No images? Click here NEWSEPFL engineering professor named to United Nations SDG group Karen Scrivener has been selected by the United Nations Secretary-General for the Group of Ten High-level Representatives of Civil Society, Private Sector and Scientific Community to Promote Science, Technology and Innovation for the Sustainable Development Goals (10-Member Group).EPFL engineering professor gives inaugural lecture at Collège de France Stéphanie Lacour engineers soft electrodes that can be interfaced with the body’s nervous system. Committed to research and educating future engineers, she spearheaded and directs EPFL’s inter-school institute, Neuro-X. This year, she holds the Liliane Bettencourt annual chair of Technological Innovation at the prestigious Collège de France.Tobias Kippenberg elected to NAE membership Professor Tobias Kippenberg at EPFL has been elected an international member of the US National Academy of Engineering (NAE).Prof. Aude Billard President of IEEE Robotics & Automation Society Aude Billard, who heads EPFL's Learning Algorithms and Systems Laboratory (LASA) and serves as the Associated Dean for Education at the School of Engineering, has been appointed as the President of the IEEE Robotics and Automation Society (RAS).Three EPFL engineering professors elected to SATW SATW, the Swiss Academy of Engineering Sciences, has announced the appointment of 14 new full members for 2024, three of whom are from EPFL's School of Engineering (STI).Sharing equipment also means sharing knowledge Marwan El Chazli challenged himself to complete his Master’s thesis in bacterial spectroscopy by borrowing as much equipment as he could from other EPFL labs. He passed this sustainability test with flying colors.Grayscale nanolithography for 2D nanoelectronics Researchers in the Microsystems Laboratory in the School of Engineering have published an innovative grayscale nanolithography technique that has potential applications in photonic and nanoelectronic device fabrication.Scientists unveil a DIY structured-illumination microscope Scientists at EPFL have published a guide to building an add-on that turns a standard optical microscope into an instrument capable of producing super resolution, 3D images of cells, organoids, and embryos.
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