The asymmetries of international society have made it difficult to understand the complexities of today’s world and make projections about future scenarios, says FAPESP President Celso Lafer at the USP "Challenges of Globality" series.
In comparison to all other Latin American and BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India and China) countries, Brazilian scientists have the highest impact rates with publications in national magazines.
With a theoretical and practical approach, the school funded by ESPCA-FAPESP discusses advanced computational methods to resolve problems related to new materials with applications in the areas of energy and the environment.
USP researchers develop application to facilitate and accelerate licensing of new undertakings and operations in the coastal area due to exploration of the Pre-Salt fields and duplication of cargo capacity at the Port of Santos.
In her new book, Mayana Zatz, coordinator of the Human Genome Studies Center, calls attention to the dilemmas and ethical questions generated by advances in genetics.
Family income and educational level of parents influence the diets of adolescents, limiting intake of important nutrients in the combat against chronic illnesses says FSP-USP study.
The appearance of metastasis contributes fundamentally to vascular endothelial growth factor A, produced by positive stromal cells for the S100A4 marker according to a new study carried out by Brazilian and North Americans.
Studies performed at the Heart Institute, InCor, show that treatment of sleep apnea can reduce blood pressure in patients with resistant hypertension as well as prevent evolution of the disease.
The youth of Brazilian science, bureaucracy and the deficiencies of the educational system are all factors that can help explain why the country has not yet had a Nobel Prize winner.
Brazil needs to develop its own biological pest control technology for agriculture that is adapted to the country's agricultural profile, says José Roberto Postalli Parra of Esalq, one of the 56th Bunge Foundation Award winners.
FAPESP’s financial outlays to support scientific and technological research increased 14.8% in 2010, compared to the previous year. With outlays of R$ 780.03 million in 2010 alone, the São Paulo Research Foundation maintained the upward curve in support to research, which grew 69% in the last decade.
São Paulo School of Advanced Sciences brings together 440 scientists and students from Brazil and abroad to debate the latest advances in knowledge in the area of redox processes in biomedicine.
British ranking of universities shows ascension of Latin America. USP climbed 84 spots and is the 169th best in the world. Unicamp leapt to 235th place.
Unesp researchers in Presidente Prudente discover a molecule capable of capturing the atmospheric gas and converting it to compounds that may be used in the future by chemical industries.
People suffering from depression oftentimes also present psychotic manifestations. But until now, the medical community had no objective methods to differentiate between these cases and cases of common depression, making the administration of specific treatment difficult.
For Simon Campbell, the British scientist who created Viagra, the pharmaceutical industry has grown too much to be able to bring together the fundamental elements for discovering new drugs: “high-level science, art and personal focus”
The São Paulo School of Advanced Sciences looked at the use of advanced computing to solve problems related to new materials with applications in the fields of energy and the environment
There are no technical barriers to biofuel production, but there are many opportunities to improve manufacturing processes and diversify them, says Chris Somerville of the University of California at Berkeley
A series of research projects begun in 1994, which received FAPESP funding, has managed significant advances against Chagas Disease, culminating in an unprecedented cure in highly susceptible mice through a technology of DNA vaccines.
A study published in Science magazine with Brazilian participation refutes research indicating a decline in the capacity of forests to sequester carbon and attributes the phenomenon to increasing droughts
Winners of the Nobel Prize participating in the Unicamp school, Ei-ichi Negishi and Kurt Wüthrich speak about the importance of FAPESP’s program for the development of Chemistry in Brazil.
Less polluting alternatives for aircraft fuel need to maintain thermal stability and good fluidity at high altitudes, says Guilherme Freire, from Embraer.