On April 18th, we held a workshop for students in grades 1-3. They designed nanoparticles for special tasks, made keyrings with nanoparticles, saw what insects look like on a nanomaterial scale and played a game in which they became part of artificial intelligence.
The original game was provided by BioGeMT University of Malta as part of the COST Action 21153 Network for implementing multiomics approaches in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease prevention and research.
On April 19th, we were visited by primary school students in grades 6-8.
The participants created a nanoparticle to help treat anaphylaxis, learned how CNBM Scientists study cellular DNA damage using AI and performed an experimental “iodine clock” oscillatory reaction. The results of this reaction were used as input to AI to predict the reaction path under modified conditions.
Dear Participants, thank you for your presence and for playing together.
You are an inspiration to us!
I would like to thank the Scientists and PhD students from CNBM for all their hard work in putting together the workshops.
As always, teamwork was the key to success!