Five years of Prospero
Five years ago, Liverpool John Moores University switched on Prospero, a High-Performance Computing (HPC) cluster named for the wise magician in Shakespeare’s The Tempest.
Five years ago, Liverpool John Moores University switched on Prospero, a High-Performance Computing (HPC) cluster named for the wise magician in Shakespeare’s The Tempest.
See our full results and more detail about LJMU Research on our Research spotlight pages. On these pages, we showcase how research has an impact – in our teaching, in our city region and in the values our university lives by.
Explore our Research Informed Teaching examples which have been collected from across all of our faculties. They illustrate scenarios where LJMU research and knowledge exchange has changed and enhanced our curriculum offer.
Welcome to the Impact Exchange, the LJMU blog site to explore how our world-leading research is making benefits beyond our university.
Meet the academics behind the Impact case studies and hear about them in their own words.
Explore the Liverpool City Region case studies and the people behind them.
Watch Dr George Wilson, a former jockey, talk about supporting riders to counter the detrimental effects of weight-making both on racing performance and long-term wellbeing.
Watch Professor of English Joe Moran speak about shyness as a condition “ignored” in the current wave of attention on mental health and wellbeing.
By interrogating data from coroner, primary care and A&E records, health psychologist Dr Pooja Saini identified a recurring theme; a lack of support and services for people in suicidal crisis, particularly within community settings.
Find out more about The National Schools Observatory: Fascination with Space fires young scientific careers - Professor Andy Newsam.