All News by...
Archived news
Health and Wellbeing Events
Currently there are no Research Events in the event calendar.
Bangor Business School enters top 15 in the world for banking research
Bangor Business School has risen 12 places to be named the 15th best institution in the world for research in the field of Banking.
Publication Date: 24/05/2013
Find out more......
Young Food Dudes Lead the Way for Healthy Nurseries
An exciting new programme to establish good eating habits in very young children received the top Health Research Award from LARIA (Local Authorities Research Intelligence Association), at an awards ceremony in Manchester University on Monday.
Publication Date: 20/05/2013
Find out more......
Professor Bernardo Batiz Lazo awarded research grant worth £15,000
Professor Bernardo Batiz-Lazo has been awarded a research grant worth £15,000 for a study of payment systems across three countries.
Publication Date: 15/05/2013
Find out more......
EU-backed project helps maximise the potential of Welsh businesses in the green economy
Economy Minister, Edwina Hart, today (15 May) launched the next phase of a project aimed at helping businesses in West Wales and the Valleys become more sustainable and support the low carbon economy.
The WISE Network is a collaborative project between Aberystwyth, Bangor and Swansea universities that enables businesses across the region to take full advantage of the growth in the green economy.
Publication Date: 15/05/2013
Find out more......
Important piece of Health Service Improvement research begins
An important new piece of research about the best ways to incorporate patients and service users’ opinions to improve the Health Services has begun in earnest at Bangor University this week.
Publication Date: 13/05/2013
Find out more......
Bangor Business School to host visiting researcher from Deakin University, Australia
Bangor Business School is to welcome a visiting researcher from Australia’s Deakin University in September.
Publication Date: 08/05/2013
Find out more......
Bangor Professor’s research hits the Hong Kong media
The South China Morning Post, the leading English-language newspaper in Hong Kong, recently published two articles showcasing groundbreaking research work by Bangor Law School’s Professor Suzannah Linton, Chair of International Law and Director of the Bangor Centre for International Law.
Publication Date: 08/05/2013
Find out more......
New drugs may be better at preventing stroke
New oral anticoagulants that have been approved by NICE are at least as effective, and may be more effective at preventing strokes in people with atrial fibrillation than the widely used drug warfarin. This finding published in Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics (DOI: 10.1038/CLPT.2013.83) may help to inform decisions about treatment options for different patients who are at risk of strokes.
Publication Date: 26/04/2013
Find out more......
Mindfulness in Society Conference: delivered by Bangor University’s Centre for Mindfulness Research and Practice
Bangor University’s Centre for Mindfulness Research and Practice hosted a scientific conference in March 2013 in Chester entitled ‘Mindfulness in Society’. It was a three day conference with additional pre and post conference day long institutes.
Publication Date: 17/04/2013
Find out more......
PhD Studentships worth £13,000 available for October 2013
Bangor Business School is inviting applications for Research Bursaries starting in October 2013. This provides three years of support for full-time PhD study.
Publication Date: 09/04/2013
Find out more......
Plants to Products – From Concept to Commercialisation
A half day seminar on product commercialisation and Intellectual Property (IP) rights
Tuesday, 23rd April 2013
Neuadd Reichel, Ffriddoedd Road, Bangor Gwynedd, LL57 2TR
08.30am – 1.00pm
Lunch buffet and refreshments. Parking available
Download more information on the seminar here
Publication Date: 08/04/2013
Find out more......
Bangor Professor invited to share expertise at mobile payments conference in the US
A lecturer from Bangor Business School was the only academic from any European university to attend a conference on the future of retail payments held in the US recently.
Publication Date: 03/04/2013
Find out more......
Bangor Centre for International Law’s inaugural EU Day a resounding success
The Bangor Centre for International Law at Bangor Law School held its inaugural EU Day on 13th March 2013.
Publication Date: 23/03/2013
Find out more......
Caring for Foster parents so that they are better placed to care for the children
Parenting has its own stresses and its own rewards, but as the UK faces a crisis in the numbers of foster parents available, one university is finding ways to improve personal well-being and reduce the stress-levels of those currently working in that role.
Publication Date: 22/03/2013
Find out more......
Protecting the amazing Chagos archipelago - Blog
Publication Date: 22/03/2013
Find out more......
Urgent action required to stop irreversible genetic changes to fish stocks
If we are to sustain fish as a global food source, then fisheries and conservation managers need to take account of new evidence showing how overfishing of the larger fish in a population actually changes the gene pool in favour of smaller less fertile fish.
A paper in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment (available online from 18.3.13) led by fish geneticists at Bangor University, with contributions from the University of East Anglia, the University of the West Indies and the Max-Planck-Institute for Developmental Biology, has proved for the first time that the change towards smaller fish takes place at the DNA level, and within a relatively short time period of a few generations.
Publication Date: 19/03/2013
Find out more......
Bangor University to lead £1.2 million Dementia and visual Arts project
Bangor University is to lead one of a number of projects that will see university researchers, community groups and national charities and trusts working together to explore community health and wellbeing, community engagement and mobilisation. The University has been awarded a Large Grant in the Cultures, Health & Well-Being theme, one of five Connected Communities Programme themes which share funding in excess of £7m.
Publication Date: 15/03/2013
Find out more......
Visit of Professor Vera Trappmann to the School of Social Sciences on an Erasmus Teaching Exchange
Professor Vera Trappmann of Otto-von-Guericke University, Magdeburg, Germany, will be visiting the School on an Erasmus Teaching Exchange during the week beginning 18 March. She is a Professor of Sociology and European Societies and her comparative research deals with labour relations, welfare and corporate social responsibility in Western, Central and Eastern Europe.
Publication Date: 15/03/2013
Find out more......
Research search for ‘invisible’ carers
There are thought to be over 70,000 people with a learning disability living in Wales today and yet only 12,000 or so are known to social services. This would, therefore, appear to indicate that many tens of thousands of people with a learning disability are living with family carers.
Publication Date: 14/03/2013
Find out more......
Business on Anglesey (BOA) offer bursary to SENRGy Research Students.
BOA is a network of SMEs who are based in Anglesey. They would like to provide a £3,000 bursary to a PhD student whose research will be of benefit to Anglesey's environment, economic or community development.
Publication Date: 12/03/2013
Find out more......
Bangor Psychology Students 'Pitch' up just short after fantastic effort in Cardiff
Two teams of Consumer Psychology masters students went to Cardiff recently to participate in the Chartered Institute of Marketing's "Pitch" competition. The teams were: "The Three Marketeers" (Jamie Muir, Will Morgan, Manuel Calatrava Conesa) and "The National Thrust" (James Gudgeon, James Gillespie, Bryan Walls).
Publication Date: 07/03/2013
Find out more......
Social Sciences staff make a knowledge exchange visit to India
Staff from the School of Social Sciences accompanied a group from the Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board on a knowledge exchange visit to India earlier this year.
Publication Date: 07/03/2013
Find out more......
Prestigious visiting research scholarship awarded to Bangor philosopher
Dr Lucy Huskinson, Senior Lecturer in the School of Philosophy and Religion, has been awarded a prestigious Mythos grant of $4500 to further her research into the phenomenology of architecture and urban design at the Opus Archives and Research Center, in Santa Barbara, US.
Publication Date: 07/03/2013
Find out more......
How much protection is enough?
Protection of marine areas from fishing increases density and biomass of fish and invertebrates (such as lobster and scallops) finds a systematic review published in BioMed Central’s open access journal Environmental Evidence. The success of a protected area was also dependent on its size and on how it was managed, however even partial protection provides significant ecological benefits.
Publication Date: 01/03/2013
Find out more......
Identifying Reptiles at Risk
Dr Anita Malhotra of Bangor University's School of Biological Sciences is one of 200 leading reptile experts who has co-authored a paper assessing the extinction risk of 1,500 randomly selected reptiles from across the globe.
Publication Date: 28/02/2013
Find out more......
First ever Bangor University prestigious 125th anniversary research scholarship completed
Marco Giudici, 29, from Milan, recently completed his 125th anniversary research scholarship in History. Marco, who now lives in Hitchin, Hertforshire, is the first to complete one of the 125th anniversary research scholarships from Bangor University.
Introduced to mark the 125th Anniversary of Bangor University, the Anniversary Research Scholarships are part of the University’s programme of postgraduate expansion. They aim to attract outstanding students who wish to study in this dynamic and research focused university.
Publication Date: 27/02/2013
Find out more......
"Seren" on Bangor's Polar Symposium
Publication Date: 21/02/2013
Find out more......
Lecturer/Senior Lecturer (Teaching & Research - 2 posts)
The School of Psychology at Bangor University is seeking to appoint candidates with significant early-career potential, or established track record of research excellence, in any area of Psychology.
Publication Date: 20/02/2013
Find out more......
Bangor academic invited to launch new seminar series on the Cashless Society
Bangor Business School’s Professor Bernardo Bátiz-Lazo was invited to launch a new series of seminars on the subject of ‘Entrepreneurial Opportunities and the Cashless Society’ as part of the Glasgow Business History Seminar Series, a joint venture between business historians located in Strathclyde Business School and the University of Glasgow.
Publication Date: 20/02/2013
Find out more......
GPs refer Eighty per cent of suspected Cancers after two visits
MORE THAN eighty per cent of patients suspected of having cancer are being referred by their GP in the first two consultations, with more than half being sent to see a specialist at the first appointment, according to new research published in the British Journal of Cancer today (Friday).
Publication Date: 09/02/2013
Find out more......
Bank Mergers Can Spoil Your Savings: research by Bangor Business School academic wins ‘Best Paper’ award
UK bank and building society mergers do not benefit their customers. Research measuring how interest rates and the range of services provided to depositors change after bank mergers has just been awarded a ‘Best Paper’ award.
Publication Date: 08/02/2013
Find out more......
£1m EU boost for pilot project to exploit behaviour change research for industry
Deputy Minister for European Programmes, Alun Davies, has announced £1m EU funding for a pilot project that will pioneer cutting-edge research to help businesses develop new products, processes or services.
Publication Date: 02/02/2013
Find out more......
All-Wales project to increase technology transfer between Welsh universities and business
A new initiative to transfer more of Wales’ cutting-edge university research into business to help boost Wales’ economy and build an ‘innovation culture’ has received a funding boost from the Higher Education Funding Council for Wales (HEFCW).
Publication Date: 02/02/2013
Find out more......
Growing oil palm for biofuels can’t save our climate
Growing oil palm to make ‘green’ biofuels in the tropics could be accelerating the effects of climate change, say scientists.
Publication Date: 01/02/2013
Find out more......
