2021.01.04 | Seminar, Research, Public/Media
Lecturer Christian Brix Folsted Andersen
2021.01.04 | Seminar, Research, Public/Media
Lecturer Per Borghammer: "Parkinson's disease - motor asymmetry, dementia, and brain-first vs. body-first subtypes explained by prion-like spreading of alpha-synuclein"
2021.01.04 | Seminar, Research, Public/Media
Lecturer Samia Joca: "Glutamate and beyond: in the search for better therapeutics in depression"
2021.01.04 | PhD defense, Public/Media, Graduate School of Health
The quality of vision following small-incision lenticule extraction for myopia
2021.01.04 | PhD defense, Public/Media, Graduate School of Health
Circulating cell-free DNA in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma or neuroendocrine tumors
2021.01.04 | Research, Public/Media, Health
Serotonin is one of the most important neurotransmitters in the brain, helping to regulate our mood and playing a crucial role in depression. Thanks to new research from Aarhus University and others, it is now possible to monitor the serotonin circuitry in the brain – while it happens.