Beyond Biomedicine: Gods and Supernatural Forces
People’s conceptions of health are strongly influenced by their cultural values and norms, such as their religious beliefs. In an increasingly diverse society, different understandings of health are combining and melding through interaction and dialogue. This phenomenon has been investigated by Kevin Becker and Adjunct Professor Carsten Butsch from the Department of Geography at the University of Bonn, who is also a member of the Sustainable Futures Transdisciplinary Research Area. Their findings have now been published in the journal “Science & Medicine.” 
Growing Trees Amid Lettuces to Protect the Climate
Germany will only be able to achieve net zero by 2045 with a concerted approach to cutting emissions and removing carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere according to the conclusion drawn from the first phase of the CDRterra research program. This has seen over 100 researchers from 39 institutions investigate some of the risks and areas of potential for land-based CO2 removal in Germany across 10 collaborative projects with strategies ranging from capturing the CO2 directly out of the air through to agriculture-based processes. Professor Eike Lüdeling from the University of Bonn, a horticultural researcher at the Institute of Crop Science and Resource Conservation and member of the Sustainable Futures Transdisciplinary Research Area, led a subproject on agroforestry. We asked him a few questions about it: 
Ideas with passion and entrepreneurial spirit
The finalists presented innovative solutions for a better future at the University of Bonn's 5th ideas competition. A total of seven teams of students and researchers from the university made it through the preliminary selection and pitched their ideas to a packed hall and an expert jury at DIGITALHUB. Four of them ultimately received prizes from the jury and—for the first time—from the audience, which were donated by the University Foundation Bonn, Comma Soft AG, DIGITALHUB.DE, and Sparkasse KölnBonn.
New vulnerability of asthma immune cells discovered
Why do certain immune cells remain permanently active in allergic asthma – even in an environment that should actually damage them? A team from the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) and the University of Bonn has discovered that these cells only survive because they activate a special antioxidant protection mechanism. When this mechanism is blocked, allergic inflammation in mouse models decreases significantly. The results have now been published in the scientific journal Immunity.
Quantum sensors: Highly precise measurements in moving brains
What is happening in the brain during an epileptic seizure? How do nerve cells function after a stroke-induced paralysis? What happens in the heads of those suffering from Parkinson’s disease? Investigating these types of questions has been difficult up to now because patients had to keep still. However, Optical Pumped Magnetoencephalography (OPMEG) is making it possible to also scan the brain while the patient is moving. Prof. Dr. Dominik Bach, Hertz Chair for Artificial Intelligence and Neuroscience at the University of Bonn, is currently setting up this type of research infrastructure on the campus of the University Hospital Bonn (UKB) and will receive funding of almost four million euros over the next three years from the EFRE/JTF program run by the European Union and the state government of North Rhine-Westphalia.
Catharina Stroppel appointed as new director at the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics
Catharina Stroppel, professor at the Mathematical Institute of the University of Bonn and member of the cluster of excellence Hausdorff Center for Mathematics, has been appointed as a director of the Max Planck Institute for Mathematics (MPIM) in Bonn. She will take up her full-time position at the MPIM in March 2026. 
Physician Gives University of Bonn Over 20,000 Sea Urchins
If you have ever met a sea urchin while paddling barefoot in the sea, you are unlikely to forget your encounter in a hurry. However, these ubiquitous creatures—known as echinoderms—also have their aesthetic sides, offering up a breathtakingly beautiful variety of sizes, shapes and colors. The donation will enable the University of Bonn to study and showcase these riches even more effectively in future. Dr. Hans-Volker Thiel, a retired orthopedic specialist who studied geology and paleontology in Bonn as an adult learner, has presented the over 20,000 sea urchins in his collection to the University of Bonn. Anyone interested in viewing these splendid spiny specimens from the comfort of their sofa can do so thanks to a photobook that has recently been published. 
How hunger affects mood
When we are hungry, our mood often drops – a phenomenon colloquially known as “hangry.” A new study by the University Hospital Bonn (UKB), the University of Bonn, and the University Hospital Center Tübingen now shows that this connection is not caused by unconscious metabolic processes. Rather, the decisive factor is that the lack of energy is consciously perceived as hunger – it is this conscious feeling of hunger that leads to a worse mood. The results have now been published in the journal eBioMedicine.
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