Keynote Speaker at The Nobel Week Dialogue

Ursula Staudinger will deliver the keynote speech “Change and Growth – a Paradox?” at the Nobel Week Dialogue in Stockholm on 9th December. This year’s event is on the theme of ageing and provides new scientific and cultural perspectives on societies of longer lives. The public can meet and engage with a unique constellation of Nobel Laureates, world-leading scientists and thought leaders in a dialogue on the opportunities and challenges of an ageing world. The annual event is free to attend. Read more

Leopoldina’s Annual Assembly

This year’s Annual Assembly of the German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina took place from 19-21 September in Rostock, Germany. Ursula Staudinger, Vice-President of Leopoldina, spoke at the opening. The theme of the conference was „Perception and Control – Sensory Systems in Biology and Engineering”. An interdisciplinary group of approximately 300 participants examined sensory organs and their engineering counterparts, i.e. sensors. Read more

Ursula Staudinger: ReServing is good for you!

Ursula Staudinger was invited to hold the keynote on the Plasticity of Aging at the ReServe National Conference in Boston. She demonstrated the extraordinary ability we have to modify the aging process through changes within the body or in the external environment. Her research also suggests that programs like ReServe – where older adults learn new skills and meet interesting people – contribute to this plasticity. Staudinger told participants that „ReServing is good for you“, because older adults are encouraged to move out of their comfort zone and try out new activities. Thus, they will make the experience that they can also success in new areas. Read more

World Population Day: Exclusive Interview with Project M

In an exclusive video interview with PROJECT M, Ursula Staudinger argues that depopulation is not only economically sustainable, but that it would also address two of the greatest challenges of modern times: environmental sustainability and demographic change. As a nation’s population decreases, so does its environmental footprint and, in this post-growth phase of world population development, societies would be forced to focus on qualitative rather than quantitative growth. Read more