Media representatives can now register for the 72nd Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting (Physiology/Medicine). Around 40 Nobel Laureates have confirmed their participation in the meeting. They will play a major role in shaping the programme from Sunday, 25 June, to Friday, 30 June 2023, and will exchange ideas with more than 600 Young Scientists from all over the world.
The agenda includes current issues such as diversity in science, artificial intelligence in medicine and the impact of climate change on health will be discussed. The Next Gen Science Sessions will give Young Scientists a stage to present their own research.
Accreditation for participation in the Lindau Inselhalle
Programme overview in the Lindau Mediatheque
Opportunities for interviews with Nobel Laureates and Young Scientists from almost 100 nations
LINO23 with focus on Physiology/Medicine
About the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings
Since their foundation in 1951, the Lindau Nobel Laureate Meetings have developed into a unique international scientific forum. The annual meetings provide an opportunity for an exchange between different generations, cultures and disciplines. The theme of the Lindau Meetings alternates between Physics, Chemistry or Physiology and Medicine – the three Nobel Prize scientific disciplines. Every five years an interdisciplinary Meeting takes place, while the Lindau Meeting on Economic Sciences is held every three years. Through the medium of various declarations (2020 for Open Science, 2015 on Climate Change, 1955 Against the Use of Nuclear Weapons) the scientists have repeatedly joined in the public debate with political appeals.
It was the Lindau physicians Franz Karl Hein and Gustav Wilhelm Parade who approached Count Lennart Bernadotte af Wisborg with the idea of a meeting of Nobel Laureates and proceeded to jointly implement this with him – since 1953 with the participation of young scientists. Some 35,000 students, PhD candidates and post-docs have since taken part. Their experience of the Meeting may be literally once-in-a-lifetime, but they remain permanent members of the Lindau Alumni Network and ambassadors for scientific dialogue.

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