User:Quaenuncabibis
Appearance
Name
[edit]"Quae nunc abibis" is a line take from Hadrian's last poem starting with the line animula vagula blandula.
Editathon contribution
[edit]Co-organiser of the following Wikipedia Editathons:
- EPFL goes Wikipedia
- EPFL Editathon on Women in Science
- Diversithon: Editathon on Diversity
- Sustainabilithon: Editathon on Sustainability
Conflict of interest
[edit]This user, in accordance with the Wikimedia Foundation's Terms of Use, discloses that they have been paid by EPFL's communication unit Mediacom for their contributions to Wikipedia.
Initiated articles on behalf of EPFL
[edit]The articles listed are initiated on behalf of EPFL on subjects and objects from the wider range of the EPFL.
- Françoise Gisou van der Goot, Dutch cell biologist
- Olaf Blanke, German neurologist and neuroscientist
- Matthias Lütolf, Swiss biomedical engineer
- Claudia R. Binder, Swiss interdisciplinary scientist
- Christophe Van Gerrewey, Belgian architectural and literary theorist, writer and architect
- Suliana Manley, American biophysicist
- Wendy Lee Queen, America chemist and material scientist
- Marcel Salathé, Swiss modeler and digital epidemiologist
- Melanie Blokesch, German microbiologist
- Joachim Lingner, Swiss molecular biologist
- Wulfram Gerstner, German neuroscientist
- Aleksandra Radenovic, Swiss-Croatian bioengineer
- Carmela Troncoso, Spanish telecommunication engineer and privacy expert
- Alexander Mathis, Austrian neuroscientist
- Yimon Aye, American chemist and molecular biologist
- Raffaella Buonsanti, Italian chemist
- David Suter (biologist), Swiss molecular biologist
- Mathias Payer, Liechtensteinian computer scientist
- Pavan Ramdya, American neuroscientist
- Giulia Tagliabue, Italian mechanical engineer
- Xile Hu, Swiss chemist
- Pierre Gönczy, Swiss-Italian cell biologist
- Andrew Oates, Australian-British biologist and embryologist
- Mohammad Khaja Nazeeruddin, Swiss chemist and materials scientist
- Michael Herzog, German neuroscientist
- Roland Tormey, Irish Sociologist
- Marinella Mazzanti, Italian chemist
- Majed Chergui, Swiss-French physicist
- John Martin Kolinski, US-American applied physicist
- Rolf Gruetter, Swiss physicist specialized in magnetic resonance
- Luisa Lambertini, Italian international finance researcher
- Sylvie Roke, Dutch photochemist
- Didier Guzzoni, Swiss computer scientist and inventor of Siri
- Damir Filipovic, Swiss mathematician
- Jean-Pierre Hubaux, Swiss-Belgian computer scientist spezialised in security and privacy
- Zhu Jieping, French chemist specialized in total synthesis
- Niels Quack, Swiss and German engineer
- Auke Ijspeert, Swiss-Dutch roboticist and neuroscientist
- Kevin Sivula, American chemical engineer
- Dimitri Van De Ville, Swiss-Belgian computer scientist and neuroscientist
- Michael Lehning, German geologist and atmospheric scientist
- Luc Thévenaz, Swiss physicist specialized in fibre optics
- Jean-Louis Scartezzini, Swiss building physicist specialized in daylighting
- Vincent Kaufmann, Swiss sociologist and urbanist
- Michel Bierlaire, Swiss-Belgian mathematician
- Gerardo Turcatti, Swiss-Uruguayan chemical biologist
- Pierre Magistretti, Italian physician and neuroscientist
- Julia Schmale, German atmospheric scientist
- Jean-Luc Sandoz, French-Swiss construction engineer and wood expert
- Gaétan de Rassenfosse, Belgian economist
- Lambert Sonna Momo, Swiss computer scientist and cryptographer
- Carlotta Guiducci, Italian bio-engineer
- Matthieu Wyart, French physicist
- Marc Gruber, German management researcher
- Edoardo Charbon, Swiss quantum engineer
- Matthias Grossglauser, Swiss communication engineer
- Giuseppe Carleo, Italian physicist
- Friedhelm Hummel, German neuroscientist and neurologist
- Dusan Licina, Serbian engineer
- Gaétan de Rassenfosse, Belgian economist
- Rüdiger Fahlenbrach, German economist
- Matthias Grossglauser, Swiss communication engineer
- Majed Chergui, Swiss and French physicist