Joint working to help tackle anti social behaviour
A collaborative project between North Wales Police and other partners, which is aimed at tackling anti-social behaviour and crime has now gone live in two areas. Working with Bangor University and the National Police Improvement Agency, North Wales Police have reviewed their current approaches in tackling anti-social behaviour.
Publication Date: 18/01/2013
Find out more......
Rolling dice reveals level of illegal badger killing
A little-used method for estimating how many people are involved in sensitive or illegal activities can provide critical information to environmental policy makers involved in the proposed badger culling scheme in England, according to new research.
“Innovative techniques for estimating illegal activities in a human-wildlife-management conflict”, a paper written by a research team from Bangor University, the University of Kent and Kingston University, has revealed - for the first time - the estimated rate of illegal badger killing.
Publication Date: 18/01/2013
Find out more......
Bank Bailouts: Bangor Professor cited in the Rolling Stone Magazine
The Rolling Stone, an American magazine published every two weeks that covers music, politics, and popular culture since 1967 has published an article in its issue dated January 17th 2013 by its award-winning contributing editor Matthew Taibbi on the “Secrets and Lies of the Bailout”.
Publication Date: 10/01/2013
Find out more......
Virtual Learning iPad app to help train future neurosurgeons
A new mobile ‘app’, downloadable free of charge, will assist with the training of future neurosurgeons, and is just one of a stream of programmes being developed, adapting visual computing and three dimensional realities to provide cost-effective virtual learning for a range of medical procedures.
Publication Date: 09/01/2013
Find out more......
Law School Head invited to lead discussion at Institute for Welsh Affairs Conference on improving Welsh Public Procurement, alongside Minister for Finance and Leader of the House, Jane Hutt AM, Welsh Government”, Cardiff, November 5th 2012
Professor Cahill critiqued John McClelland’s report on how to maximise the Welsh pound in public procurement in Wales at the IWA on Nov 5th 2012. The main findings of John McClelland’s very well written report is that, although the Welsh Government has developed excellent policies in public procurement, unfortunately, the Welsh Government procurement policies are not being fully accepted and implemented by a significant minority of public sector organisations in Wales.
Publication Date: 22/12/2012
Find out more......
Bangor academic's article on local labour market published in the Western Mail
An article by Dr Tony Dobbins, Senior Lecturer in Human Resource Management at Bangor Business School, has been published in the Western Mail.
Publication Date: 19/12/2012
Find out more......
New WHO recommendations: Optimizing health worker roles through task shifting
The World Health Organization’s recommendations on optimizing the roles of health workers aim to help address critical health workforce shortages that slow down progress towards the health-related Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). A more rational distribution of tasks and responsibilities among cadres of health workers can significantly improve both access and cost-effectiveness – for example by training and enabling ‘mid-level’ and ‘lay’ health workers to perform specific interventions otherwise provided only by cadres with longer (and sometimes more specialized) training.
Publication Date: 19/12/2012
Find out more......
Independent research programme will evaluate the Welsh Medium Education Strategy
A research team that includes three lecturers from the School of Education has won a £275,000 tender from the Welsh Government towards an evaluation of the initial development of the Welsh Medium Education Strategy launched in April 2010.
Publication Date: 18/12/2012
Find out more......
Sound and vision piece inspired by dyslexia to feature on Radio 4 All in the Mind programme
A new sonic art work inspired by dyslexia and the science behind dyslexia is to be covered by Radio 4’s flagship All in the Mind programme, which explores the limits and potential of the human mind. The programme will be broadcast on Tuesday 18 December at 9.00pm and repeated on Wednesday 19 at 3.30 and will be available online after the first broadcast.
Publication Date: 15/12/2012
Find out more......
Head of School leads discussion on improving Welsh Public Procurement at Institute for Welsh Affairs Conference
Professor Dermot Cahill, Head of Bangor Law School, was invited to lead a discussion at the Institute for Welsh Affairs Conference on improving Welsh Public Procurement, alongside Minister for Finance and Leader of the House, Jane Hutt AM, in Cardiff on 5th November 2012.
Publication Date: 14/12/2012
Find out more......
Bangor hosts ESCR-funded seminar on Financial Modelling
Bangor Business School recently played host to the first seminar in a series which will look at the origins of the 2008 financial crisis and the lessons that can be learnt from it.
Publication Date: 11/12/2012
Find out more......
Bangor University hosts its first Polar Symposium
A ‘Polar Symposium’ being held this week-end (Saturday 8 December) is the first of its kind to be held at Bangor University.
The 'Bangor Polar Symposium' at the School of Ocean Sciences has been jointly organized by the UK Polar Network and the Endeavour Society, a Bangor University student society focussing on ocean sciences.
Publication Date: 08/12/2012
Find out more......
Winning in Tendering Project Manager Interviewed on BBC Radio Wales
On November 8th 2012, Winning in Tendering Project Manager Gary Clifford was invited by BBC Radio Wales’ Wales at Work programme to discuss the latest figures relating to Wales’ public expenditure.
Publication Date: 29/11/2012
Find out more......
The ICPS Team Go Stateside!
In August 2012, three members of staff from the Winning in Tendering (WiT) project and the Institute for Competition & Procurement Studies (ICPS) – Dr Pedro Telles, Dr Ama Eyo, and Ceri Evans – travelled to Seattle, USA, to deliver papers at the 5th International Public Procurement Conference (IPPC). The papers were selected for presentation by a select panel of specialist reviewers, tasked with reviewing over three hundred abstract submissions.
Publication Date: 23/11/2012
Find out more......
Developments in Public Procurement: E-Procurement and E-Invoicing in Ireland
On 18th October 2012, Professor Dermot Cahill, Dean of Bangor University’s Law School, and Director of the Winning in Tendering Project, was invited to speak at a major national Irish conference, ‘Developments in Public Procurement: E-Procurement and E-Invoicing in Ireland.’
Publication Date: 23/11/2012
Find out more......
Hard to fish areas of the seabed may act as refuges for endangered skate
Marine scientists working in the Celtic Sea have discovered a natural refuge for the critically endangered flapper skate. Many elasmobranchs (sharks, rays and skates) are highly vulnerable to over-fishing, but a new paper in the open access journal PLOS ONE shows that small areas of the seabed that experience below-average fishing intensity can sustain greater populations of these species.
Publication Date: 16/11/2012
Find out more......
Through revolutionary methods . . . ? A conference to evaluate five decades of language campaigning.
On Friday and Saturday 16-17 November, the School of Welsh at Bangor – in conjunction with Aberystwyth University’s Institute of Welsh Politics (and with the financial support of the Coleg Cymraeg Cenedlaethol) – will host a major interdisciplinary conference in order to evaluate the influence of more than fifty years of language campaigning on the political and cultural life of Wales.
Publication Date: 14/11/2012
Find out more......
Bangor University contributes to ‘Buildings as Power Stations’ technology
Bangor University’s School of Chemistry is contributing to a research project which could put Wales at the forefront of global renewable energy technology.
Publication Date: 13/11/2012
Find out more......
EPSRC Grant Win
Professor Martin Taylor’s group in Electronic Engineering have recently won an EPSRC grant to investigate the fabrication of a new type of Charged Coupled Device, CCD.
Publication Date: 06/11/2012
Find out more......
Increasing Broadband capacity two thousand-fold - for the same price
Could you use a broadband service that is two thousand times faster, but costs you the same? A revolutionary “future-proof” technology, first proposed by Bangor University, is the front-runner in satisfying future demand for dramatically increased internet speeds and capacity.
Publication Date: 06/11/2012
Find out more......
Majority favours assisted dying
New international research reveals that the majority responding to questions about assisted suicide, are in favour. This contrasts with a recent review of research that suggests that UK doctors consistently oppose euthanasia.
The results, drawn from the views of over 62,000 people who contributed views to a large number of research papers on the subject from different countries, reveals for the first time, that people from very different backgrounds and experience, on the whole, share similar views on this topic.
Publication Date: 06/11/2012
Find out more......
High-Flying Geese take low profile over Himalayas
A study published this week (31 October 2012) in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences has tackled the long-standing problem of assessing the actual altitude and migration path of Bar-headed geese crossingthe Himalayas using state of the art satellite tracking technology. Scientists from Bangor University and an international team of collaborators recorded highly accurate GPS (Global Positioning System) locations from 42 individual geese as they migrated.
Publication Date: 01/11/2012
Find out more......
LEAD Wales programme supports the growth of Welsh businesses
LEAD Wales, a project based at the Universitys Business School, is well placed to play a leading role in supporting the growth of Welsh businesses, according to research published today (Tuesday 30 October).
Publication Date: 31/10/2012
Find out more......
Launch of €1.8 million Network to develop the Solar Energy Sector in Ireland and Wales
A new €1.8 million initiative to help develop and sustain employment in the economically important Solar Energy (photovoltaic or PV) sector has just been launched by a consortium of Higher Education Institutes, from Wales and Ireland. The ‘Wales Ireland Network for Innovative Photovoltaic Technologies’ (WIN-IPT) is part-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) through the Ireland Wales Programme 2007-13.
Publication Date: 25/10/2012
Find out more......
Paper named as one of the most cited ever in 'Business History' journal
A paper by a Bangor Business School academic is the third most cited article to have been published in leading industry journal ‘Business History’.
Publication Date: 22/10/2012
Find out more......
How penguins use bubbles to 'take to the air'
A suggestion by Bangor University Professor Roger Hughes of the School of Biological Sciences, that bubble trails seen in footage of emperor penguins swimming to the sea surface are produced to reduce drag is published in the November 2012 edition of National Geographic. Roger Hughes's intriguing idea while watching penguins on TV originally led to a research paper revealing just how the penguins could manage this. Collaborators at University College Cork and the Technical University of Denmark showed that ‘lubrication’ provided by tiny air bubbles released from under the feathers could allow penguins to gain enough speed to leap out of the water and onto the ice shelf.
Publication Date: 22/10/2012
Find out more......
Censorship under Franco’s dictatorship still casts a shadow over literature in Spain
Skyfall, the twenty-third James Bond film, is to be released 26 October 2012 to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the first film, Dr No in 1962. But fans of the secret agent may be surprised to learn that Spanish readers of Dr No, one of Ian Fleming’s most popular novels, are reading a version which still bears cuts imposed by censors under Franco’s Dictatorship (1939-1975).
Readers in Spain will be equally surprised to discover that this and many of the published translation of the classics of English and American literature currently available are still the edited versions approved by the Dictator’s censors - and that until very recently many other novels have remained unavailable in Spain due to the legacy of the censorship of the Franco era.
Publication Date: 22/10/2012
Find out more......
