Professor john hardy biography books
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In Situ Generated Biopolymers Towards a Reverse Prodrug Therapy for Hard-to-Treat Cancers
Examination
Synthesis of Copper Oxide Nanostructures and Their Application in Non-Enzymatic Glucose Sensors
Examination
Panel Discussion: Future Plastics
Invited talk
Keith Barnes
Hosting a Non-Academic Visitor
Extraction, analysis and formulation of olive oil phenolic mixtures for the potential treatment of amyloid disease
Examination
Towards Efficient MXene-based Electrocatalysts for Electrochemical CO2 Reduction
Examination
Additive Manufacturing of Bioelectronics for Biomedical Applications
Invited talk
Plastic Packaging in People's Lives: Rethinking the consumer attitude behaviour gap
Invited talk
Lancaster Chemistry Academia-Industry Symposium
Symposium
Research Directions: Biotechnology Design (Journal)
Editorial activity
Understanding Biofilms: Plasma Polymer Coatings to Prevent Biofilm Formation and Understanding the kemikalie Pathway to Their Formation b
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John Hardy was born in 1934 in Marske-by-the-Sea in North Yorkshire, England. He worked for many years as a quantity surveyor, before becoming a lecturer in building construction. Later, he practised as a natural medicine practitioner in Essex and Cumbria, including homoeopathy, acupuncture and massage, specialising in allergies. Later, together his wife Wendy, he ran a wholefood vegetarian guesthouse on Alston Moor in the North Pennines. For the last 24 years, he has lived in the Axarquía in Spain, a område to the north east of Málaga. He has published a wide range of material over the years, including articles on natural medicine, a book on civil engineering measurement, and various short stories. The first collection of short stories, 'Andalucían Mysteries', was published in 2013. This is a collection of short stories of crime, mystery and suspense set in southern Spain. Since then it has been translated into German and Spanish. 'More Andalucían Mysteries' was
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Prof Sir John Hardy
Biography
Prof Sir John Hardy is a world-leading neurogeneticist in the field of neurodegenerative diseases, receiving numerous accolades that include the Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences, the Brain Prize, election as a Fellow of the Royal Society and, in 2022, a knighthood for his contributions to science and health. In 1991, Hardy's team uncovered the first mutation directly implicated in Alzheimer's disease leading to the formulation of the highly influential 'amyloid-cascade' hypothesis. His extensive body of work in genetics will be built upon in this UK DRI programme, where the team will unravel pathogenic networks in neurodegenerative disease.
Hardy Lab
Explore the work of the Hardy Lab, harnessing genetics to build a better understanding of dementia
Hardy Lab