Conferences - Page 4
Get to know all the exciting research being carried out by RITMO's PhDs and Postdocs.
RITMO has been fully operational for one year, and we are eager to show and tell about what we have been doing so far. Welcome to RITMO Largo, our annual conference!
The UiO:Life Science ImmunoLingo Convergence Environment Symposium.
Workshop during the GLOW conference: Generative Linguistics beyond Language: Shared Modules for Rhythm, Narration and Emotion across Domains.
Registration is now open for the NCMM annual network meeting.
The 17th International Workshop on Treebanks and Linguistic Theory will be held on December 13 and 14, 2018, at the University of Oslo.
Welcome to the opening conference of RITMO Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time and Motion. Lectures, panels, music and party!
Honorary guest and speaker: Holberg Prize Winner and Professor Julia Kristeva, Université Paris Diderot. Key note speakers: Professor Marie Rose Moro, Université Paris Descartes, Professor Brian Hurwitz, King's College London and Professor Trish Greenhalgh, University of Oxford.
Roundtable discussion chaired by Brandy Schillace, Editor-in-chief of BMJ’s Medical Humanities Journal (London). Commentary to Julia Kristeva's lecture by Prof. Rosemarie Garland-Thomson (Emory University).
The 9th Nordic EMBL Partnership Meeting will be hosted by NCMM in Oslo.
Meeting for Young Investigators at the 9th Annual Network Meeting of the Nordic EMBL Partnership for Molecular Medicine.
We wish you welcome to a seminar by Ray Dingledine
In connection with Ray Dingledine’s inauguration as elected member of The Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters (DNVA), we organize a seminar at which Ray will give two presentations, as introductions to informal discussions.
Leading international experts will present some of the latest research in the field of cancer genomics.
Seminar with GSK: Industry collaboration with academia
Open to all researchers, clinicians, industry representatives, patient groups and others with an interest in stem cell biology, research and applications.
It is 50 years since the first scientific articles about the lack of LCAT was published. The symposium will discuss the importance of what lecitihin-cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) means for the transport of cholesterol in the organism, and it will take place at the hospital where the hereditary disease LCAT deficiency was first discovered.
The meeting is open to all interested, but registration is needed
Andrew Collins has been a staff scientist at the Department of Nutrition since 2002 and is a leading international expert on nutrition and DNA damage.
In honour of Professor Collins’ 70th birthday, we invite you to an international symposium with a wide range of topics that touch on Prof. Collin's areas of scientific interest.
Open to all researchers, clinicians, industry representatives, patient groups and others with an interest in stem cell biology, research and applications.