Hungarian science will be the main focus between 21 and 23 November at the Museum of Fine Arts. At the first Science Expo, several HUN-REN research centres will be on show, where, among other things, you can find out how a medicine is created.
Ten HUN-REN research institutes will participate in this first-of-its-kind event. While more detailed information about the institutes has been shared previously, this time we are focusing on the exhibition spaces.
At the Innovative Drug Development Technologies booth, attendees can follow a drug's journey from concept to completion: from the researcher's initial idea to the patient’s hands. Researchers from the HUN-REN Research Centre for Natural Sciences, the HUN-REN (KOKI) Institute of Experimental Medicine, and experts from Gedeon Richter Plc. will lead this experience.
Other notable exhibits include thyroid hormone diagnostics and the latest advancements in research methods. Visitors can also engage directly with experts and learn about new studies, including promising results on a drug, already used in oncology, that shows potential in treating severe coronavirus infections.
The KOKI research team will showcase their work using mouse brain slice preparations to explore how microglial cells, the brain's primary defense cells, are activated following injury. While we have previously shared insights on this topic, visitors will have the chance to speak with KOKI scientists in person at the Science Expo.
Full program details will be posted on the institutes’ websites soon.
- Renewing HUN-REN
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The modernising HUN-REN aims to become one of the most effective research organisations in Europe. The new leadership of HUN-REN seeks to establish a well-funded, open research institution system focused on social and economic issues, which can make a significant contribution to Hungary's social and economic success.
Researchers within the HUN-REN network can expect a long-term, consistent, value-driven, and performance-based funding system, mutually reinforcing structure and operation, nationally and internationally competitive salaries, as well as a predictable research career in an organisation with a strong entrepreneurial and collaborative mindset, administrative and procurement services to support researchers, and a significant emphasis on relationships beyond academia.