest rates fall? The answer is clear: No, they are.

Health - Psychology - 02.12.2025
Contraceptive pills may affect women's mental health
Contraceptive pills may affect women's mental health
Contraception The contraceptive pill has been hailed as one of the most revolutionary health technologies of the 20th century - a tool that gave women control over their fertility and paved the way for education and careers.

Life Sciences - Agronomy & Food Science - 26.11.2025
Plants use engineering principles to push through hard soil
Plants use engineering principles to push through hard soil
Agriculture An international research team led by the University of Copenhagen, Shanghai Jiao Tong University and the University of Nottingham has discovered how plant roots penetrate compacted soil by deploying a well-known engineering principle. The finding could have major implications for future crop development at a time when pressure on agricultural land is increasing.

Environment - 21.11.2025
The Paradox of Climate Protest
The Paradox of Climate Protest
Activism Disruptive protest actions are among the tools often used by climate activists. New research from the University of Copenhagen shows that these types of actions have the intended effect: they raise public awareness of climate change. However, they also carry the risk of backlash. Climate activism takes many forms, but one of the most visible is so-called disruptive protests.

History & Archeology - Architecture & Buildings - 20.11.2025
New Research Reshapes our Understanding of Denmark’s Architectural Heritage
Knowledge about building with bricks did not travel directly from Italy to Denmark. That is the surprising conclusion of a team of researchers who analyzed bricks from medieval churches in Italy and Denmark. For more than a century, building archaeologists have believed that the art of brick building in Denmark was imported directly from Lombardy in northern Italy in the mid-12th century.

Life Sciences - Paleontology - 17.11.2025
The world's oldest RNA extracted from woolly mammoth
The world’s oldest RNA extracted from woolly mammoth
New research offers a unique insight into the lives of mammoths during the last Ice Age. Scientists have taken an important step closer to understanding the mythical mammoths that roamed the Earth thousands of years ago. For the first time ever, a research team has succeeded in isolating and sequencing RNA molecules from woolly mammoths dating back to the Ice Age.

Health - Pharmacology - 17.11.2025
Breast cancer treatments can improve both survival chances and income
Breast cancer treatments can improve both survival chances and income
Health and work life Radiation therapy treatment for breast cancer not only improves survival rates but also generates long-term financial benefits according to a new study from the University of Copenhagen. Survivors of illness and disease often suffer economic hardship such as reduced employment as they recover from treatment.

Health - Pharmacology - 17.11.2025
Psychologist-supported digital intervention can reduce fear of cancer recurrence
Research from the University of Southern Denmark and Lillebaelt Hospital shows that a digital treatment intervention combined with written support from a psychologist can reduce the fear of cancer recurrence and improve the quality of life for people who have had colorectal cancer. Fear of cancer recurrence is a common late effect among former cancer patients.

Environment - Life Sciences - 12.11.2025
Wild animals divide Danes - but most say 'yes' to red deer and fences
Wild animals divide Danes - but most say ’yes’ to red deer and fences
Rewilding A new nationwide survey from the University of Copenhagen shows that most Danes would like to see more large animals in the forests. Danes prefer forests with wild animals such as red deer and bison to traditional nature conservation with cattle and sheep. However, a significant minority are far from enthusiastic about nature with fences and large animals.

Environment - 11.11.2025
Danmark and the Nordics have the largest stock of plastic per capita in the world
Danmark and the Nordics have the largest stock of plastic per capita in the world
Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark (SDU) and the University of Cambridge have, for the first time, mapped the total flow of plastic in the Nordic countries. The study shows that the Nordic region holds the world's largest stock of accumulated plastic per capita and that only around 5% is recycled domestically.

Media - 11.11.2025
Small digital frictions can slow the spread of misinformation
Small digital frictions can slow the spread of misinformation
New research from the University of Copenhagen points to a simple yet effective method for combating misinformation on social media: make it slightly harder to share content. Social media platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and X have made it incredibly easy to share content with friends and acquaintances through like and share buttons.

Environment - 11.11.2025
Denmark and the Nordics have the largest stock of plastic per capita in the world
Researchers from the University of Southern Denmark (SDU) and the University of Cambridge have, for the first time, mapped the total flow of plastic in the Nordic countries. The study shows that the Nordic region holds the world's largest stock of accumulated plastic per capita and that only around 5% is recycled domestically.

Life Sciences - Pharmacology - 30.10.2025
New antivenom shows effectiveness against 17 African snake species
New antivenom shows effectiveness against 17 African snake species
Biotechnology DTU researchers are behind a potentially groundbreaking antivenom that could revolutionize the treatment of venomous snakebites in Africa. Snakebite envenoming is among the world's deadliest yet most overlooked tropical disease. The WHO has classified snakebite envenoming as one of 21 neglected tropical diseases, resulting in between 100,000 and 150,000 deaths worldwide each year.

Life Sciences - Health - 27.10.2025
Rare Brain Cell May Hold the Key to Preventing Schizophrenia Symptoms
Rare Brain Cell May Hold the Key to Preventing Schizophrenia Symptoms
Schizophrenia A specific type of brain cell is abnormally active in mice exhibiting behavior reminiscent of schizophrenia, according to a new study from the University of Copenhagen. By dampening the activity of these cells, researchers were able to restore the animals' behavior-an insight that may pave the way for a new preventive treatment.

Environment - Earth Sciences - 20.10.2025
Important phenomenon discovered in the Arctic - could boost marine life
Important phenomenon discovered in the Arctic - could boost marine life
Researchers from the University of Copenhagen have discovered an important phenomenon beneath the Arctic sea ice that was previously thought impossible. This phenomenon could have implications for the food chain and the carbon budget in the cold north. The shrinking sea ice in the Arctic Ocean is, overall, a disaster.

History & Archeology - Environment - 16.10.2025
Archaeologists excavate 5,500-year-old ritual landscape in Jordan
Archaeologists excavate 5,500-year-old ritual landscape in Jordan
Archaeology A research team led by the University of Copenhagen has uncovered a remarkable Early Bronze Age ceremonial gathering place at Murayghat in Jordan. The discovery may shed new light on how ancient societies responded to social and environmental upheaval. How did ancient cultures react to severe crises and the breakdown of the established social order? The 5,500-year-old bronze age site of Murayghat in Jordan, excavated by archaeologists from the University of Copenhagen, may hold an answer.
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