Bangor Professor wins award to investigate bank bailouts
The Europlace Institute of Finance (EIF) in Paris has awarded a research grant of 10,000 Euro to Bangor’s Professor of Empirical Banking, Dr Klaus Schaeck, to examine how bank bailout packages during crises affect interest rates on loans and deposits.
Publication Date: 11/10/2012
Find out more......
Bangor academics attract grant from the British Academy
The unintended consequences of bank regulatory enforcement actions will come under scrutiny in a new study by Bangor Business School.
Publication Date: 11/10/2012
Find out more......
Link between Dry Eye Disease and dehydration established
Health scientists at Bangor University have for the first time established a link between dry eye disease and dehydration.
Dry eye disease (DED) is a condition which can cause extreme discomfort and lead to eye damage. While difficult to establish the full costs of this condition to healthcare and society in the UK, it is estimated that current prescription treatments such as eye drops cost the NHS £32 million per year (in England alone). Because many individuals suffering from DED self-treat by buying over-the-counter medications (e.g. artificial tears) the true cost of DED is likely to be significantly higher. This new link suggests that ensuring DED sufferers are fully hydrated could alleviate DED symptoms.
Publication Date: 05/10/2012
Find out more......
Prestigious European history research grant for Bangor historian
Dr Katharine Olson, lecturer in medieval and early modern history at Bangor, has recently been awarded a prestigious Bernadotte E. Schmitt Grant for Research in European History by the American Historical Association
Publication Date: 25/09/2012
Find out more......
Research Student Conference 8th Oct
Publication Date: 20/09/2012
Find out more......
Insight into snake venom evolution could aid drug discovery
Natural Environment Research Council press release
UK-led scientists have made a discovery about snake venom that could lead to the development of new drugs to treat a range of life-threatening conditions like cancer, diabetes and high blood pressure. Most venom contains a huge variety of lethal molecules called toxins, which have evolved from harmless compounds that used to do different jobs elsewhere in the body. These toxins target normal biological processes in snakes’ prey such as blood clotting or nerve cell signalling, stopping them from working properly.
Publication Date: 19/09/2012
Find out more......
BPS Poster Prize for Masters Student
Postgraduate student wins prize for best poster at the BPS Division of Health Psychology annual conference.
Publication Date: 17/09/2012
Find out more......
Extremes Research Group to the Himalaya in 2013?
Drs. Jamie Macdonald and Sam Oliver are in discussion with leaders of the next Medic Journey Expedition to Mera Peak, Himalaya, 2013.
Publication Date: 12/09/2012
Find out more......
Extremes Research Group attend prestigious international conference
Dr. Jamie Macdonald and his PhD student, Dr. Naushad Junglee, have had four abstracts accepted for presentation at the American Society of Nephrology Kidney Week 2012, the world’s premier nephrology meeting.
Publication Date: 12/09/2012
Find out more......
Impact of Bangor University research on London 2012 highlighted in new report
Universities Week (30 April – 7 May) report shows impact of universities’ research and sport development around the Olympic and Paralympic Games and UK sports industry.
Publication Date: 12/09/2012
Find out more......
Bangor Business School is UK leader for Banking research
Bangor Business School is the top institution in the UK – and amongst the world’s top 30 – for Banking research, according to recent rankings.
Publication Date: 11/09/2012
Find out more......
Students from across the world take part in 3rd Annual Visceral Mind Summer School at Bangor University
The Visceral Mind Summer School, running in the School of Psychology at Bangor University, attracted over 140 highly qualified applicants for the 40 available places. The summer school, now in its 3rd year, has proven popular with ambitious young researchers keen to share in Bangor Psychology’s world leading expertise in the field of cognitive neuroscience. The primary aim of the course, which is supported by the James S. McDonnell Foundation, is to redress an inadequacy of neuroanatomical knowledge in young neuroscientists, caused at least partially, by the limited availability of human brain tissue for providing this training to students outside the US.
Publication Date: 10/09/2012
Find out more......
Medieval Music Theory in Context workshop, July 2012
Second Workshop on Medieval Music Theory at Bangor University.
Publication Date: 05/09/2012
Find out more......
Enigmatic Eliseg reveals its secrets
An Open Afternoon between 2-5 on Saturday 8 September will give the public an opportunity to find more about the third season of excavations at the Pillar of Eliseg, a ninth-century AD stone monument which stands on a prehistoric mound near Valle Crucis Abbey Llangollen, in north-east Wales. Archaeologists from Bangor and Chester Universities are returning to carry out a third season of excavations at the site between 26 August -16 September 2012.
Publication Date: 22/08/2012
Find out more......
Major AHRC Grant awarded to PRoMS – 'The Production and Reading of Music Sources, 1480-1530'
Music manuscripts and printed editions from the 'Golden Age' of polyphony are to come under close scrutiny in a three year research project.
Publication Date: 13/08/2012
Find out more......
Head of School appears on BBC’s 'Dragon’s Eye'
On 28th June at 11:35pm, Professor Dermot Cahill, Head of Bangor Law School and Director of the Winning in Tendering project, appeared on BBC One’s Dragon’s Eye, the weekly Welsh politics programme.
Publication Date: 01/08/2012
Find out more......
Snacking and BMI linked to double effect of brain activity and self-control
Snack consumption and BMI are linked to both brain activity and self-control, new research has found.
The research, carried out by academics from the Universities of Exeter, Cardiff, Bristol, and Bangor, discovered that an individual’s brain ‘reward centre’ response to pictures of food predicted how much they subsequently ate. This appeared to have more effect on the amount they ate than their conscious feelings of hunger or how much they wanted the food.
Publication Date: 26/07/2012
Find out more......
Drinking sugar-sweetened soft drinks leads to fat gain
New research from Bangor University has shown that regularly drinking sugar sweetened soft drinks can increase fat gain, inhibit fat metabolism, and increases blood glucose in your body. So if you’re thirsty and think of reaching for a sugary soft drink- don’t - it can compromise your long-term health. Reach for water instead.
Publication Date: 20/07/2012
Find out more......
Access to HPC Wales’ supercomputing services
Bangor University is a partner of High Performance Computing (HPC) Wales*, an innovative collaboration which gives businesses and researchers access to world-class, secure and easy to use high performance computing (HPC) technology.
Publication Date: 18/07/2012
Find out more......
School of Psychology Annual Newsletter – Research with Impact
Publication Date: 18/07/2012
Find out more......
Cultural views should influence conservation polices
Conservation policy needs to take account of diverse cultural views about the value of different species, according to the results of a new study led by Bangor University.
Publication Date: 11/07/2012
Find out more......
Iraqi PhD students complete unique enhanced training programme
Bangor Law School is honoured to host a large contingent of PhD students from Iraq. In order to support our students more effectively, the School recently organised a special event for Iraqi PhD students to present their work before an audience of fellow Iraqi students, academic staff and an invited expert, Professor Haider Ala Hamoudi, of the Law School at Pittsburgh University.
Publication Date: 11/07/2012
Find out more......
SENRGy staff train Agroforestry researchers in Northern Ethiopia
Publication Date: 11/07/2012
Find out more......
WISERD Immigration Study makes the news
A Welsh Government funded study carried out by researchers at Bangor University, as part of WISERD (The Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research, Data and Methods), has provided new data on what people in Wales think about immigration and how this compares to other parts of the United Kingdom.
Publication Date: 03/07/2012
Find out more......
WISERD Immigration Study makes the news
A Welsh Government funded study carried out by researchers at Bangor University, as part of WISERD (The Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research, Data and Methods), has provided new data on what people in Wales think about immigration and how this compares to other parts of the United Kingdom.
Publication Date: 03/07/2012
Find out more......
State of the Art Research Facility assists ‘Green’ industry
A £1M industrial facility, operated by the BioComposites Centre (Bangor University) on the Llangefni Industrial Estate at Mona, has been helping local companies test new eco-friendly alternatives to existing products.
Publication Date: 28/06/2012
Find out more......
Santander Mobility Scholarships
Closing date for applications is July 12th. Click here for more details.
Publication Date: 27/06/2012
Find out more......
PhD scholarships available for Chinese graduates
Bangor University is working with the China Scholarship Council (CSC) to offer up to 10 scholarships to enable talented Chinese students to undertake fully funded PhD programmes at starting in 2013-14.
Publication Date: 27/06/2012
Find out more......
Developing ‘Mental toughness’ can help footballers cope with high pressure penalty shoot outs
Penalty shoot-outs are possibly the most stressful situations that footballers have to contend with. They need to be able to focus on the task and block out noise and other distractions coming from the stands.
Publication Date: 21/06/2012
Find out more......
Bangor Social Sciences Conference on Intersectionality and Belonging (28-29 June)
On Thursday 28th and Friday 29th June, Bangor University will be hosting an international conference exploring the themes of intersectionality and belonging.
The conference is a collaborative venture between the School of Social Sciences Bangor University, the Wales Institute of Social and Economic Research Data and Methods (WISERD), the Centre for Research on Migration, Refugees and Belonging at the University of East London, as well as the British Sociological Association Social Theory Study Group.
Publication Date: 20/06/2012
Find out more......
What you see is what you get? Bangor academics to research impression management by business organisations
‘Impression management’, or how organisations control the way they are perceived by the public, will be the focus of cutting-edge research undertaken by a new centre at Bangor University.
Publication Date: 14/06/2012
Find out more......
Longest-lived animals reveal climate change secrets
Researchers at Bangor University have used some of the world’s longest-lived animals to look at how the North Atlantic Ocean has affected our climate over the past 1,000 years.
Publication Date: 12/06/2012
Find out more......
Food Dudes has spun out
Over the past ten years the Food Dudes programme at the School of Psychology has gone from strength to strength – winning grants, accolades, and awards around the world. In the process, it has improved the eating habits and health of hundreds of thousands of kids. And recently, leading the school’s drive toward commercialisation, the programme has become its own spin-out company - Food Dudes Health Ltd (FDH).
Publication Date: 01/06/2012
Find out more......
PhD Anniversary Research Bursaries available
Bangor Law School is offering 2 PhD Anniversary Research Bursaries worth £7,000 per annum.
Publication Date: 31/05/2012
Find out more......
Bangor University academic invited to international panel on animal by-products disposal
Dr Prysor Williams from the School of Environment, Natural Resources & Geography has just returned from an international symposium in Detroit, USA, focussed on discussing all aspects of animal by-product disposal. During the conference, he presented two papers on the research work being undertaken at Bangor University on a novel system of storing livestock carcasses prior to disposal, called Bioreduction.
Publication Date: 31/05/2012
Find out more......
