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erc_research

European Research Council

🌍 Europe's leading funding agency for basic research
🧪 Exploring the frontiers of science
🚀 Pushing the boundaries of knowledge

299
posts
119
followers
34.5K
following

We’ve long known that a woman’s lifestyle and exposures during pregnancy can influence her child’s health. But what about men?⁣

Oskar Karlsson and his team from Stockholm University reveal that, even before conception, a father’s environment – from chemical exposure to stress – can alter gene expression in ways that are passed down to future generations.⁣

By revealing how a father’s past can shape his child’s future, the project doesn’t just advance biology and public health concerns – it also demands we rethink reproductive responsibility, from the lab to the living room.⁣

Check their website: https://karlssonlab.se

#FrontierResearch ⁣

@stockholmuniversity @scilifelab @environment_sthlmuni @eukommissionen


307
4
1 months ago


We’ve long known that a woman’s lifestyle and exposures during pregnancy can influence her child’s health. But what about men?⁣

Oskar Karlsson and his team from Stockholm University reveal that, even before conception, a father’s environment – from chemical exposure to stress – can alter gene expression in ways that are passed down to future generations.⁣

By revealing how a father’s past can shape his child’s future, the project doesn’t just advance biology and public health concerns – it also demands we rethink reproductive responsibility, from the lab to the living room.⁣

Check their website: https://karlssonlab.se

#FrontierResearch ⁣

@stockholmuniversity @scilifelab @environment_sthlmuni @eukommissionen


307
4
1 months ago

We’ve long known that a woman’s lifestyle and exposures during pregnancy can influence her child’s health. But what about men?⁣

Oskar Karlsson and his team from Stockholm University reveal that, even before conception, a father’s environment – from chemical exposure to stress – can alter gene expression in ways that are passed down to future generations.⁣

By revealing how a father’s past can shape his child’s future, the project doesn’t just advance biology and public health concerns – it also demands we rethink reproductive responsibility, from the lab to the living room.⁣

Check their website: https://karlssonlab.se

#FrontierResearch ⁣

@stockholmuniversity @scilifelab @environment_sthlmuni @eukommissionen


307
4
1 months ago

We’ve long known that a woman’s lifestyle and exposures during pregnancy can influence her child’s health. But what about men?⁣

Oskar Karlsson and his team from Stockholm University reveal that, even before conception, a father’s environment – from chemical exposure to stress – can alter gene expression in ways that are passed down to future generations.⁣

By revealing how a father’s past can shape his child’s future, the project doesn’t just advance biology and public health concerns – it also demands we rethink reproductive responsibility, from the lab to the living room.⁣

Check their website: https://karlssonlab.se

#FrontierResearch ⁣

@stockholmuniversity @scilifelab @environment_sthlmuni @eukommissionen


307
4
1 months ago

We’ve long known that a woman’s lifestyle and exposures during pregnancy can influence her child’s health. But what about men?⁣

Oskar Karlsson and his team from Stockholm University reveal that, even before conception, a father’s environment – from chemical exposure to stress – can alter gene expression in ways that are passed down to future generations.⁣

By revealing how a father’s past can shape his child’s future, the project doesn’t just advance biology and public health concerns – it also demands we rethink reproductive responsibility, from the lab to the living room.⁣

Check their website: https://karlssonlab.se

#FrontierResearch ⁣

@stockholmuniversity @scilifelab @environment_sthlmuni @eukommissionen


307
4
1 months ago

Zoom in, researchers. ⁣

Breakthroughs don’t happen overnight. They start with curiosity - and the freedom to explore it.


106
2
1 months ago

Winning a grant from the European Research Council means the freedom to explore bold ideas, ask big questions and push the frontiers of knowledge.⁣

For many researchers, it’s a moment they will never forget.⁣

Interested in applying for a grant?⁣

The ERC offers several types of grants for researchers at different stages of their careers:

👉 Starting Grants for early-career scientists
👉 Consolidator Grants for researchers building their own team
👉 Advanced Grants for established research leaders
👉 Synergy Grants bring together small groups of researchers to tackle ambitious problems
👉 Proof of Concept Grants explore the innovation potential of ERC-funded discoveries.⁣

Find out more on our website!


