Handheld device could transform heart disease screening
08 April 2025Researchers have developed a handheld device that could potentially replace stethoscopes as a tool for detecting certain types of heart disease.
Researchers have developed a handheld device that could potentially replace stethoscopes as a tool for detecting certain types of heart disease.
Researchers have successfully demonstrated the UK’s first long-distance ultra-secure transfer of data over a quantum communications network, including the UK’s first long-distance quantum-secured video call.
Two ̽»¨Ö±²¥ of Cambridge researchers are among the thirty-two early career researchers, tackling issues from improving food security to developing better medical implants, who have been announced as the 2025 Schmidt Science Fellows.
A ̽»¨Ö±²¥ of Cambridge spin-out company working to improve AI efficiency and bandwidth has raised €25 million in new funding.
A new AI weather prediction system, developed by researchers from the ̽»¨Ö±²¥ of Cambridge, can deliver accurate forecasts tens of times faster and using thousands of times less computing power than current AI and physics-based forecasting systems.
Researchers have developed comfortable, washable ‘smart pyjamas’ that can monitor sleep disorders such as sleep apnoea at home, without the need for sticky patches, cumbersome equipment or a visit to a specialist sleep clinic.
Chris Tagnon is the first Cambridge ̽»¨Ö±²¥ student to be awarded a Masters in Motorsport scholarship.
Cambridge researchers are developing implants that could help repair the brain pathways damaged by Parkinson’s disease.
̽»¨Ö±²¥ ̽»¨Ö±²¥ of Cambridge is one of two UK participants named as part of the PIXEurope consortium, a collaboration between research organisations from across Europe which will develop and manufacture prototypes of their products based on photonic chips.
Researchers have developed a machine learning algorithm to accurately detect heart murmurs in dogs, one of the main indicators of cardiac disease, which affects a large proportion of some smaller breeds such as King Charles Spaniels.