
New members greeted in Heidelberg
In May this year 62 life scientists were elected as EMBO Members and Associate Members, joining a group of more than 1,800 outstanding life scientists.
In May this year 62 life scientists were elected as EMBO Members and Associate Members, joining a group of more than 1,800 outstanding life scientists.
How do I choose the best people? How do I negotiate a deal with my university? And how do I set a clear vision and goals for my research and prioritize my own and the group’s time?
EMBO Short-Term Fellowships fund laboratory visits for up to three months. In this series, four Fellows talked to Kathy Weston about how such an exchange influenced them professionally and personally.
EMBO Short-Term Fellowships fund laboratory visits for up to three months. In this series, four Fellows talked to Kathy Weston about how such an exchange influenced them professionally and personally.
EMBO Short-Term Fellowships fund laboratory visits for up to three months. In this series, four Fellows talked to Kathy Weston about how such an exchange influenced them professionally and personally.
EMBO Short-Term Fellowships fund laboratory visits for up to three months. In this series, four Fellows talked to Kathy Weston about how such an exchange influenced them professionally and personally.
EMBO congratulates its member Sir Gregory Winter from the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, UK, on receiving the 2018 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
The EMBO Young Investigator Programme actively supports networking and collaborative working. In a new three-part series, six former and current EMBO Young Investigators talked to Kathy Weston about how the programme has enabled them to form lasting scientific and personal connections.
The EMBO Young Investigator Programme actively supports networking and collaborative working. In a new three-part series, six former and current EMBO Young Investigators talked to Kathy Weston about how the programme has enabled them to form lasting scientific and personal connections.
The EMBO Young Investigator Programme actively supports networking and collaborative working. In a new three-part series, six former and current EMBO Young Investigators talked to Kathy Weston about how the programme has enabled them to form lasting scientific and personal connections.