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Earth Sciences - 18.03.2026 - Today
SDU tests rescue drones in the Arctic
Health - Career - 17.03.2026
AI was supposed to ease doctors’ workload - instead they spend hours correcting errors
AI AI-powered clinical documentation was meant to streamline work at Danish hospitals.
Religions - 10.03.2026

Health - 05.03.2026

WOMEN'S HEALTH Many women lack sufficient knowledge about menopause, which has long been an under-prioritized topic.
Pharmacology - Social Sciences - 04.03.2026

Nightlife Young people - especially women - increasingly fear being drugged, and the phenomenon is more widespread and complex than previously assumed.
Campus - Economics - 26.02.2026

Innovation - Career - 24.02.2026
What can we learn from demographic concerns of the past?
Environment - 24.02.2026

History & Archeology - Campus - 23.02.2026
Jan Nordby Gretlund, Remembered
Pharmacology - Health - 18.02.2026
5 things you should know about the medicine in your home
Over-the-counter or prescription? Most of us have one or more medicinal products lying around at home.
Astronomy & Space - Innovation - 18.02.2026

Social Sciences - 12.02.2026
When Crisis Strikes, Denmark’s Volunteers Step Forward
Crisis volunteering A portion of the population is ready to take action when crisis hits and others need help. According to researchers from the Department of Sociology at the University of Copenhagen, these individuals make up a civilian emergency corps of volunteers. But they are not necessarily the same volunteers you know from traditional associations such as your local sports club.
Health - Innovation - 29.01.2026
Health Innovation Day highlighted research with real-world impact
Life Sciences - Psychology - 29.01.2026

DECISIONS New research from the University of Copenhagen, INSERM and Friedrich Miescher Institute for Biomedical Research shows that the brain in mice works in separate channels at the same time, when they respond to emotionally significant stimuli. The research helps us better understand how the brain can quickly react to what is important.
Politics - Environment - 29.01.2026

Campus - 27.01.2026
Young researcher from SDU to help ensure sufficient critical resources for the green transition
Young researcher from SDU will help ensure sufficient critical resources for the green transition The green transition depends heavily on access to critical raw materials, which are currently subject to vulnerable supply chains in an uncertain world.
Innovation - Environment - 27.01.2026

Social Sciences - 27.01.2026

Environment - Agronomy & Food Science - 26.01.2026
Kenya’s big cats under pressure - cattle push lions away
Cattle herds are driving lions and other wildlife away from their habitats in Kenya, even though herders enclose their livestock at night when predators are most active.
Computer Science - Economics - 26.01.2026
Aarhus University invests DKK 300 million to boost Danish cybersecurity
Transport - Computer Science - 21.01.2026
Getting to Aarhus from different airports
Career - Social Sciences - 21.01.2026

Politics Career pressure - not ideology - causes military officers to protect or overthrow dictators. New research from the Department of Political Science shows that ambition and anxiety can transform 'ordinary men' into the regime's ruthless henchmen - or into those who bury the regime. Why do some people become the dictators' most brutal agents?
Health - Sport - 21.01.2026
Women’s health must be prioritised in sport
A new set of 56 international injury prevention recommendations highlights the specific risks and needs of female athletes.
Computer Science - Pedagogy - 15.01.2026
SDU builds virtual IT labs on its own supercomputer
Health - Pharmacology - 15.01.2026
Insight: Why research into women’s health matters
What does a lack of knowledge about women's health actually mean? Here are five clear answers to why both research and the healthcare system must focus more on women's health - with insights from Prof
Chemistry - Environment - 14.01.2026
Make green hydrogen production PFAS-free and competitive
Event - Innovation - 14.01.2026
Innovation in health: From idea to impact
Innovation - Health - 14.01.2026

Politics - 07.01.2026

Jura The American president's demand for control over Greenland violates international law, international agreements and the constitution.
Innovation - Economics - 06.01.2026

Counterfeiting Every year, companies lose billions of kroner when goods are copied or illegally resold.
Campus - Health - 19.12.2025
Strengthen the healthcare system of the future with new master’s degree programme in health economics
History & Archeology - Computer Science - 18.12.2025

Archaeology Archaeologists from the University of Copenhagen and the University of Bergen have used AI and free digital tools to create a dynamic and educational video game about the Stone Age.
Campus - Career - 18.12.2025
These SDU researchers have been awarded this year’s grants from the Carlsberg Foundation
Physics - Computer Science - 18.12.2025
DKK 13.3M for SDU Researcher: AI to Green Quantum Physics
Line Jelver, a newly appointed assistant professor at the University of Southern Denmark (SDU), has received DKK 13.3 million from the Novo Nordisk Foundation.
Research Management - Innovation - 18.12.2025

Astronomy & Space - Innovation - 17.12.2025

SPACE The University of Copenhagen will lead Denmark's first lunar mission. The mission aims to map the Moon's surface in unprecedented detail to make it safer to land on the Moon and construct bases in the future.
Agronomy & Food Science - 17.12.2025
My Julefrokost Experience
Environment - Computer Science - 17.12.2025
Climate-friendly diets in your pocket: New app uses behavioural science principles to change eating habits
Astronomy & Space - Innovation - 17.12.2025
SDU to the Moon: Danish-led space mission to map the Moon’s surface
Astronomy & Space - 17.12.2025

Space technology Using AI, advanced camera technology, and navigation developed by DTU Space, satellites can now all by themselves maneuver and maintain formation with extreme precision - without any assistance from Earth.
Earth Sciences - Life Sciences - 16.12.2025
Identical micro-animals live in two isolated deep-sea environments. How is that possible?
It sounds almost impossible. And yet, the same nematodes live in two extremely isolated deep-sea trenches located 17,000 km apart.
Health - Life Sciences - 12.12.2025

How do you study gut bacteria when they keep dying every time you try? You build a model that makes it possible.
Psychology - Pharmacology - 11.12.2025

Economics Grief over the sudden death of a partner leads one in six surviving partners to experience such severe psychological distress that they begin taking sedatives or antidepressants. If the death also results in a noticeable loss of income, the share of widows and widowers using psychotropic medication is significantly higher.
Health - Life Sciences - 05.12.2025

Food Seaweed has long been praised as a sustainable superfood, but its characteristic 'fishy' flavor has been a barrier for many Western consumers. Now, a new study from the University of Copenhagen shows that fermentation with lactic acid bacteria may be the key to making seaweed more palatable. Eating seaweed can be extremely healthy, we often hear.
Economics - 05.12.2025

Korea Eldest sons step up financially, while eldest daughters take care of their parents. A new study from the University of Copenhagen shows how Korean siblings divide the responsibility of caring for their parents through the stages of widowhood. When a parent loses their partner, the family dynamic changes significantly.
Innovation - 04.12.2025

Innovation - Campus - 03.12.2025

Environment - Chemistry - 28.11.2025
Can Artificial Photosynthesis Solve Our Energy Problems?
In nature, photosynthesis runs constantly, converting sunlight into chemical energy that all living organisms depend on to grow and survive.
Campus - Environment - 27.11.2025
SDU’s researchers showered with awards in 2025
Health - Environment - 27.11.2025

MALARIA If we fail to curb climate change, malaria mosquitoes could significantly expand their habitats across Africa, exposing hundreds of millions of people to a higher risk of infection. An insistent buzzing at sunset followed by itchy, spotted legs. Here in Denmark, mosquitoes are mostly an annoying - but generally harmless - nuisance.