«Cuocere significa rendere i cibi più sicuri, perché molte molecole tossiche vengono distrutte, e più digeribili», spiega la neuroscienziata Raffaella Rumiati della Sissa di Trieste.
In edicola
«Cuocere significa rendere i cibi più sicuri, perché molte molecole tossiche vengono distrutte, e più digeribili», spiega la neuroscienziata Raffaella Rumiati della Sissa di Trieste.
In edicola
Il verde e il blu Nella storia il colore ha sempre influito sulle scelte alimentari. «L' Homo sapiens ha preferito i cibi con sfumature di rosso rispetto a quelle verdi», prosegue la neuroscienziata Raffaella Rumiati che ha condotto una ricerca su questo argomento assieme ad altri colleghi della Sissa di Trieste.
In edicola
La vicenda umana di Nikola Tesla è certamente una delle più emblematiche tra quelle degli scienziati/inventori vissuti a cavallo tra il XI e XX secolo - dice Andrea Gambassi, Direttore del laboratorio Interdisciplinare per le Scienze Naturali e Umanistiche della Sissa.
In edicola
Due conferenze, alle 9.30 e alle 11, incentrate sulle tomografie applicate alla replicazione di strumenti musicali antichi e sulle neuroscienze, con scienziati quali Domenica Bueti, Associate Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience alla Sissa.
In edicola
La 17ª rassegna, promossa di concerto con gli Astrofili Lessinia orientale e il patrocinio del Comune, si apre domani a San Bonifacio in sala Barbarani: interverrà Alessandro Bressan, astrofisico e cosmologo della Scuola internazionale superiore di studi avanzati (Sissa) di Trieste.
In edicola
La 17ª rassegna, promossa di concerto con gli Astrofili Lessinia orientale e il patrocinio del Comune, si apre domani a San Bonifacio in sala Barbarani: interverrà Alessandro Bressan, astrofisico e cosmologo della Scuola internazionale superiore di studi avanzati (Sissa) di Trieste.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
The international team of Sissa (International School for Advanced Studies), Italy, collaborated with the researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles and the University of Leeds to develop a new multi-electrode for spinal cord stimulation.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
Stefano Canali, dottore di ricerca in Logica ed Epistemologia, ricercatore presso l'Area Neuroscienze e il Laboratorio interdisciplinare per le Scienze naturali e umanistiche della Scuola internazionale superiore di Studi avanzati - SISSA.
Giovanni Paolo Vladilo [...] È stato docente delle discipline "Pianeti e Astrobiologia" e "Astronomia Osservativa" del corso di Laurea Magistrale in Fisica dell'Università di Trieste, e di Astrobiologia nel corso di dottorato "Astrofisica e Cosmologia" della Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati (Sissa).
"Ogni individuo possiede una rappresentazione unica su come vengano espresse differenti emozioni, affine all'idea di un'impronta digitale". E' quanto spiegato da Nicola Binetti, ricercatore della Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati di Trieste (Sissa).
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.
This work-conducted in collaboration with NYU Tandon graduate student Francesco Lavini, and colleagues from the International School for Advanced Studies, the International Center for Theoretical Physics in Trieste Italy, as well as Prague's Charles University-could lead to more efficient manufacturing processes, greener vehicles, and a generally more sustainable world.