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Sju projekt får forskningsmedel från Norrköping
Forskning kring ungas digitala berättande i Norrköping är ett av sju projekt som fått pengar från Norrköpings kommuns fond för forskning och utveckling.
Sedan 2012 delar kommunen ut pengar för att stödja Norrköpings långsiktiga utveckling. I år inkom 22 ansökningar.
De projekt som fått pengar är:
- Energieffektivisering i kulturhistoriskt värdefulla byggnader med växtväggar och sakernas internet. 700 000 kronor. Projektägare är professor Shaofang Gong vid Institutionen för teknik och naturvetenskap (ITN).
- Demensvänligt samhälle – Norrköpingsmodellen. 1 700 000 kronor. Projektägare är universitetslektor Agneta Kullberg som forskar inom området folkhälsovetenskap vid Institutionen för medicin och hälsa.
- Mikrovågsenergi som tillämpning vid processandet av olika slamtyper. 300 000 kronor. Projektägare är Håkan Carlsson vid teknikkonsultbolaget Combitech AB.
- Optimering av interaktiva pekbord som lärandeverktyg på Norrköpings Visualiseringscenter C. 650 000 kronor. Projektägare är universitetslektor Konrad Schörnborn vid Institutionen för teknik och naturvetenskap (ITN).
- Entreprenöriella grupper i företagsinkubatorer. 800 000 kronor. Projektägare är Karl Wennberg, forskare vid Institutet för analytisk sociologi (IAS).
- Digitala verktyg för levande historia. 1 300 000 kronor. Projektägare är universitetslektor Jonas Unger vid Institutionen för teknik och naturvetenskap (ITN).
- Ungas digitala berättande i Norrköping. Digitalisering och mångfald inom utbildning. 500 000 kronor. Projektägare är Arianit Kurti, studio director vid Interactive Institute Swedish ICT.
Totalt delades 5 950 000 kronor ut.
Foto: David Einar
Mer om Norrköpings kommuns fond för forskning och utveckling
Academic boycott
LiU researchers have joined international calls for a boycott of scientific conferences in the US.
risky perfectionism
Psychology students took on role of treaters in a study of perfectionism and internet-delivered cognitive behavioural therapy.
social sustainability
Social value creation is on the agendas of more and more companies and organisations. Erik Jannesson, senior lecturer in management control, has just published a book on the subject.
Critical of the national board of health and welfare
Rolf Holmqvist is one of 17 researchers who are critical to guidelines for the treatment of depression and anxiety.
when researchers meet vulnerability
Malin Thor Tureby was keynote speaker at an international conference on oral history.
global media hit
Cats that meow with a dialect have caused a sensation in the world media. Robert Eklund, a linguist who works with cats at the Department of Culture and Communication, has lost count of the number of times the work has been reported in the media.
farewell exchange students
On 6 December, a Farewell Mingle was held for departing exchange students who have studied at Linköping University.
success for new master's
"We have a global and critical perspective that attracts today's students," says Stefan Jonsson, professor at REMESO, about the Faculty of Arts and Science’s first international master’s programme at REMESO in Norrköping - Ethnic and Migration Studies.
health is our new religion
Achieving perfect health has become a religion in the western world, according to a newly published study. Barbro Wijma, professor emerita and physician with many years of experience meeting patients, views this development with dismay.
black in sweden
Skin colour matters, also in Sweden. But many people don’t accept that racism is a problem here – only in other countries. So claims doctoral student Victoria Kawesa, who writes about black feminism and whiteness in Sweden.
redress for neglect
Johanna Sköld from Child Studies at Linköping University co-organised an international workshop where researchers compared various models of compensation for institutional neglect and abuse.
tomorrow's nobel laureates?
Anna Lindström and Monika Lopez of the Department of Culture and Communication applied earlier this year for funding for an initiative in an issue relating to refugees. The funding was granted, and the “Tomorrow’s Nobel laureates” project was born.
Alumni of the year 1
Suad Ali, expert on Sweden’s refugee quota, works tirelessly for refugees worldwide. For her dedication she has been chosen as one of Linköping University’s two Alumni of the Year.
Alumni of the Year 2
Thomas Lunner’s research has given improved hearing to millions of people with impaired hearing. He has been chosen as one of this year’s Alumni of the Year.
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Last updated: 2017-02-13