Bangor University helps government of Madagascar develop a strategy to tackle bushmeat hunting
Bushmeat hunting-the hunting of wild animals for food, is recognised as a major conservation issue across much of the tropics. However until recently the threat this poses to Madagascar’s wildlife, including its famous lemurs, was not wildly recognised.
Publication Date: 30/05/2012
Find out more......
Bangor University helps government of Madagascar develop a strategy to tackle bushmeat hunting
Bushmeat hunting - the hunting of wild animals for food, is recognised as a major conservation issue across much of the tropics. However until recently the threat this poses to Madagascar’s wildlife, including its famous lemurs, was not wildly recognised. Following three years of research by Bangor University with the Malagasy NGO Madagasikara Voakajy (funded by the UK government’s Darwin Initiative), there is now much more information on the extent of this problem and how it could be tackled.
Publication Date: 29/05/2012
Find out more......
First Global Study: Seagrass beds can store twice as much carbon as forests
Globally threatened seabed areas are hotspots for carbon storage according to a paper published in the journal Nature Geoscience this week (20.5.11 doi:10.1038/ngeo1477 ). The study “Seagrass Ecosystems as a Globally Significant Carbon Stock” is the first global analysis of carbon stored in seagrass meadows.
Publication Date: 22/05/2012
Find out more......
New means of safeguarding world fish stocks proven
Powerful and versatile new genetic tools that will assist in safeguarding both European fish stocks and European consumers is reported in Nature Communications (DOI 10.1038/ncomms1845 22/05/12). The paper reports on the first system proven to identify populations of fish species to a forensic level of validation.
Publication Date: 22/05/2012
Find out more......
Bangor Law School teams up with the School of Electronic Engineering to collaborate with 5 other European countries in a major Transnational European research programme
Bangor University’s Law School is to join an elite group of universities and organisations on a Europe-wide research transnational collaboration to support knowledge intensive high growth potential companies.
Bangor University – the only UK partner to be invited to join the consortium – will work in conjunction with the University of Tilburg, Netherlands, to research how high-growth potential start-ups can benefit from public procurement participation, and the challenges they face in doing so.
Publication Date: 14/05/2012
Find out more......
Researchers meet in Ireland to discuss impacts of climate change to Irish Sea shellfisheries
SUSFISH researchers from Wales and Ireland recently met at University College Cork to discuss the impacts of climate change to commercial shellfish productivity in the Irish Sea. Bangor University is leading this collaborative project, funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), which brings together experts from Bangor, Aberystwyth and Swansea Universities in Wales and the University College Cork in Ireland.
Publication Date: 11/05/2012
Find out more......
Psychologists reveal how emotion can shut down high-level mental processes without our knowledge
Psychologists at Bangor University believe that they have glimpsed for the first time, a process that takes place deep within our unconscious brain, where primal reactions interact with higher mental processes. Writing in the Journal of Neuroscience (May 9, 2012 • 32(19):6485– 6489 • 6485), they identify a reaction to negative language inputs which shuts down unconscious processing.
Publication Date: 09/05/2012
Find out more......
HPC Wales at Bangor
Bangor University are a partner in the High Performance Computing Wales (HPC Wales) project, a £40M pan-Wales project (part funded by the Welsh Government’ ERDF and ESF Convergence programmes for West Wales and the Valleys and the UK Government’s Department for Business, Innovation and Skills) that is building a state-of-the-art high-performance computing infrastructure across the universities in Wales, to deliver research innovation, high-level skills development and transformational ICT for wide economic benefit.
Publication Date: 02/05/2012
Find out more......
Don't make a mistake; don't make a mistake; DOH!
Athletes at the Olympic Games will strive to perform to their potential under intense pressure this summer. Each one will be trying to win a gold medal and concentrating on not making any mistakes. However, researchers at Bangor University’s Institute for the Psychology of Elite Performance (IPEP) have revealed that some performers are likely to make a mistake that they least want to.
Publication Date: 02/05/2012
Find out more......
Oxford Award for Bangor Professor
Tony Bushell, Professor of German in Bangor’s School of Modern Languages, has been awarded a prestigious visiting scholarship by St. John’s College, Oxford to complete a study devoted to the rhetorics of Austrian identity.
Publication Date: 26/04/2012
Find out more......
Research for Business and the Business of Research. A public lecture not to be missed!
Research for Business and the Business of Research
George Buckley Chief UK Economist, Deutsche Bank.
Stephenson Room, George Building, Normal Site. 6pm for 6:15 start
A Public Lecture not to be missed!
Publication Date: 24/04/2012
Find out more......
Funded opportunities to build relationships with external partner organizations
Strategic Insight Programme (SIP)
Application Deadline: Friday 4th May 2012
Bangor University is pleased to announce that applications for the Strategic Insight Programme (SIP) in Bangor are now open.
Publication Date: 16/04/2012
Find out more......
PhD studentships for October 2012
Bangor Business School is inviting applications for Research Bursaries starting in October 2012. This provides three years of support for full-time PhD study.
Publication Date: 12/04/2012
Find out more......
Where did the idea of a cashless society come from?
The concept of a "cashless society" is now getting increased attention as countries such as Sweden try to move away from bills and coins whereas in the UK there has been a failed attempt by banks to do without paper cheques. In a Bangor Business School Working Paper, Bernardo Bátiz-Lazo, of the Business School, along with Thomas Haigh of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; The Haigh Group and David Stearns, of Seattle Pacific University document, the ‘cashless’ idea actually originated first in the world of business and only later moved into the realm of fiction.
Publication Date: 11/04/2012
Find out more......
SCSM researcher awarded prestigious place on the Welsh Crucible leadership scheme
SCSM's Astrid Ensslin has been awarded a place on the prestigious HEFCW-funded Welsh Crucible 2012 scheme.
Publication Date: 11/04/2012
Find out more......
Another successful Completion Workshop for Bangor's PhD students
Following the success of the first PhD Completion Workshop in September 2011, Bangor Law School held the second Completion Workshop for advanced PhD students on Friday 23 March 2012.
Publication Date: 02/04/2012
Find out more......
Where did the idea of a cashless society come from?
The concept of a "cashless society" is now getting increased attention as countries such as Sweden try to move away from bills and coins whereas in the UK there has been a failed attempt by banks to do without paper cheques. In a Bangor Business School Working Paper, Bernardo Bátiz-Lazo of the Business School, along with Thomas Haigh of the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee; The Haigh Group and David Stearns, of Seattle Pacific University document that the ‘cashless’ idea actually originated first in the world of business and only later moved into the realm of fiction.
Publication Date: 02/04/2012
Find out more......
Dr. Marco Tamburelli awarded Santander Early Career Scholarship
Marco Tamburelli has been awarded the Santander Early Career Scholarship.
Publication Date: 28/03/2012
Find out more......
Professor Dermot Cahill speaks to BBC Radio Wales about Procurement Week
Professor Dermot Cahill, Head of Bangor Law School, was interviewed by BBC Radio Wales last Thursday, 22nd March 2012. He spoke about the Institute of Competition and Procurement Studies’ first ever Procurement Week, which takes place at Bangor University this week (27th-30th March).
Publication Date: 27/03/2012
Find out more......
What you see is what you get? Bangor academics to research impression management by business organisations
‘Impression management’, or how organisations control the way how they are perceived by the public, will be the focus of cutting-edge research undertaken by a new centre at Bangor University.
Publication Date: 27/03/2012
Find out more......
Santander supports language research
A Santander Scholarship enabled Robat Trefor, a PhD student from the School of Welsh, to visit the Basque Country recently, and he was accompanied by Professor Peredur Lynch, his research supervisor and Head of School.
Publication Date: 27/03/2012
Find out more......
Leading German business newspapers cover research by Bangor academic
The article “Does it pay to have friends? Social ties and executive appointments in banking”, jointly authored by Dr Klaus Schaeck from Bangor Business School with his colleagues Allen Berger (University of South Carolina), Thomas Kick (Deutsche Bundesbank), and Michael Koetter (University of Groningen), has received widespread media coverage by two leading business newspapers in Germany, Handelsblatt and Wirtschaftswoche.
Publication Date: 26/03/2012
Find out more......
Conference Review: 'Markers of Identity in Medieval Europe, 13th -15th centuries'
The inaugural conference of a new international research network took place at the Centre d'Etudes Superieures de Civilisation Medievale (CESCM), University of Poitiers, 17-18 November.
Publication Date: 26/03/2012
Find out more......
Grant success: 'Insular Books: Vernacular Miscellanies in Late Medieval Britain'
Research network secures funding for its first conference, held at and funded by the British Academy (London, 21-23 June 2012).
Publication Date: 26/03/2012
Find out more......
Trash to cash: killing two birds with one stone in Bangladesh
Municipal waste can be used to provide a valuable source of nutrients for intensively farmed soils in Bangladesh- with the effect of both improving agriculture and crop yields and removing unhygienic waste materials from city streets.
Publication Date: 23/03/2012
Find out more......
Prestigious Award for Honorary Professor
Prof. John Duncan (Cambridge) who is a honorary member of staff in Bangor's Psychology department has won the prestigious Dr. A.H. Heineken Prize for Cognitive Science for his innovative, multidisciplinary research into the relationships between psychology, behaviour and intelligence on the one hand and neural processes on the other
Publication Date: 22/03/2012
Find out more......
Wild plants threatened by collection for sale could be grown commercially providing new income streams, report finds
Wild plants threatened by collection for sale could be grown commercially providing new income streams, report finds Exotic palm leaves in your Mother’s Day bouquet may have come from forests in Belize or Guatemala, central America. Export for the flower arranging industry threatens the survival of some of these palms in the wild
Publication Date: 16/03/2012
Find out more......
Bangor academic Helena Miguélez-Carballeira wins award to lead research network on translation in Wales
The Project ‘Translation in Non-State Cultures: Perspectives from Wales’ has been awarded an AHRC Research Development Grant. Dr Helena Miguélez-Carballeira, Lecturer in Spanish and Director of the Translation Studies Graduate Programme at Bangor University’s School of Modern Languages has won £12.000 from the Arts and Humanities Research Council to lead a Wales-wide research network on translation in Wales.
Publication Date: 16/03/2012
Find out more......
PhD student Sadiqa Riazat is published in interview with Martin Schulz
PhD student and 125Anniversary bursary holder Sadiqa Riazat has recently been published in discussion with Martin Schulz, who has recently been elected President of the European Parliament.
Publication Date: 16/03/2012
Find out more......
PhD student Adam Pearce's translation of Daniel Owen's short stories published
Adam Pearce, a 125th Anniversary Ph.D. Student in Bangor’s School of Modern Languages, is the translator of a recently-published collection of short stories entitled Fireside Tales by Daniel Owen, widely regarded as the father of the Welsh novel.