292
9
2 months ago

🎵 What does music have to do with medicine, physics or urban life? More than you might think.⁣

At the ERC, researchers explore questions that cross disciplines and connect fields in unexpected ways. And that’s how we end up exploring music as a window into health, science, history and society.⁣

Four ERC-funded projects show what this looks like in practice.⁣

👉 Elaine Chew uses mathematical models to understand how music can support cardiovascular health⁣
👉 J Griffith Rollefson studies how hip hop culture produces and circulates knowledge across cities and communities⁣
👉 Maciej Lewenstein explores the connections between jazz and quantum physics⁣
👉 David Trippett reconstructs an unfinished opera, bringing a lost 19th-century work back to life for modern performance.⁣

While music is the common thread, the discoveries of these projects reach far beyond the arts.⁣

#MusicResearch⁣

@cambridgeuniversity @icfonians @globalcipher @universitycollegecork
@cambridgeuniversity


82
2 days ago


🎵 What does music have to do with medicine, physics or urban life? More than you might think.⁣

At the ERC, researchers explore questions that cross disciplines and connect fields in unexpected ways. And that’s how we end up exploring music as a window into health, science, history and society.⁣

Four ERC-funded projects show what this looks like in practice.⁣

👉 Elaine Chew uses mathematical models to understand how music can support cardiovascular health⁣
👉 J Griffith Rollefson studies how hip hop culture produces and circulates knowledge across cities and communities⁣
👉 Maciej Lewenstein explores the connections between jazz and quantum physics⁣
👉 David Trippett reconstructs an unfinished opera, bringing a lost 19th-century work back to life for modern performance.⁣

While music is the common thread, the discoveries of these projects reach far beyond the arts.⁣

#MusicResearch⁣

@cambridgeuniversity @icfonians @globalcipher @universitycollegecork
@cambridgeuniversity


82
2 days ago

🎵 What does music have to do with medicine, physics or urban life? More than you might think.⁣

At the ERC, researchers explore questions that cross disciplines and connect fields in unexpected ways. And that’s how we end up exploring music as a window into health, science, history and society.⁣

Four ERC-funded projects show what this looks like in practice.⁣

👉 Elaine Chew uses mathematical models to understand how music can support cardiovascular health⁣
👉 J Griffith Rollefson studies how hip hop culture produces and circulates knowledge across cities and communities⁣
👉 Maciej Lewenstein explores the connections between jazz and quantum physics⁣
👉 David Trippett reconstructs an unfinished opera, bringing a lost 19th-century work back to life for modern performance.⁣

While music is the common thread, the discoveries of these projects reach far beyond the arts.⁣

#MusicResearch⁣

@cambridgeuniversity @icfonians @globalcipher @universitycollegecork
@cambridgeuniversity


82
2 days ago

🎵 What does music have to do with medicine, physics or urban life? More than you might think.⁣

At the ERC, researchers explore questions that cross disciplines and connect fields in unexpected ways. And that’s how we end up exploring music as a window into health, science, history and society.⁣

Four ERC-funded projects show what this looks like in practice.⁣

👉 Elaine Chew uses mathematical models to understand how music can support cardiovascular health⁣
👉 J Griffith Rollefson studies how hip hop culture produces and circulates knowledge across cities and communities⁣
👉 Maciej Lewenstein explores the connections between jazz and quantum physics⁣
👉 David Trippett reconstructs an unfinished opera, bringing a lost 19th-century work back to life for modern performance.⁣

While music is the common thread, the discoveries of these projects reach far beyond the arts.⁣

#MusicResearch⁣

@cambridgeuniversity @icfonians @globalcipher @universitycollegecork
@cambridgeuniversity


82
2 days ago

🎵 What does music have to do with medicine, physics or urban life? More than you might think.⁣

At the ERC, researchers explore questions that cross disciplines and connect fields in unexpected ways. And that’s how we end up exploring music as a window into health, science, history and society.⁣

