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The John Curtin School of Medical Research in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory | Medical research centre



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The John Curtin School of Medical Research

Locality: Canberra, Australian Capital Territory

Phone: +61 2 6125 2598



Address: Building 131 - ANU, Garran Rd 2601 Canberra, ACT, Australia

Website: http://jcsmr.anu.edu.au

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23.01.2022 At JCSMR there are experts of every field just down the hallway. says Nathan Reynolds from the Dehorter Laboratory. Watch the last video of our #scienceweek special here: https://youtu.be/6UnMT6-OiHk If you want to learn from the experts at JCSMR, join us for our student information evening to find out how https://bit.ly/3azKp43



21.01.2022 PhD’s focus on niches. Lithin Louis from the Department of Genome Sciences takes a minute to explain why this matters and how his research might help us understand heart disease. Watch this #scienceweek video here: https://youtu.be/Bi7UeIo-WqM

19.01.2022 Meet Prof Barry Thompson! Barry is a Drosophila & mouse geneticist who worked European Molecular Biology Laboratory - EMBL as a postdoc & had his own lab The Fr...ancis Crick Institute before joining us an EMBL Australia Group Leader at the The John Curtin School of Medical Research - JCSMR at The Australian National University in 2019. He was recently awarded an ARC Future Fellowship to study the genetic control of tissue growth in animals: https://bit.ly/2GekVy6 #MeetTheTeamMonday

17.01.2022 One of our three Snow Fellows, Dr Marian Burr is an outstanding early-career researcher and academic pathologist with expertise in cancer immunology, molecular biology and cellular pathology. The John Curtin School of Medical Research - JCSMR https://youtu.be/UhVOZduxZSE



13.01.2022 I think that if you’re not creative it’s pointless Cynthia Turnbull says that creativity in science is essential. She researches immunological diseases as part of the Vinuesa Laboratory at JCSMR. Today’s #scienceweek Behind the Curtin video is out now: https://youtu.be/dlQWQoe5jpI

13.01.2022 It has taught me to be persistent. Angela Nicoli from the Eccles Institute of Neuroscience talks about how learning the patch-clamp technique has taught her to be persistent and patient throughout her degree. Our second video as part of the #scienceweek Behind the Curtin series is out now: https://youtu.be/25_sg9h1qOk

07.01.2022 Today is International Day of Women and Girls in Science! "It is fascinating the number of things one can answer with just a computer, the appropriate data and some chunks of code" says Marina Reixachs, postgraduate student of the Eyras Group. You can read more about the JCSMR #WomeninSTEM here --> https://jcsmr.anu.edu.au//celebrating-international-day-wo



06.01.2022 This type of collaboration broadens our understanding of scientific research and allows us to experience two different types of joy as scientists." Read more about the way a sugar solution is changing the way we look at platelets, in collaboration with Engineering & Computing at ANU https://bit.ly/36fllzm

02.01.2022 It is a tricky technique to get right, but when it works it's really stunning science. James O'Connor's research shows how a $50 dye could change the way we design malaria #vaccines. Read more here: https://bit.ly/3653RWp

01.01.2022 Introducing the #scienceweek youtube series Behind The Curtin! How you go about presenting a piece to the audience matters. In our first instalment, Matt Witney from the Department of Immunology and Infectious Disease talks about the overlap between science and music. Listen here https://youtu.be/jZfNqiO8ruc

01.01.2022 A new blood test capturing previous exposure to COVID-19 has been developed by researchers at the College of Health and Medicine. Initial results suggest many more people have been exposed to coronavirus in Australia than have been detected so far. Learn more: bit.ly/33vj6Vu

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