Publication Date: 16/03/2012
Find out more......
AHRC PhD Studentship in Archaeology
Applications are invited by the Graduate School of Arts and Humanities at Bangor University for an AHRC PhD Studentship in Archaeology beginning on 1st October 2012.
Publication Date: 16/03/2012
Find out more......
AHRC PhD Studentship in Translation Studies
Applications are invited by the Graduate School of Arts and Humanities at Bangor University for an AHRC PhD Studentship in Translation Studies beginning on 1st October 2012.
Publication Date: 15/03/2012
Find out more......
The Psychology of Shopping
Students on the Consumer Psychology with Business degree were recently treated to a practical insight into the psychology of shopping by Mr Philip Adcock, who is one of the world's experts on how people shop.
Publication Date: 08/03/2012
Find out more......
Almost Half of Depression in Adults starts in adolesence
A new study by research psychologists at Bangor and Oxford Universities show that half of adults who experience clinical depression had their first episode start in adolescence. In fact, the most common age to see the start of depression is between 13-15 years-old.
Publication Date: 29/02/2012
Find out more......
Study examines number of GP visits before cancer patients are referred to specialists
Study examines number of GP visits before cancer patients are referred to specialists
Patient information reveals women, young people, ethnic minorities and people with less common cancers have the highest number of pre-referral consultations
Publication Date: 25/02/2012
Find out more......
125 Anniversary PhD Studentships
The School of Linguistics at Bangor University seeks applications from well-qualified students to undertake a fully-funded PhD by research.
Publication Date: 21/02/2012
Find out more......
Simple structured discussions and word games beneficial for people with dementia
Activities as simple as structured discussion groups and word games can benefit memory and thinking for people with Alzheimer’s or dementia, according to a systematic review lead by Professor Bob Woods, of the Dementia Services Development Centre Wales, Bangor University. The review also found that well-being also improved as a result.
Publication Date: 16/02/2012
Find out more......
Looking into a dancer’s brain
Dance and psychology come together at Bangor University this week (14 + 15 February 2012). In an exciting boundary crossing piece of research, Dr. Emily Cross, a psychologist at Bangor University, will be working with internationally renowned contemporary dancer Riley Watts to study what happens in our brains when we watch complex movements.
Publication Date: 16/02/2012
Find out more......
Bangor academic Helena Miguélez-Carballeira wins award to lead research network on translation in Wales
The Project ‘Translation in Non-State Cultures: Perspectives from Wales’ has been awarded an AHRC Research Development Grant. Dr Helena Miguélez-Carballeira, Lecturer in Spanish and Director of the Translation Studies Graduate Programme at Bangor University’s School of Modern Languages has won £12,000 from the Arts and Humanities Research Council to lead a Wales-wide research network on translation in Wales.
Publication Date: 16/02/2012
Find out more......
Forging new research talent
The search is on for the next generation of talented researchers building their careers in Wales.
Welsh Crucible, the development scheme for the nation’s research leaders of the future, is recruiting for this summer’s capacity-building programme.
Publication Date: 09/02/2012
Find out more......
Bangor Academic wins award to research the current account market
The real cost of ‘free’ current account banking services will come under greater scrutiny in a new research study by Bangor Business School. Dr John Ashton, a senior lecturer in banking, has been awarded a £25,000 grant from the Friends Provident Charitable Foundation to determine what are the costs of ‘free’ current account use, particularly for customers viewed as more vulnerable or poorly-informed about financial services. The project is to be undertaken with collaboration from North Wales Credit Union.
Publication Date: 04/02/2012
Find out more......
Calling the future research leaders and innovators of Wales - Welsh Crucible 2012
The Welsh Crucible is a prestigious professional and leadership development programme for the future research leaders of Wales.
What is Welsh Crucible?
Funded by the St David’s Day group of higher education institutions, Welsh Crucible will bring together thirty researchers to explore how they can work together to tackle the current research challenges facing Wales.
Welsh Crucible 2012 will take place over three intensive two-day (residential) workshops comprising inspiring guest speakers, seminars, skills sessions and informal discussions.
Publication Date: 03/02/2012
Find out more......
Bangor’s Battle against Ovarian Cancer
Saturday, 4th of February marks World Cancer Day. Scientists at the Northwest Cancer Research Fund Institute at Bangor University, Dr Ramsay McFarlane and Professor Nick Stuart, are currently using state of the art technologies to identify novel cancer markers in patient ovarian tumour samples.
Publication Date: 02/02/2012
Find out more......
Santander Early Career Researcher Scholarship
Early Career Researchers currently employed at Bangor University may be eligible to apply for a 12-month scholarship of £5,000. Full details can be found here.
Publication Date: 27/01/2012
Find out more......
Simple precautions could reduce risk of E coli O157 in the environment say researchers
Researchers investigating the risk of E coli O157 in the countryside as part of the UK research councils’ Rural Economy and Land Use Programme, say that simple measures and coordinated action from the relevant authorities could play a major role in keeping children and other vulnerable groups safer.
Academics from the universities of Aberdeen, Bangor and Manchester and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, have been researching how the bacterium behaves in the rural environment, and the part that farmers, abattoirs and the public could play.
Publication Date: 25/01/2012
Find out more......
How sports science research feeds into medical care
Three articles by researchers at Bangor University’s School of Sport, Health & Exercise Sciences appear in the latest issue of Arthritis Care and Research, an international journal published by the American College of Rheumatology. The latest edition is a special issue containing 18 articles focussing on state-of-the-art research on muscle and bone in the rheumatic diseases.
Publication Date: 19/01/2012
Find out more......
Articles on enhancing ventilation in homes of children with asthma published
Two articles in the British Journal of General Practice are part authored by researchers from Bangor University.
Publication Date: 18/01/2012
Find out more......
Bangor academic co-authors article selected as one of the best corporate finance papers
The article “Who disciplines bank managers?”, co-authored by Dr Klaus Schaeck from Bangor Business School, is the lead article in a virtual issue of the best corporate governance papers published in the Review of Finance, one of the top five finance journals.
Publication Date: 14/01/2012
Find out more......
Giving the community an opportunity to hear about the latest research on Managing Long-Term Conditions
A lecture focusing on Managing Long-Term Conditions, takes place at Venue Cymru at 6pm on 17th January. The lecture series is free to attend, open to the public and includes refreshments, networking opportunities and a certificate of attendance.
Publication Date: 12/01/2012
Find out more......
Bangor Lecturer wins Economist Paper award
A Bangor Business School lecturer has won an award for a paper presented at a major banking and finance conference in Italy.
Publication Date: 10/01/2012
Find out more......
Potential solution to financial services mis-selling raised by Bangor Academic
In a week where we have observed yet another financial services mis-selling case are there any solutions to this perennial problem of financial regulation? While the recent movement to remove commission in the sales of retail investments may assist this problem, an article published this month by a Bangor academic suggests more fundamental change to how we regulate the development of financial services products is required.
Publication Date: 05/01/2012
Find out more......
Research on effectiveness of Mindfulness reaches conclusion phase
Researchers at Bangor and Oxford Universities are drawing together the results of a major 5 year study, the results of which will be revealed later this year, into how effective the Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy programme can be in reducing the incidence of depression and suicidality for people with recurrent suicidal depression.
Publication Date: 04/01/2012
Find out more......
It’s not just “because it’s there”
Mountaineer George Mallory may have quipped that people climb Everest ‘because it’s there’. In fact, the reasons why people seek extreme sports such as high altitude mountaineering are far more complex. Sport psychologists at Bangor University are recognised world-leaders in establishing the psychological motivations for taking part in extreme sports.
Publication Date: 30/12/2011
Find out more......
Bangor’s expertise in ‘world-changing’ technology
An area of research in which Bangor University is a world leader, is described by this month’s (December) issue of Scientific American as one of ten ‘world-changing ideas’.
Publication Date: 17/12/2011
Find out more......
Bangor Professor leads speakers at international conference
Bernardo Batiz-Lazo, Professor of Business History and Bank Management at Bangor Business School, delivered the key note address at the first international conference organised by the Tolani Institute of Management Studies (TIMS) in Gandhidham, Gujarat (India). The town bears the name of India's founding father because the announcement of the decision to house the Sindhi community (a group of people relocated after partition) in that area was Gandhi's last act on the day he was killed. The Institute itself is part of an educational group that educates over 8,000 students thanks to the effort, financial support and vision of K. B. Tolani (1893-1988).
Publication Date: 16/12/2011
Find out more......
Erosion of traditional ‘taboos’ threatens Madagascar’s lemurs
Madagascar is world famous for its unique animals, many of which are protected by law, but recent research has demonstrated that illegal hunting of these protected species may be widespread and pose an urgent threat the country’s globally important biodiversity.
Research by a team from Bangor University and the Malagasy organization Madagasikara Voakajy, reported in the online scientific and medical research journal, PLOS ONE suggests that hunting of protected species in eastern Madagascar is increasing due to rapid social change, as appetites for meat increase and traditional taboos protecting the species, especially lemurs, become less powerful.
Publication Date: 16/12/2011
Find out more......
University researchers seek feedback from older carers of people with dementia
People aged 65 and over who have experience of looking after somebody with dementia can contribute towards research currently being carried out by academics at Bangor University. Health economists there are investigating the economic demands of caring for people with dementia. The results of their research will contribute towards shaping health and social care policies across the UK.
Publication Date: 16/12/2011
Find out more......
‘WINSS’ of €2.6 million for science careers in Ireland and Wales Job Sustainability Programme
A €2.6 million project to develop and sustain jobs in the sector at the interface between chemistry and life sciences has been announced. Funded under the Ireland Wales 2007-2013 INTERREG IVA programme and managed in Wales by Bangor University’s School of Chemistry. The “Wales Ireland Network for Scientific Skills” (WINSS) will assist companies that work across chemistry, life sciences and material sciences. The project will provide a range of specialist skills training to develop the expertise needed by the sector.
Publication Date: 15/12/2011
Find out more......
High Anxiety - beating fear is the key to extreme sports appeal
Sport Psychologists within the School are now recognised world-leaders in establishing the psychological motivations for taking part in extreme sports.
Publication Date: 14/12/2011
Find out more......
Scallop Association funds collaborative project to help define English Channel Scallop fishery
A new industry-funded PhD research project is now underway at Bangor University to help improve understanding of the scallop fishery in the English Channel.
Publication Date: 13/12/2011
Find out more......
Arthritis Care and Research (ACR)
SHES staff have provided three out of 18 accepted articles in a special edition of the ACR on 'Muslce and bone in the Rheumatic Diseases'.