Four ERC-funded projects show what this looks like in practice.⁣

👉 Elaine Chew uses mathematical models to understand how music can support cardiovascular health⁣
👉 J Griffith Rollefson studies how hip hop culture produces and circulates knowledge across cities and communities⁣
👉 Maciej Lewenstein explores the connections between jazz and quantum physics⁣
👉 David Trippett reconstructs an unfinished opera, bringing a lost 19th-century work back to life for modern performance.⁣

While music is the common thread, the discoveries of these projects reach far beyond the arts.⁣

#MusicResearch⁣

@cambridgeuniversity @icfonians @globalcipher @universitycollegecork
@cambridgeuniversity


82
2 days ago

Forests around the world are undergoing unprecedented changes due to climate change and human activity 🌲🌲. But how can we better understand the impact of disturbances such as droughts, fires and logging on forest ecosystems?⁣

ERC grantee Kim Calders and his team at Ghent University are building highly detailed “digital twin” forests to help answer these questions.⁣

Using advanced 3D laser scanning and spectrometry, the researchers create virtual forest models that capture forest structure and spectral properties in remarkable detail.⁣

Their work combines field measurements with satellite observations to improve the monitoring of forest disturbances and recovery across tropical and temperate ecosystems.⁣

Some of this research involves extraordinary fieldwork - including mounting a laser scanner in an 80 m-tall tree in Tasmania to scan giant forest canopies.⁣

The team also collaborates closely with local partners around the world to better understand the drivers of forest disturbances.⁣

Through their research, the scientists aim to improve forecasts of forest carbon dynamics and reduce uncertainties in climate models - insights that are urgently needed in the context of global warming and climate mitigation.⁣

Find out more about the project 👉 @qforestlab

@kimcalders @ugent @nationaalparkbosland @thetreeprojects
@eu4be


88
3
4 days ago

Forests around the world are undergoing unprecedented changes due to climate change and human activity 🌲🌲. But how can we better understand the impact of disturbances such as droughts, fires and logging on forest ecosystems?⁣

ERC grantee Kim Calders and his team at Ghent University are building highly detailed “digital twin” forests to help answer these questions.⁣

Using advanced 3D laser scanning and spectrometry, the researchers create virtual forest models that capture forest structure and spectral properties in remarkable detail.⁣

Their work combines field measurements with satellite observations to improve the monitoring of forest disturbances and recovery across tropical and temperate ecosystems.⁣

Some of this research involves extraordinary fieldwork - including mounting a laser scanner in an 80 m-tall tree in Tasmania to scan giant forest canopies.⁣

The team also collaborates closely with local partners around the world to better understand the drivers of forest disturbances.⁣

Through their research, the scientists aim to improve forecasts of forest carbon dynamics and reduce uncertainties in climate models - insights that are urgently needed in the context of global warming and climate mitigation.⁣

Find out more about the project 👉 @qforestlab

@kimcalders @ugent @nationaalparkbosland @thetreeprojects
@eu4be


88
3
4 days ago

Forests around the world are undergoing unprecedented changes due to climate change and human activity 🌲🌲. But how can we better understand the impact of disturbances such as droughts, fires and logging on forest ecosystems?⁣

ERC grantee Kim Calders and his team at Ghent University are building highly detailed “digital twin” forests to help answer these questions.⁣

Using advanced 3D laser scanning and spectrometry, the researchers create virtual forest models that capture forest structure and spectral properties in remarkable detail.⁣

Their work combines field measurements with satellite observations to improve the monitoring of forest disturbances and recovery across tropical and temperate ecosystems.⁣

Some of this research involves extraordinary fieldwork - including mounting a laser scanner in an 80 m-tall tree in Tasmania to scan giant forest canopies.⁣

The team also collaborates closely with local partners around the world to better understand the drivers of forest disturbances.⁣

Through their research, the scientists aim to improve forecasts of forest carbon dynamics and reduce uncertainties in climate models - insights that are urgently needed in the context of global warming and climate mitigation.⁣

Find out more about the project 👉 @qforestlab

@kimcalders @ugent @nationaalparkbosland @thetreeprojects
@eu4be


88
3
4 days ago


Forests around the world are undergoing unprecedented changes due to climate change and human activity 🌲🌲. But how can we better understand the impact of disturbances such as droughts, fires and logging on forest ecosystems?⁣

