On Friday, November 7, 2025, SISSA will celebrate the opening of the new academic year — the 47th since its foundation. The inaugural ceremony will take place starting at 11:00 a.m. in the “Paolo ...
Reflecting on the spread of generative artificial intelligence technologies, analyzing their opportunities, challenges and ethical and regulatory implications. This is the goal of the Artificial ...
SISSA offers a high-level international research environment where outstanding research projects are carried out. Our mission is to help researchers find the suitable call to carry out their project ...
Existing and future gravitational-wave detectors will observe signals so precisely that they will be able to detect possible deviations from Einstein’s theory of relativity and the standard model of ...
Candidates must apply to be admitted to the standard entrance examination. There are two examination sessions each year usually in March and September. The deadline for applications is around a month ...
SISSA Colloquium returns on Monday, October  20th, at 2 PM in Aula Magna Budinich. This time, we will have the pleasure of hosting Professor Gábor Tamás (University of Szeged, Hungary) who will ...
How many black holes are out there in the Universe? This is one of the most relevant and pressing questions in modern astrophysics and cosmology. The intriguing issue has recently been addressed by ...
Enrico Barausse is one of the 4 PIs of the international consortium GWSky, awarded with 12 million euros by the European Research Council to investigate gravitational waves Existing and future ...
Since the beginning of COVID-19 pandemic SISSA researchers have been working at different levels to help understanding the virus, finding new therapies and developing strategies to contain its ...
Rats perceive the world with a complexity that modern artificial neural networks struggle to match. This is the finding of a recent study published in the journal Patterns by the Visual Neuroscience ...
The magnetic fields that formed in the very early stages of the Universe, may have been billions of times weaker than a small fridge magnet, with strengths comparable to magnetism generated by neurons ...
Chloride ion flows that enter the cells play an important role in the duplication of glioblastoma cells, a highly aggressive brain tumor. This is the finding of research recently published in the ...