Publication Date: 13/12/2011
Find out more......
Credit Ratings Research at Bangor Business School
On 5th December 2011, the credit rating agency Standard & Poor’s (S&P) attracted news headlines by placing the credit ratings of 15 eurozone nations under review (‘watch’) for downgrade. Using a 15-year dataset, researchers at Bangor Business School identified that S&P has tended to act earlier than other agencies in placing sovereign government ratings under review for downgrade.
Publication Date: 09/12/2011
Find out more......
A new Strategic Alliance working for Wales
Aberystwyth and Bangor Universities will announce a new Strategic Alliance on Wednesday 7th December that signals a new phase in the partnership between the two institutions.
Publication Date: 08/12/2011
Find out more......
Major report identifies significant gaps and weaknesses in children’s health information
Children and young people who have chronic health conditions or need operations don’t always have access to the high-quality, child-friendly information they need to understand what is happening to them. That is the key finding of a three-year study funded by the National Institute for Health Research Service Delivery and Organisation (NIHR SDO) programme and led by Bangor and Cardiff Universities.
Publication Date: 06/12/2011
Find out more......
Bringing up children in a bilingual community
Approximately 70% of the population in Gwynedd, the stronghold of the Welsh language, report that they speak Welsh. Many parents who themselves grew up speaking Welsh, and also many who grew up speaking only English, are bringing up their children as bilinguals. And most children begin their schooling in Gwynedd through the medium of Welsh.
Publication Date: 02/12/2011
Find out more......
Bangor Academic’s Research Quoted in Position Limits Article
A working paper by a Bangor Business School academic has been quoted in a Computerworld article on position limits.
Research undertaken by Professor Shahid Ebrahim, Professor of Islamic Banking and Finance at Bangor Business School, was quoted in an article reporting on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission’s recent 3-2 decision to impose a position limits regime in the commodity futures and swaps markets.
Publication Date: 01/12/2011
Find out more......
Bangor Business Lecturer goes Down Under
A Bangor Business School lecturer recently completed a stint as Visiting Chair at the University of Sydney, Australia.
Professor Lynn Hodgkinson, Professor of Accounting and Finance at Bangor Business School and its new teaching centre in London, worked alongside Sydney’s Professor Graham Partington on a paper examining the impact of a change in dividend taxation of New Zealand Managed Funds.
Publication Date: 01/12/2011
Find out more......
Cancer experts gather for Bangor Conference
On Wednesday and Thursday this week (23/24/11/11), delegates from across the UK will be gathering at Bangor University for the second conference exploring how services for patients with cancer can be provided in a rural environment.
Publication Date: 24/11/2011
Find out more......
Psychology workshop leads to the development of an all-Wales network for research on prevention of age-related cognitive decline and disability
On the 27th October 2011 the School of Psychology hosted a workshop to discuss the prevention of age related disability and dementia (organised by Prof Linda Clare). The workshop was well attended by academics, health professionals and representatives from voluntary sector organisations and local government.
Publication Date: 24/11/2011
Find out more......
Climate change effect on release of CO2 from peat far greater than assumed
Drought causes peat to release far more carbon dioxide into the atmosphere than has previously been realised.
Publication Date: 22/11/2011
Find out more......
Bowel, oesophageal and pancreatic cancers show biggest improvement in diagnosis time
NEW research shows that bowel, oesophageal and pancreatic cancers have seen the greatest improvement in the time it takes from when a patient first visits their GP with symptoms to when they are diagnosed with the disease.
Publication Date: 17/11/2011
Find out more......
Bangor Law School welcomes distinguished scholars for guest lectures
Bangor Law School is welcoming two distinguished guest lecturers to Bangor in November 2011.
Professor Jason Chuah, Head of Academic Law at City University Law School in London, will deliver a seminar on "Letters of Credit - Reconciling legal rules with commercial realities" on Monday 14 November. Also delivering a seminar on 14 November will be Professor Z Wang of Beijing Foreign Studies University. He will deliver a seminar entitled "The Evolving Nature of EU Power and Sino-EU Relations in the 21st Century".
Publication Date: 15/11/2011
Find out more......
Nathan Abrams has been awarded an AHRC fellowship to take forward his research on Stanley Kubrick
Nathan Abrams has been awarded an AHRC fellowship to take forward his research on Stanley Kubrick.
Publication Date: 12/11/2011
Find out more......
Research Creates BBC Radio series for Remembrance Week
Researching conflict reporting has led to the producing of a documentary series which is being broadcast on BBC Radio Wales this month as part of their season of Remembrance programmes.
Publication Date: 11/11/2011
Find out more......
Helping local company who have developed and won the market for outdoor survival products
Working with Dr Sam Oliver and PhD student Jenny Brierley of the University’s Extremes Research Group, Derek Ryden of Blizzard Protection Systems Ltd. has been able to commission tailored research that measures exactly how good the products are. The University has been researching how effective the innovative material is in directing escaping body heat back into the body, preventing or delaying the onset of hypothermia in extreme conditions.
Publication Date: 10/11/2011
Find out more......
Welcome to Professor Mike Hammond, Visiting Research Fellow for this semester
We are pleased to welcome Professor Mike Hammond as a Visiting Research Fellow for this semester.
Publication Date: 12/10/2011
Find out more......
Alcohol industry ‘responsible drinking’ messages failing to address the real issues
Alcohol industry campaigns to promote ‘responsible drinking’ have little effect, and may even be counterproductive. That’s one of the key findings of a new Alcohol Concern Cymru report to be launched on Wednesday 12 October, which has been written by researchers from Glyndŵr and Bangor Universities.
Publication Date: 12/10/2011
Find out more......
US Award for Expert in Ageing
An internationally recognised expert on ageing and dementia, Professor Bob Woods of Bangor University, is to be the first international recipient of an American Award on Thursday 13 October 2011.
Publication Date: 12/10/2011
Find out more......
Sticky Stuff - Ocean Sciences Research Grant to study ripples on mudflats and beaches
Sand and mud banks form important barriers around our coastline. Researchers at Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences are to lead a major research project to assess how these fine materials are moved by water currents around our coastline, and how this movement could change as the result of climate change
Publication Date: 11/10/2011
Find out more......
Successful Bid for National Welsh College (Coleg Cymraeg Cenedlaethol) Grant (2012-2015)
Prestigious grant awarded to Dr. Enlli Thomas (Education) and Dr. Peredur Davies (Linguistics).
Publication Date: 05/10/2011
Find out more......
Bangor's Bilingualism Research is highly influential
Bilingualism: Language and Cognition (BLC), is an international peer-reviewed journal focusing on bilingualism from a cognitive science perspective. An article by Prof. Gathercole of Bangor's Psychology department has been included in a list of editors’ highlights of recent influential articles. Cambridge Journals have provided free access to this article here.
Publication Date: 03/10/2011
Find out more......
International funding for environmental policies based on weak evidence
Tropical deforestation contributes to climate change, destroys biodiversity and can harm the interests of local people. Community Forest Management (CFM) has been promoted as providing a potential win-win solution (conserving forests while benefitting local communities) and global funders have invested billions of dollars in CFM programmes in developing countries. A study published this week, however, highlights the lack of evidence upon which such investments are made and calls for improved evidence collection in the future.
Publication Date: 28/09/2011
Find out more......
Bangor team in Marine Parks review in the Caribbean
A team from Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences have been busy in the Cayman Islands in the Caribbean, consulting the public on marine protection to help plan Marine Parks for the future.
Publication Date: 28/09/2011
Find out more......
Could Disappearance of Arctic Ice signal another cold snap this winter?
Scientists have established a link between the cold, snowy winters in Britain and melting sea ice in the Arctic and have warned that long periods of freezing weather are likely to become more frequent in years to come.
Publication Date: 26/09/2011
Find out more......
Climate Change: The Evidence
Prof Bridget Emmett & Dr Clive Walmsley present the latest talks in the Climate Change debate series on 15 November . The climate change lecture series ends on 29th November with a Public Question Time debate.
Publication Date: 20/09/2011
Find out more......
New R.S.Thomas Manuscripts for University Collection
New R.S.Thomas Manuscripts for University Collection.
Publication Date: 19/09/2011
Find out more......
Green light for marine renewables?
Farms of ‘underwater windmills’ could affect how sand moves around our coastal seas, affecting beaches, sand banks and ultimately the risk of flooding, according to Bangor University oceanographer Dr Simon Neill.
Publication Date: 15/09/2011
Find out more......
Can plants replace oil derived compounds?
Bangor University is responding to the ever increasing price of oil and the global depletion of fossil fuel supplies by pioneering research into the extraction of useful compounds from every day plants.
Publication Date: 09/09/2011
Find out more......
Experience Medieval worship at St Teilo’s Church
Step into the Medieval Church of St Teilo’s next week (Tuesday 13th and Thursday 15th 11.30 & 4.00) and you will experience, as closely as possible, the sights and sounds that accompanied our Medieval ancestors at prayer. The rare and unusual services take place at the reconstructed medieval decorated church of St Teilo at St Fagans: National History Museum of Wales.
Publication Date: 09/09/2011
Find out more......
Welsh Medium Postgraduate Scholarship: Social Policy
The School of Social Sciences at Bangor University is offering a Welsh medium postgraduate scholarship in the field of Social Policy to start 1 October 2011. This scholarship is funded by Y Coleg Cymraeg Cenedlaethol. Funding is available for up to five years, including three/four years as a doctorate research student and an additional year as a teaching fellow. The postgraduate scholarship will include the university’s tuition fees (the current rate for home/EU students is £3,466) and also a maintenance grant (the current rate is £13,590 a year). Applications are invited from prospective researchers with a background in social sciences and who have an interest in health policy in Wales since devolution. The successful candidate will also need to undertake some Welsh medium teaching in the School of Social Sciences as one of the scholarship’s conditions. The final year of the scholarship will be considered a fellowship year when the teaching commitments will increase.
Publication Date: 31/08/2011
Find out more......
Modern archaeology to reveal Eliseg’s secrets
Archaeologists from Bangor and Chester universities begin a second season of excavations (4 – 16 September 2011) at the Pillar of Eliseg, a ninth-century AD stone monument which stands on a prehistoric mound near Valle Crucis Abbey Llangollen, in north-east Wales. There will be an open afternoon at the archaeological site on Friday 16 September, between 3 – 6pm.
Publication Date: 31/08/2011
Find out more......
International recognition for Food Dudes
The Bangor University academics behind the highly successful Food Dudes programme, which encourages healthy eating choices in young children and their families, are to receive an award for the way that they have adapted their scientific knowledge for a very practical purpose.