ERC grantee Kim Calders and his team at Ghent University are building highly detailed “digital twin” forests to help answer these questions.⁣

Using advanced 3D laser scanning and spectrometry, the researchers create virtual forest models that capture forest structure and spectral properties in remarkable detail.⁣

Their work combines field measurements with satellite observations to improve the monitoring of forest disturbances and recovery across tropical and temperate ecosystems.⁣

Some of this research involves extraordinary fieldwork - including mounting a laser scanner in an 80 m-tall tree in Tasmania to scan giant forest canopies.⁣

The team also collaborates closely with local partners around the world to better understand the drivers of forest disturbances.⁣

Through their research, the scientists aim to improve forecasts of forest carbon dynamics and reduce uncertainties in climate models - insights that are urgently needed in the context of global warming and climate mitigation.⁣

Find out more about the project 👉 @qforestlab

@kimcalders @ugent @nationaalparkbosland @thetreeprojects
@eu4be


88
3
4 days ago

Forests around the world are undergoing unprecedented changes due to climate change and human activity 🌲🌲. But how can we better understand the impact of disturbances such as droughts, fires and logging on forest ecosystems?⁣

ERC grantee Kim Calders and his team at Ghent University are building highly detailed “digital twin” forests to help answer these questions.⁣

Using advanced 3D laser scanning and spectrometry, the researchers create virtual forest models that capture forest structure and spectral properties in remarkable detail.⁣

Their work combines field measurements with satellite observations to improve the monitoring of forest disturbances and recovery across tropical and temperate ecosystems.⁣

Some of this research involves extraordinary fieldwork - including mounting a laser scanner in an 80 m-tall tree in Tasmania to scan giant forest canopies.⁣

The team also collaborates closely with local partners around the world to better understand the drivers of forest disturbances.⁣

Through their research, the scientists aim to improve forecasts of forest carbon dynamics and reduce uncertainties in climate models - insights that are urgently needed in the context of global warming and climate mitigation.⁣

Find out more about the project 👉 @qforestlab

@kimcalders @ugent @nationaalparkbosland @thetreeprojects
@eu4be


88
3
4 days ago

Forests around the world are undergoing unprecedented changes due to climate change and human activity 🌲🌲. But how can we better understand the impact of disturbances such as droughts, fires and logging on forest ecosystems?⁣

ERC grantee Kim Calders and his team at Ghent University are building highly detailed “digital twin” forests to help answer these questions.⁣

Using advanced 3D laser scanning and spectrometry, the researchers create virtual forest models that capture forest structure and spectral properties in remarkable detail.⁣

Their work combines field measurements with satellite observations to improve the monitoring of forest disturbances and recovery across tropical and temperate ecosystems.⁣

Some of this research involves extraordinary fieldwork - including mounting a laser scanner in an 80 m-tall tree in Tasmania to scan giant forest canopies.⁣

The team also collaborates closely with local partners around the world to better understand the drivers of forest disturbances.⁣

Through their research, the scientists aim to improve forecasts of forest carbon dynamics and reduce uncertainties in climate models - insights that are urgently needed in the context of global warming and climate mitigation.⁣

Find out more about the project 👉 @qforestlab

@kimcalders @ugent @nationaalparkbosland @thetreeprojects
@eu4be


88
3
4 days ago

Can music reveal hidden signs of heart disease? 🎵🎵 For Prof. Elaine Chew at King's College London, the answer lies in the patterns she’s spent a lifetime studying. As a mathematician and pianist, Chew saw how algorithms could decode music’s emotional power.⁣

Her research has revealed that music doesn’t just affect our emotions — it can physically influence how our hearts beat and how our blood flows. By tracking these subtle shifts, music could help detect early signs of heart problems or even calm stress-related conditions like high blood pressure.⁣

@lifeatkings @euinuk


54
2
1 weeks ago

From sunlight-powered electronics to next-generation solar cells, frontier research is opening new possibilities for the green transition ☀️⁣

