“Nice to meet you” NUTRIM PhD Julien Luyten
Beating the odds: Julien Luyten’ s path to rare bile duct cancer research. Insight story from a NUTRIM PhD and chair of the NUTRIM PhD council.

Beating the odds: Julien Luyten’ s path to rare bile duct cancer research. Insight story from a NUTRIM PhD and chair of the NUTRIM PhD council.
Read the NUTRIM Special Holiday Edition Newsletter with the highlights of 2024
The call for the YERUN Open Science Awards 2024 is officially open, from 3 December 2024 until 13 January 2025! YERUN extends a warm invitation to researchers and staff from Maastricht University and other member universities to submit their applications.
Professor Ellen Blaak, PhD Gilian Larik and research team are tracking in MRUM fermentation chambers, how gut bacteria respond to food.
Economists and spouses Dr Özge Gökdemir and Professor Devrim Dumludağ conducted a study for Maastricht University that reveals differences in competitive behaviour between women in the Netherlands. Their findings will be published soon in a scholarly journal. Here, they give us a sneak peek.
Maastricht University is leading a research project funded by the Worldwide Universities Network, bringing together perspectives from four continents on green hydrogen policies.
Meet Myrthe Eussen from NUTRIM. Interview about sustainability in the operating room and the CAREFREE project Myrthe as a researcher, is passionate about.
Open Science proposes openness about data, sources and methodology to make research more efficient and sustainable as well as bringing science into the public. UM has a thriving Open Science community. Dennie Hebels and Rianne Fijten talk about progress, the Open Science Festival and what...
Why do female entrepreneurs struggle to secure funding in today’s competitive ecosystem? Despite efforts to level the playing field, women continue to face significant barriers when pitching their ventures to investors. But with a growing focus on sustainability and social impact, can female-led...
Researchers at Maastricht UMC+ and GROW have developed a technique that can analyse the entire genome in a single test, allowing for faster determination of embryos suitable for successful pregnancy.