Publication Date: 11/08/2011
Find out more......
Bangor Physical Oceanographers score a million pound hat-trick!
Physical Oceanographers from Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences have recently won three research grants from the Natural Environment Research Council, one of the bodies which funds UK research. Together, the research grants bring a million pounds’ worth of new research to be conducted by the University.
Publication Date: 19/07/2011
Find out more......
University Launches £3.2 million Project Set to Boost Economic Growth
Bangor University Law School has officially launched a £3.2 million project that is set to encourage economic growth in Wales and Ireland.
Publication Date: 18/07/2011
Find out more......
'Love Your Body' to Lose Weight
New research involving SHES senior lecturer Dr David Markland shows that improving body image can enhance the effectiveness of weight loss programmes based on diet and exercise.
Publication Date: 18/07/2011
Find out more......
University Launches £3.2 million Project Set to Boost Economic Growth
Bangor University Law School has officially launched a £3.2 million project that is set to encourage economic growth in Wales and Ireland.
Part-funded by the EU’s Ireland/Wales Cross Border Programme, the Winning in Tendering project aims to transform smaller suppliers’ ability to win contracts and ensure home-grown organisations win a greater share of public sector business.
Publication Date: 13/07/2011
Find out more......
Study reveals US turtles’ movements
A study of the movements of an entire sub-population of marine turtle has been conducted for the first time. The study confirms that through satellite tracking we can closely observe the day-to-day lives of marine turtles, accurately predicting their migrations and helping direct conservation efforts.
Publication Date: 24/06/2011
Find out more......
£3.2m Tendering Project Prepares for Launch
Small businesses and charities in Wales and Ireland will be in a stronger position to compete for public sector contracts thanks to a £3.2 million Bangor University-led project launched this week.
Publication Date: 20/06/2011
Find out more......
Research project from Bangor University celebrated as Big Idea for the Future
Research selected for leading national report
Groundbreaking work from Bangor University has been chosen as one of the most important research projects currently taking place in universities, with the publication today of the Big Ideas for the Future report.
Publication Date: 16/06/2011
Find out more......
As seen on TV
The Extremes Research Group are rapidly gaining recognition for their research into how humans face the challenge of extreme environments.
Publication Date: 15/06/2011
Find out more......
Over consumption of sugary drinks dull our taste buds and our enjoyment
If your children are thirsty, encourage them to drink water- that would be the clear health message from research into taste preferences at Bangor University.
Publication Date: 09/06/2011
Find out more......
Too many sugary drinks can dull taste buds and enjoyment
New research undertaken by Dr Hans-Peter Kubis and his team, has shown for the first time that overweight and obese people have a dulled sensitivity to soft drinks but enhanced subconscious liking of sweet as a taste.
Publication Date: 08/06/2011
Find out more......
Major AHRC Grant awarded to PRoMS – 'The Production and Reading of Music Sources, 1480-1530'
Music manuscripts and printed editions from the 'Golden Age' of polyphony are to come under close scrutiny in a three year research project.
The Renaissance period has bequeathed upon us an unrivalled richness of musical sources. Manuscript from across Europe have survived - providing a breadth of examples from the large and highly decorated to the very small and unadorned copies of musical notations.
Publication Date: 31/05/2011
Find out more......
On a wild goose chase after the world’s highest migrant
The remarkable achievements of the world’s highest flying geese have been revealed by researchers from Bangor University and are reported in the prestigious American scientific journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Publication Date: 31/05/2011
Find out more......
Quantifying melting glaciers’ effect on ocean currents
A team of scientists from Bangor University and the University of Sheffield have used a computer climate model to study how freshwater entering the oceans at the end of ice-ages 140,000 years ago, affected the parts of the ocean currents that control climate. This is the first study of this kind for the time period.
Publication Date: 20/05/2011
Find out more......
Bangor University welcomes latest Sustainable Fisheries Accreditation
Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences has welcomed the news that the fishery producing Manx Queenies, the Isle of Man’s queen scallops, has been awarded a sustainability certification under the Marine Stewardship Council programme.
Experts in sustainable fisheries at the School have worked with the Isle of Man (IOM) Government’s Department of Environment Food and Agriculture since 2006, to advise them how to manage the fishery sustainably.
Publication Date: 19/05/2011
Find out more......
Social class a barrier to successful ageing
Research by Ian Rees Jones, Professor of Sociology at the School of Social Sciences, has shown that improving access to education and housing and increasing people’s material circumstances through income and pension levels could have a more profound effect on the health of the population than interventions aimed at changing an individual’s health behaviours.
Publication Date: 19/04/2011
Find out more......
ESRC Small Grant Awarded
Dr Simon Cottee has been awarded an ESRC small grant to undertake a research project on the experiences and challenges of ex-Muslims living in Britain.
Publication Date: 19/04/2011
Find out more......
Anniversary Research Bursaries
The School of Social Sciences is offering 5 Anniversary Research Bursaries worth £7,000 each.
Publication Date: 19/04/2011
Find out more......
Major European Grant Success for Law School
Bangor University Law School’s Professor Dermot Cahill and Ceri Evans have just successfully led a €4 million research grant bid (the WIT project), a collaboration with Dublin City University’s Strategic Procurement Unit led by Paul Davis of DCU Business School.
Publication Date: 18/04/2011
Find out more......
Investors not impressed by impression management, according to Bangor Business School research
The practice of awarding hefty bonuses to employees within the Banking industry at a time of global Banking crisis has caused widespread controversy. Bank employees had grown accustomed to receiving substantial annual cash bonuses, and such bonuses in a period of recession became highly unpopular amongst the public in general. Banks have been seeking alternative methods of rewarding employees, including the award of ‘share option compensation’.
Publication Date: 11/04/2011
Find out more......
Recreated ‘Medieval’ Organ to complement Medieval Church
An unique musical instrument is being unveiled at St Fagans National History Museum on 8-9 April. The highly decorated organ, which has quite a different sound to the modern church organ, recreates the now lost medieval organ.
Publication Date: 01/04/2011
Find out more......
New species of viper identified
A group of Bangor University scientists have featured in the National Geographic this weekfollowing their discovery of two new species of snake in Southeast Asia.
Publication Date: 29/03/2011
Find out more......
Could the Arctic be coming out of hibernation?
Reduced ice cover in the Arctic Ocean could be the reason why the UK has experienced colder winters recently.
The ice has acted to insulate temperature changes in the sea from the atmosphere. But as the ice decreases in coverage this could have a consequent effect on our climate.
“Some climatologists believe the absence of sea ice north of Siberia last autumn allowed the warmer open ocean to heat the atmosphere, resulting in changed wind patterns and the development of a “blocking” atmospheric high pressure system over Siberia. This then results in cold air being channelled south from the Arctic, over northern Europe,” explains Dr Tom Rippeth of Bangor University.
Scientists at the University have also just discovered that the Arctic Ocean, is not as tranquil as previously supposed by oceanographers and this too could have an effect on the climate.
Publication Date: 17/03/2011
Find out more......
Researchers reveal that sharks are hygienic
Scientists at Bangor University have shown for the first time, that sharks visit shallow tropical reefs or ‘seamounts’, to benefit from cleaning services and rid themselves of cumbersome parasites. The strategy is risky however, since by being there, they become vulnerable to interference from human activity.
Publication Date: 16/03/2011
Find out more......
Celtic Media Festival Shortlist
A Bangor University lecturer is on the short list at the annual Celtic Media Festival for his latest documentary. Dr Llion Iwan directed a tribute to master poet Dic Jones following his death in 2009, and which was broadcast on S4C in 2010. Llion lectures in journalism and documentary film at the School of Creative Studies and Media.
Publication Date: 15/03/2011
Find out more......
Bangor University announces third year of expansion of Postgraduate Research Scholarships
New Research Scholarship places are being offered at Bangor University for the third successive year. The places are part of the University's five year post-graduate expansion programme. They were also created to mark the University’s 125th Anniversary in 2009.
"A strong postgraduate community is an essential element of any international research-led university. As well as contributing to the further growth of our already vibrant postgraduate community, over half the Scholarship students will work on projects that will assist businesses working in key sectors of the Welsh economy. This will enable them to access the expertise that exists within the University to develop their businesses,” said Professor John G. Hughes, the University's Vice-Chancellor.
Publication Date: 12/03/2011
Find out more......
New research centre to help shape services for Children and Families in Wales
Building on research that has shown how programmes for infants, young families and teachers across Wales, support children’s social and emotional development, a new research centre should provide further answers that will continue to help the Welsh Assembly Government shape services for children and families in the future.
The Centre for Evidence Based Early Intervention (CEBEI) will be launched by Huw Lewis AM, Deputy Minister for Children on Wednesday 9 March at the Incredible Years Wales Annual Conference in Cardiff.
Publication Date: 10/03/2011
Find out more......
ECB enlists Bangor University scientists to help with cricket talent testing
The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) has turned to sports scientists at Bangor University to assist them in creating a talent forecasting model to help identify future generations of world-class cricketers.
The aim of the research project between the ECB and the University’s School of Sport, Health & Exercise Sciences is to validate a model for predicting cricket talent. This will be used to help selectors and coaches assess and identify promising young players and increase their conversion rate into successful international cricketers.
Publication Date: 10/03/2011
Find out more......
CARIAD helps Ethiopian researchers to improve food security
Ethiopian researchers working with scientists at Bangor University’s Centre for Advanced Research in International Agricultural Development (CARIAD), have achieved a breakthrough in increasing the food security of poor farmers in drought prone areas of Ethiopia. They have identified two Indian wheat varieties, adapted to Ethiopian conditions, which give higher yields when rainfall is scarce.
Publication Date: 09/03/2011
Find out more......
Getting to the heart of the matter
n a research project for the ESRC Public Services Programme, co-funded by the General Medical Council (the regulatory body for doctors), Dr Mark Exworthy and Professor Jonathan Gabe from Royal Holloway-University of London, and Ian Rees Jones from Bangor University, explored the impact of disclosure of death rates on cardiac surgeons. In 2009, they undertook an in-depth study at the micro level of a surgical unit, the meso level of the hospital in which the unit was based and the local Primary Care Trust, and the macro level of the regulatory environment. The research explored the connections between clinical professionals, managers and regulators.
Publication Date: 05/03/2011
Find out more......
Dating Anglesey’s birth as an island and formation of the Menai Strait
Research has revealed when Anglesey became a permanent island through the formation of the Menai Strait.
Mike Roberts, a mature student from Amlwch, conducted the research as part of his PhD at Bangor University’s School of Ocean Sciences, supported by the Cemlyn Jones Trust and the Countryside Council for Wales.