Inspired by photosynthesis in green leaves, Michael Grätzel pioneered solar technologies that can harvest even ambient indoor light — helping power devices such as e-readers, headphones and smartphones with reduced charging needs.⁣

His research has also contributed to advances in photovoltaic technologies designed to be more adaptable, efficient and accessible for future energy systems.⁣

His research is based at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale De Lausanne in Switzerland!⁣

@epflcampus


56
2
1 weeks ago

From sunlight-powered electronics to next-generation solar cells, frontier research is opening new possibilities for the green transition ☀️⁣

Inspired by photosynthesis in green leaves, Michael Grätzel pioneered solar technologies that can harvest even ambient indoor light — helping power devices such as e-readers, headphones and smartphones with reduced charging needs.⁣

His research has also contributed to advances in photovoltaic technologies designed to be more adaptable, efficient and accessible for future energy systems.⁣

His research is based at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale De Lausanne in Switzerland!⁣

@epflcampus


56
2
1 weeks ago


From sunlight-powered electronics to next-generation solar cells, frontier research is opening new possibilities for the green transition ☀️⁣

Inspired by photosynthesis in green leaves, Michael Grätzel pioneered solar technologies that can harvest even ambient indoor light — helping power devices such as e-readers, headphones and smartphones with reduced charging needs.⁣

His research has also contributed to advances in photovoltaic technologies designed to be more adaptable, efficient and accessible for future energy systems.⁣

His research is based at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale De Lausanne in Switzerland!⁣

@epflcampus


56
2
1 weeks ago

From sunlight-powered electronics to next-generation solar cells, frontier research is opening new possibilities for the green transition ☀️⁣

Inspired by photosynthesis in green leaves, Michael Grätzel pioneered solar technologies that can harvest even ambient indoor light — helping power devices such as e-readers, headphones and smartphones with reduced charging needs.⁣

His research has also contributed to advances in photovoltaic technologies designed to be more adaptable, efficient and accessible for future energy systems.⁣

His research is based at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale De Lausanne in Switzerland!⁣

@epflcampus


56
2
1 weeks ago

Meet Prof. Kath Browne, whose work explores lesbian, gay, bisexual and trans exclusions and, more recently, groups and organisations that resist sexual and gender equality.⁣

Her research examines new ways of understanding difference and the social effects of changing attitudes towards sex and gender in the 21st century.⁣

Watch the video to hear more about the project’s findings.⁣

#IDAHOT⁣

@universitycollegedublin @euireland


32
1 weeks ago

🌊 Who controls the science of the high seas? The new UN High Seas Treaty is a big win for ocean protection, but it also tells another story.⁣

Alice Vadrot, Professor in International Relations and the Environment at the Universität Wien, followed the negotiations closely and found that science wasn’t just guiding decisions, it was part of the negotiations.⁣

📊 Countries used data strategically⁣
🌍 Not everyone had equal access to science⁣
⚖️ A balance had to be struck between conservation and fairness⁣

Power in global politics is closely tied to who produces and controls knowledge. In the end, science isn’t just about facts, it’s about influence.⁣

#ScienceDiplomacy⁣

@univienna


104
1
2 weeks ago

On Europe Day, we're asking a question we think is worth sitting with: what happens when science is free to follow curiosity, without knowing where it will lead?⁣

The answer, time and again, is that it leads somewhere important.⁣

Researchers spend years exploring questions with no obvious application – from how AI reshapes warfare, to what ancient ice reveals about climate, to how policies build up over time.⁣

None of these started with a guaranteed outcome. All of them produced knowledge that matters.⁣

That is free science. And it is worth protecting.⁣

@eu_science europeancommission


192
2
3 weeks ago

On Europe Day, we're asking a question we think is worth sitting with: what happens when science is free to follow curiosity, without knowing where it will lead?⁣

The answer, time and again, is that it leads somewhere important.⁣

Researchers spend years exploring questions with no obvious application – from how AI reshapes warfare, to what ancient ice reveals about climate, to how policies build up over time.⁣

None of these started with a guaranteed outcome. All of them produced knowledge that matters.⁣

