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Donald Fitzmaurice, a professor of nanomaterials at University College Dublin, and the founder of Nanomat, believes that thin films made of metal-oxide nanoparticles could have a promising future in solar cells and batteries.
ECONOMIST: MONITOR
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Ian O'Donnell, of University College Dublin, blames the increase on migration (labourers coming back from London), growing social inequality, and a rapid increase in beer consumption.
ECONOMIST: Murder
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Another promising nanotech company, spawned on the campus of University College in Dublin, is privately owned Ntera .
FORBES: Magazine Article
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It is not only in the debating halls of Trinity College and University College Dublin where lively opinion-bashing can be heard.
BBC: Dublin's underground literary scene
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Mark Keane, Chair of Computer Science in University College Dublin, and Aaron Gerow, an MSc candidate in computer science, used a computer model to plot distributions of words from financial articles published between 2006 and 2010.
FORBES: Study: Financial Reporters' Bubbly Word Choice Predicts Stock Market Bubbles
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Lourdes Basabe-Desmonts is a Research Fellow at the Biomedical Diagnostics Institute, Dublin City University, her location of choice since 2006.
UNESCO: 2010 UK and Ireland Winners
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Professors Don Bergh from the University of Denver and Patrick Gibbons from University College Dublin set out to examine exactly this question.
FORBES: Does the stock market appreciate management consultants?
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Dr Eoin O'Malley, who lectures in politics at University College Dublin, suggests Sinn Fein has the added burden of managing two constituencies on this issue.
BBC: Abortion on Sinn Fein conference agenda
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Former Republic of Ireland Under-21 international Sammon began his career with University College Dublin before moving to Derry City.
BBC: Conor Sammon turns down Scunthorpe move
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By the time he got his degree, from University College, Dublin, in 1902, the family was living in the northern suburb of Cabra.
NEWYORKER: Silence, Exile, Punning
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The view in Dublin was that the prospect of the Kells transfer, already being resisted by some university authorities, was now in further doubt.
BBC: Priceless book damaged in flight