Enhanced Games athletes can compete for US$1 million prizes. But at what cost to sport?
Alexandra Consterdine, Senior Lecturer in Sport and Exercise Science writes in The Conversation.
Alexandra Consterdine, Senior Lecturer in Sport and Exercise Science writes in The Conversation.
MA Journalism graduate scoops NCTJ Student Project of Year
Liverpool John Moores University hosted the highly prestigious 14th British Nepal Academic Council (BNAC) Conference on 14th and 15th April 2016.
Students from Liverpool John Moores University are trialling cutting edge technology that will enable them to learn to drive without the use of a car.
Six months after launching the Reciprocal Mentoring programme, prominent leaders from the city of Liverpool and the university came together on campus, to mark the halfway point of their innovative scheme to develop greater understanding between the university and the communities they serve.
Plesiosaurs are an extinct group of marine reptiles from the age of dinosaurs who are famous for their long necks. The effect of such long necks on how these animals swam is a mystery but now computer simulations are helping LJMU scientists understand what would happen if a plesiosaur turned its head while swimming.
IT Services is running a series of drop-in classroom display and audio technology introduction/refresher sessions
An international team of scientists, led by the China University of Geosciences in Beijing and including palaeontologists from the Liverpool John Moores University, has shed new light on some unusual dinosaur tracks from northern China. The tracks appear to have been made by four-legged sauropod dinosaurs yet only two of their feet have left prints behind.
Early-career researcher Hannah Dalgleish was invited to Parliament after making a new discovery about the Milky Way.
LJMU academic staff travelled to Malta to recognise and celebrate the achievements of a group of graduating students.