That is free science. And it is worth protecting.⁣

@eu_science europeancommission


192
2
3 weeks ago

On Europe Day, we're asking a question we think is worth sitting with: what happens when science is free to follow curiosity, without knowing where it will lead?⁣

The answer, time and again, is that it leads somewhere important.⁣

Researchers spend years exploring questions with no obvious application – from how AI reshapes warfare, to what ancient ice reveals about climate, to how policies build up over time.⁣

None of these started with a guaranteed outcome. All of them produced knowledge that matters.⁣

That is free science. And it is worth protecting.⁣

@eu_science europeancommission


192
2
3 weeks ago

On Europe Day, we're asking a question we think is worth sitting with: what happens when science is free to follow curiosity, without knowing where it will lead?⁣

The answer, time and again, is that it leads somewhere important.⁣

Researchers spend years exploring questions with no obvious application – from how AI reshapes warfare, to what ancient ice reveals about climate, to how policies build up over time.⁣

None of these started with a guaranteed outcome. All of them produced knowledge that matters.⁣

That is free science. And it is worth protecting.⁣

@eu_science europeancommission


192
2
3 weeks ago

On Europe Day, we're asking a question we think is worth sitting with: what happens when science is free to follow curiosity, without knowing where it will lead?⁣

The answer, time and again, is that it leads somewhere important.⁣

Researchers spend years exploring questions with no obvious application – from how AI reshapes warfare, to what ancient ice reveals about climate, to how policies build up over time.⁣

None of these started with a guaranteed outcome. All of them produced knowledge that matters.⁣

That is free science. And it is worth protecting.⁣

@eu_science europeancommission


192
2
3 weeks ago

Every year, around 3.2 million women are diagnosed with breast, ovarian or cervical cancers. Together, these cancers cause over 1.2 million deaths annually.⁣

An ERC-funded project led by Claudia Allemani is tackling a crucial question: why survival for these cancers differ so dramatically around the world.⁣

It provides the first truly global picture of cancer care pathways, based on data for more than 275 000 women, diagnosed between 2025 and 2018, across 39 countries.⁣

🔷 The findings show that for ovarian cancer, fewer than 20% of women are diagnosed at an early stage worldwide, although the situation remains slightly worse for women in low-and middle income countries. ⁣
🔷 Access to surgery and treatments that align with international guidelines also varies widely, and older women are less likely to receive recommended care. ⁣

By identifying where and why care falls short, the project aims to guide policymakers and help prevent avoidable deaths worldwide.⁣

“Optimal treatment for early-stage tumours is more accessible in most countries. Efforts to promote early detection should continue,” says Claudia Allemani, based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK.⁣

Co-author Veronica Di Carlo refers to international clinical guidelines, stressing “women everywhere need to be able to discuss their treatment with medical professionals, in order to access the best available options according to recommended guidelines.” ⁣

#WorldOvarianCancerDay⁣

@lshtm


68
3
3 weeks ago

Every year, around 3.2 million women are diagnosed with breast, ovarian or cervical cancers. Together, these cancers cause over 1.2 million deaths annually.⁣

An ERC-funded project led by Claudia Allemani is tackling a crucial question: why survival for these cancers differ so dramatically around the world.⁣

It provides the first truly global picture of cancer care pathways, based on data for more than 275 000 women, diagnosed between 2025 and 2018, across 39 countries.⁣

🔷 The findings show that for ovarian cancer, fewer than 20% of women are diagnosed at an early stage worldwide, although the situation remains slightly worse for women in low-and middle income countries. ⁣
🔷 Access to surgery and treatments that align with international guidelines also varies widely, and older women are less likely to receive recommended care. ⁣

By identifying where and why care falls short, the project aims to guide policymakers and help prevent avoidable deaths worldwide.⁣

“Optimal treatment for early-stage tumours is more accessible in most countries. Efforts to promote early detection should continue,” says Claudia Allemani, based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK.⁣

Co-author Veronica Di Carlo refers to international clinical guidelines, stressing “women everywhere need to be able to discuss their treatment with medical professionals, in order to access the best available options according to recommended guidelines.” ⁣