His research, just published in an academic journal, reveals that the Strait became a permanent feature between 5,800 and 4,600 years ago around the time when hunter-gatherers were replaced by the first farmers in north Wales.
Publication Date: 02/03/2011
Find out more......
Diabetes UK funds Bangor University research into insulin-producing gene
Leading health charity Diabetes UK has funded a research project at Bangor University to investigate a gene which could identify important new avenues for diabetes treatment.
Publication Date: 23/02/2011
Find out more......
Carbon scientists go underground to look for answers
An unusual below-ground laboratory, set to be the only one of its kind in the UK, is to begin work at Bangor University later this year, enabling scientists to discover more about carbon held in the soil.
Publication Date: 23/02/2011
Find out more......
The part–time way to post-graduate education
In these tougher times, studying for a postgraduate degree part-time while remaining at work is an option at Bangor University.
Bangor University’s next Postgraduate Courses Fair takes place on Friday 18 February 2011 between 12.30 – 2.30. Anybody interested in postgraduate study at Bangor is most welcome to attend, and take advantage of the opportunity to learn more about the many different postgraduate programmes that are currently available. Pre-register for the event online via the University’s website at: http://www.bangor.ac.uk/pgfair/contactus.php.en
Publication Date: 17/02/2011
Find out more......
A BEACON of light for the green economy
Bangor University is a partner in a newly announced £20m programme to boost the green economy by helping business in West Wales and the Valleys develop new technologies to turn locally grown plant crops into commercial products, announced by Deputy First Minister, Ieuan Wyn Jones AM, at the Senedd. [Tuesday, 15 February).
Publication Date: 16/02/2011
Find out more......
‘Queenie’ scallops win Award with assistance from Bangor University
Support and advice from Bangor University’s renowned School of Ocean Sciences has assisted the Isle of Man ‘Queenie’ fishery to win the prestigious Billingsgate Sustainable Fisheries Award. And the future looks bright for the Isle of Man fishing industry. Once in decline, the now sustainably fished ‘queenie’ fishery is providing a high value product sought after by best restaurants around the UK.
Publication Date: 15/02/2011
Find out more......
What’s the best way to assist children with diabetes to look after themselves?
A new study co-led by Bangor University and Cardiff University with a team of experts from across the UK is seeking to establish the best way of presenting information in order to help children and young people with type 1 diabetes look after themselves.
Publication Date: 15/02/2011
Find out more......
Measuring success of peatland restoration
Bangor University are assisting the National Trust in an ambitious project to restore Wales’s second largest peat upland and a European-designated special conservation area.
A 400 mile network of ditches on the Migneint between Ffestiniog and Llanrwst will over time be filled in to restore the area to its natural state. Cut over centuries to improve drainage and provide more land for farming and grouse shooting, the ditches are possibly contributing to the release of carbon.
Publication Date: 08/02/2011
Find out more......
Experts of the future brought to Wales
The establishment of a Doctoral Training Centre will allow 33 new postgraduate studentships to be offered every year in Wales for the next five years.
The postgraduates will be trained in a range of important disciplines, including social policy, psychology, economics, environmental planning and linguistics.
Publication Date: 05/02/2011
Find out more......
Leave your comfort zones behind you! Postgraduate ‘Beyond Boundaries 2011 – Transition’ Conference
Now in its fifth year, the latest Beyond Boundaries (BB) conference brought together Bangor postgraduate students from across disciplines for a fascinating and valuable experience of engagement with non specialists. Organised by the Research Students’ Forum (RSF) and supported by the Academic Development Unit and Vice-Chancellor’s office, BB again provided that rare but essential opportunity to go beyond the actual ‘nose to screen’ research and share our experiences.
Publication Date: 29/01/2011
Find out more......
Bangor archaeology research on early Iceland attracts international attention
Publication Date: 21/01/2011
Find out more......
Computers that can understand our emotions?
Having a computer that can read our emotions could lead to all sorts of new applications, including computer games where the player has to control their emotions while playing. Thomas Christy, a Computer Science PhD student at Bangor University is hoping to bring this reality a little nearer by developing a system that will enable computers to read and interpret our emotions and moods in real time.
Publication Date: 20/01/2011
Find out more......
Catfish study reveals importance of being ‘similar but different’
A group of armoured catfishes abundant in small rivers and streams across South America are not all they appear- in fact communities are far more diverse and complex than previously suspected.
A new multidisciplinary study, reported in Nature (6.1.11), has enabled evolutionary biologists at Bangor University to establish for the first time that many Corydoras catfish that live together in the same rivers actually mimic each other’s colour patterns.
Publication Date: 07/01/2011
Find out more......
Bangor led project covered by Science
A Bangor- Unversity led European Union funded research project developing techniques to assist in the fight against illegal fishing and to preserve fish stocks is covered in the Magazine Science.
Publication Date: 18/12/2010
Find out more......
Bangor Uni’s Food Dudes Scheme extended in Wolverhampton
Wolverhampton City NHS Primary Care Trust, who have pioneered UK use of the Food Dudes scheme to encourage schoolchildren to eat more fruit and vegetables, have decided to continue for a further two years.
The Scheme, developed by Bangor University’s Food and Activity Research Unit at the School of Psychology, was introduced in Wolverhampton in January 2009 and initially planned to run it until December 2011 - benefitting 20,000 pupils at primary and special schools – at a total cost of £500,000.
Publication Date: 15/12/2010
Find out more......
One of ten UK projects selected for Award
An academic at Bangor University’s School of Chemistry is one of ten British academics involved in British-Israeli research projects selected to receive funding through the Britain Israel Research and Academic Exchange Partnership, BIRAX. The announcement of Awards to projects which tackle global challenges in Energy and the Environment was made recently by British Foreign Secretary William Hague at an event hosted by Britain’s ambassador to Israel Matthew Gould, celebrating scientific collaboration between the UK and Israel. He hailed science as “one of the cornerstones of the relationship between Britain and Israel” and added “both are countries that have built up our economies and our identity through being leaders in science and technology”
Publication Date: 07/12/2010
Find out more......
One of ten UK projects selected for Award
An academic at Bangor University’s School of Chemistry is one of ten British academics involved in British-Israeli research projects selected to receive funding through the Britain Israel Research and Academic Exchange Partnership, BIRAX. The announcement of Awards to projects which tackle global challenges in Energy and the Environment was made recently by British Foreign Secretary William Hague at an event hosted by Britain’s ambassador to Israel Matthew Gould, celebrating scientific collaboration between the UK and Israel. He hailed science as “one of the cornerstones of the relationship between Britain and Israel” and added “both are countries that have built up our economies and our identity through being leaders in science and technology”
Publication Date: 30/11/2010
Find out more......
Modern Languages celebrates AHRC success
The School of Modern Languages has been two prestigious Early Career Fellowship by the AHRC for 2011. This success is particularly notable as it is very unusual for a school to be awarded two such Fellowships in the same year. The successful recipients, Dr Helen Abbott and Dr Anna Saunders, will take up their Fellowships in January 2011. Head of School, Professor Carol Tully said ‘We are extremely proud of the work being undertaken by colleagues and these awards are an indication of the quality of research the School is able to boast.’
Publication Date: 25/11/2010
Find out more......
Explosives detection research being conducted at Bangor University
Scientists at the School of Chemistry in Bangor University are working on novel sensor technology which will, it is hoped, soon be trialled in airports. The group at the School of Chemistry in Bangor is working as part of a European consortium called Nanosecure. The group consists of 26 partners both academic and industrial all working towards an integrated system which will detect airborne explosives, narcotics, chemical and biological agents. The system will also be able to decontaminate the air from chemical and bio agents should some be detected. It will do this by integrating with a building’s air-conditioning units. One of the partners in this consortium is Schiphol Airport where it is hoped the units will be trialled.
Publication Date: 09/11/2010
Find out more......
Bangor scientists contribute to global conservation review.
Conservation scientists at Bangor University have contributed data to the latest comprehensive conservation assessment of the world’s vertebrates.
Publication Date: 28/10/2010
Find out more......
Bangor scientist to help protect Marine Biodiversity in the Caribbean
The School of Ocean Sciences collaborating with the Government of the Cayman Islands and US partner The Nature Conservancy have launched an £817,000 project to protect the marine biodiversity of the Cayman Islands, a UK Overseas Territory in the central Caribbean.
Publication Date: 28/10/2010
Find out more......
Nature’s Backbone at Risk
The most comprehensive assessment of the world’s vertebrates confirms an extinction crisis with one-fifth of species threatened. However, the situation would be worse were it not for current global conservation efforts, according to a study launched today at the 10th Conference of the Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity, CBD, in Nagoya, Japan.
Publication Date: 27/10/2010
Find out more......
Bangor Pontifical on the Web: Phase One Complete
The Bangor Pontifical Project, launched exactly one year ago as a partnership between the University and the Cathedral to ensure the long-term preservation of Bangor’s most precious medieval manuscript, has just reached its first significant milestone. Completion of phase one, funded by a Welsh Assembly grant, has enabled conservation and rebinding of the Pontifical and digitization of its 340 pages. The manuscript was photographed by the cutting-edge Digital Image Archive of Medieval Music (DIAMM) last spring, and viewers may now zoom in on the excellent high-quality images via the open access Bangor Pontifical Project website.
Publication Date: 20/10/2010
Find out more......
New DNA Sequencing reveals hidden communities
Half a bucket full of sand from an unassuming beach in Scotland has revealed a far richer and more complex web of microscopic animals living within the tiny ‘ecosystem’ than have previously been identified.
Publication Date: 19/10/2010
Find out more......
Major European Grant Success for Law School
Bangor University Law School’s Professor Dermot Cahill and Ceri Evans have just successfully led a €4 million research grant bid (the WIT project), a collaboration with Dublin City University’s Strategic Procurement Unit led by Paul Davis of DCU Business School. This major award, announced last week against stiff international competition, will be funded until the end of 2013 by the European Union’s Ireland/Wales INTERREG Innovation & Competitiveness programme. Bangor University Law School will be the Lead Partner.
Publication Date: 15/10/2010
Find out more......
Major marine science boost for North Wales
A major £23.6m investment to grow Wales’ growing marine sector by increasing collaborative research projects between business and universities has been announced today (Weds 8th Sept) by Deputy First Minister Ieuan Wyn Jones.
Bangor University’s SEACAMS (Sustainable Expansion of the Applied Coastal and Marine Sectors) project has been given the go-ahead following EU backing of £12.6m from the European Regional Development Fund through the Welsh Assembly Government.
Publication Date: 08/09/2010
Find out more......