#WorldOvarianCancerDay⁣

@lshtm


68
3
3 weeks ago

Every year, around 3.2 million women are diagnosed with breast, ovarian or cervical cancers. Together, these cancers cause over 1.2 million deaths annually.⁣

An ERC-funded project led by Claudia Allemani is tackling a crucial question: why survival for these cancers differ so dramatically around the world.⁣

It provides the first truly global picture of cancer care pathways, based on data for more than 275 000 women, diagnosed between 2025 and 2018, across 39 countries.⁣

🔷 The findings show that for ovarian cancer, fewer than 20% of women are diagnosed at an early stage worldwide, although the situation remains slightly worse for women in low-and middle income countries. ⁣
🔷 Access to surgery and treatments that align with international guidelines also varies widely, and older women are less likely to receive recommended care. ⁣

By identifying where and why care falls short, the project aims to guide policymakers and help prevent avoidable deaths worldwide.⁣

“Optimal treatment for early-stage tumours is more accessible in most countries. Efforts to promote early detection should continue,” says Claudia Allemani, based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK.⁣

Co-author Veronica Di Carlo refers to international clinical guidelines, stressing “women everywhere need to be able to discuss their treatment with medical professionals, in order to access the best available options according to recommended guidelines.” ⁣

#WorldOvarianCancerDay⁣

@lshtm


68
3
3 weeks ago

Every year, around 3.2 million women are diagnosed with breast, ovarian or cervical cancers. Together, these cancers cause over 1.2 million deaths annually.⁣

An ERC-funded project led by Claudia Allemani is tackling a crucial question: why survival for these cancers differ so dramatically around the world.⁣

It provides the first truly global picture of cancer care pathways, based on data for more than 275 000 women, diagnosed between 2025 and 2018, across 39 countries.⁣

🔷 The findings show that for ovarian cancer, fewer than 20% of women are diagnosed at an early stage worldwide, although the situation remains slightly worse for women in low-and middle income countries. ⁣
🔷 Access to surgery and treatments that align with international guidelines also varies widely, and older women are less likely to receive recommended care. ⁣

By identifying where and why care falls short, the project aims to guide policymakers and help prevent avoidable deaths worldwide.⁣

“Optimal treatment for early-stage tumours is more accessible in most countries. Efforts to promote early detection should continue,” says Claudia Allemani, based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK.⁣

Co-author Veronica Di Carlo refers to international clinical guidelines, stressing “women everywhere need to be able to discuss their treatment with medical professionals, in order to access the best available options according to recommended guidelines.” ⁣

#WorldOvarianCancerDay⁣

@lshtm


68
3
3 weeks ago

Every year, around 3.2 million women are diagnosed with breast, ovarian or cervical cancers. Together, these cancers cause over 1.2 million deaths annually.⁣

An ERC-funded project led by Claudia Allemani is tackling a crucial question: why survival for these cancers differ so dramatically around the world.⁣

It provides the first truly global picture of cancer care pathways, based on data for more than 275 000 women, diagnosed between 2025 and 2018, across 39 countries.⁣

🔷 The findings show that for ovarian cancer, fewer than 20% of women are diagnosed at an early stage worldwide, although the situation remains slightly worse for women in low-and middle income countries. ⁣
🔷 Access to surgery and treatments that align with international guidelines also varies widely, and older women are less likely to receive recommended care. ⁣

By identifying where and why care falls short, the project aims to guide policymakers and help prevent avoidable deaths worldwide.⁣

“Optimal treatment for early-stage tumours is more accessible in most countries. Efforts to promote early detection should continue,” says Claudia Allemani, based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in the UK.⁣

Co-author Veronica Di Carlo refers to international clinical guidelines, stressing “women everywhere need to be able to discuss their treatment with medical professionals, in order to access the best available options according to recommended guidelines.” ⁣

#WorldOvarianCancerDay⁣

@lshtm


68
3
3 weeks ago

🌍 The biggest challenges we face can’t be solved alone. From climate change to global health and digital security, progress depends on cooperation across borders, yet collaboration is under pressure.⁣

In the new #ERCMagazine, ERC President Maria Leptin discusses why science diplomacy matters and how science can help bridge divides. ⁣

She highlights three key ideas:⁣

🔸 Knowledge as a global common⁣

🔸 Science as a tool for diplomacy⁣

🔸 Inclusive scientific research systems⁣

By supporting curiosity-driven research, the ERC helps sustain open international collaboration.⁣

📖 Read the editorial in the latest ERC Magazine: Check the link in bio


200
3 weeks ago


Instagramストーリーを秘密で見る

Instagramストーリービューアは、Instagramストーリー、動画、写真、またはIGTVを秘密に見たり保存したりできる簡単なツールです。このサービスを使用すると、コンテンツをダウンロードして、いつでもオフラインで楽しむことができます。Instagramで後でチェックしたいものを見つけた場合や、匿名でストーリーを見たい場合、このビューアは最適です。Anonstoriesは、あなたの身元を隠すための優れたソリューションを提供します。Instagramは2023年8月にストーリー機能を導入し、すぐに他のプラットフォームでも採用されました。このフォーマットは魅力的で、時間に敏感なため、ユーザーが写真、動画、または自撮りをテキスト、絵文字、またはフィルターで強化して、24時間限定で公開することができます。この限られた時間枠は、通常の投稿に比べて高いエンゲージメントを生み出します。今日の世界では、ストーリーはソーシャルメディアでつながり、コミュニケーションをとる最も人気のある方法の1つです。しかし、ストーリーを視聴すると、作成者は自分の名前を視聴者リストに見ることができ、プライバシーの懸念があります。もしストーリーを目立たずに閲覧したい場合、ここでAnonstoriesが役立ちます。これを使うことで、自分の身元を明かさずにInstagramのコンテンツを視聴できます。単に調べたいプロファイルのユーザー名を入力すると、その人の最新のストーリーが表示されます。Anonstoriesビューアの特徴:- 匿名閲覧:視聴リストに名前が表示されずにストーリーを視聴 - アカウント不要:Instagramのアカウントにサインインせずに公開コンテンツを視聴 - コンテンツダウンロード:ストーリーコンテンツを直接デバイスに保存してオフラインで使用 - ハイライト視聴:24時間を過ぎてもInstagramのハイライトにアクセス - リポストモニタリング:個人プロファイルのストーリーに対するリポストやエンゲージメントのレベルを追跡 制限事項:- このツールは公開アカウントでのみ動作し、非公開アカウントはアクセスできません。 利点:- プライバシー保護:Instagramのコンテンツを匿名で閲覧可能 - シンプルで簡単:アプリのインストールや登録は不要 - 独自のツール:Instagramが提供していない方法でコンテンツをダウンロードおよび管理可能

Anonstoriesの利点

IGストーリーをプライベートに探る

Instagramの更新をプライバシーを守りつつ、匿名で追跡できます。


プライベートInstagramビューア

プライベートプロファイルビューアを使用して、プロフィールと写真を簡単に匿名で閲覧できます。


無料のストーリービューア

この無料ツールでInstagramストーリーを匿名で閲覧でき、アクティビティがストーリーアップローダーに知られることはありません。

よくある質問

 
匿名性

Anonstoriesを使用すると、作成者に通知されることなくInstagramストーリーを閲覧できます。

 
デバイス互換性

iOS、Android、Windows、macOS、ChromeやSafariなどの最新のブラウザで問題なく動作します。

 
安全性とプライバシー

ログイン情報なしで、安全かつ匿名で閲覧できます。

 
登録不要

ユーザーは、ユーザー名を入力するだけで公開ストーリーを閲覧可能—アカウント登録は不要です。

 
対応フォーマット

写真(JPEG)と動画(MP4)を簡単にダウンロードできます。

 
料金

サービスは無料で利用できます。

 
非公開アカウント

非公開アカウントのコンテンツはフォロワーのみがアクセスできます。

 
ファイル使用

ファイルは個人または教育目的でのみ使用し、著作権法を遵守する必要があります。

 
動作方法

公開ユーザー名を入力して、ストーリーを閲覧またはダウンロードします。サービスはコンテンツをローカルに保存するための直接リンクを生成します。