Lectures and hands on workshop series
Upcoming
The “personalization from below” paradigm: citizen science-based data altruism practices to rethink health services and personalization.
This lecture introduces the concept of “personalization from below”, examining how citizen-driven data sharing and data altruism initiatives can reshape personalized healthcare. It discusses how patient communities and citizen science practices challenge traditional top-down models of health data governance.
13/05/2026 at 13:00
Dr. Anna Berti SUMAN
Medical citizen science: From data awareness to advocacy
This lecture examines the evolving role of citizens in medical research, from developing awareness and literacy around health data to actively advocating for research priorities and policy change. It highlights how citizen participation can strengthen transparency, accountability, and patient-centered innovation in healthcare.
05/06/2026 at 17:00
Stefania OIKONOMOU
Hands-on Workshop Series
Leveraging AI Agents to Simulate Your Interaction with Patients
Do you find it challenging to start a meaningful conversation with patients? Do you wish it would be possible to practice this interaction early in your study? In this session, we will learn how to use AI Agents to simulate your interaction with patients. The purpose is to practice how to start a meaningful patient-centered conversation while respecting ethics and social responsibility. No prior knowledge or technical skill is required.
19/05/2026 at 10h00
Prof. Leona CHANDRA KRUSE, Associate Prof. Sofie WASS
Citizen science-based data altruism practices to rethink health services and personalization
This workshop investigates how citizen science and data altruism can enable more participatory and transparent health data ecosystems. Participants will co-design practical pathways toward improved personalization and citizen-driven health services.
27/05/2026 at 13:00
Dr. Anna Berti SUMAN
Intelligent Assistant for Student Inquiry Support (IASIS)
IASIS (Intelligent Assistant for Student Inquiry Support) is an educational innovation designed to enhance the learning experience of undergraduate medical students through the integration of Generative AI (GenAI). It addresses the challenge of limited personalised academic support by offering an in-house, open-source GenAI tool that provides accurate, context-aware responses to student questions based on course materials.
28/05/2026 at 15:00
Dr. Alfredo CAPOZUCCA, Dr. Maria PAVLOU
A principle-based approach to the ethical evaluation of digital and AI-based healthcare applications
Digital health technologies raise profound ethical questions — but how do you actually go about evaluating them in a structured and reflected way? This hands-on workshop introduces a principle-based approach to the ethical evaluation of digital and AI-based healthcare applications. The approach guides participants through different steps of ethical analysis: identifying who is affected by a technology, mapping what is ethically at stake for each stakeholder, and reasoning through how competing interests should be balanced. The approach is designed as a reusable tool — for students encountering a new digital health technology, for clinicians navigating decisions about AI-assisted care, and for educators looking for a structured way of teaching ethics in digital health contexts.
29/05/2026 at 16:00
PD Dr. Nadia PRIMC
Virtual dissection tool for anatomy learning
This hands-on session will simulate how virtual tools can be beneficial in human anatomy teachings, exploiting a live virtual dissection.
03/06/2026 at 16:00
Prof. Dr. Paola ALBERTI
Completed
AI and Diagnostic Assistance
This lecture introduces students to the role of artificial intelligence in medical diagnostic assistance. It explores core AI concepts, including machine learning and pattern recognition, and demonstrates how these technologies support clinicians in interpreting medical data, identifying anomalies, and improving diagnostic accuracy.
26/03/2026 at 18:00
Prof. Christoph SCHOMMER
Emerging Technologies in Health Professionals’ Education
This lecture will examine the impact of emerging technologies on health professionals’ education. We will discuss the limitations of traditional training methods and explore how tools like simulations, virtual reality (VR) and artificial intelligence (AI) enhance learning experiences. The lecture will cover the benefits and challenges of these technologies and their potential to improve training outcomes and support continuous learning.
30/03/2026 at 09:10
Prof. Jaana-Maija KOIVISTO (University of Helsinki)
A Stroll Along AI
This talk will present the historical development of artificial intelligence, highlighting its major milestones. It will provide a clear definition of AI and outline the relationships between its principal subfields, including Machine Learning, Deep Learning, and Generative AI. Concrete examples will be explored, along with an examination of current challenges and risks associated with AI, followed by a perspective on future developments. The overall objective is to contribute to a clearer and more accessible understanding of the concept of AI.
01/04/2026 at 10:00
Prof. Christophe LEY
Where ethics meets the machine: ethics of AI and digitalisation in healthcare
A clinical risk score shapes a treatment decision. A monitoring device guides care throughout a hospital shift. These tools are trusted — but how well do we understand their limits? As digital technologies move into hospitals, and health systems, the ethical questions they raise don’t fit neatly into existing frameworks. This lecture brings together the foundational principles of medical ethics and the emerging ethics of technology to ask: what does it mean to design, use, and trust digital health tools responsibly?
02/04/2026 at 16:00
PD Dr. Nadia PRIMC
Virtual dissections in human anatomy teachings
This lecture will present a possible virtual approach to human anatomy teachings that both students and staff can employ to enhance the learning experience.
09/04/2026 at 16:00
Prof. Dr. Paola ALBERTI
Introduction to Cybersecurity Trends in Healthcare
This lecture introduces students to the growing importance of cybersecurity in healthcare. It highlights how cybersecurity risks evolve alongside the digitalization of hospitals and health systems, and it outlines the most common cybersecurity risks currently affecting healthcare organizations. The session further emphasizes the role future clinicians will play in protecting patient data and fostering a culture of cybersecurity awareness within clinical environments.
14/04/2026 at 13:00
Associate Prof. Elina Niemimaa
Gamification approach in human anatomy teachings
This lecture will provide a possible exploitation of virtual dissections in human anatomy teachings embedding gamification into the didactive activities.
15/04/2026 at 16:00
Prof. Dr. Paola ALBERTI
The patient in the loop: autonomy, privacy and responsibility in digital healthcare
Digital health technologies are reshaping the relationship between patients, clinicians, and the systems they navigate — in ways that existing frameworks of consent, trust, and accountability struggle to keep pace with. This lecture examines, from an ethical perspective, what digital health technologies do to the individual patient-clinician relationship, through four interconnected lenses: the black-box problem, the automation bias, the responsibility gap, as well as privacy and data.
20/04/2026 at 17:00
PD Dr. Nadia PRIMC
Mobilising citizen science in support of health research and health services provision
This lecture explores how citizen science can support health research and improve health service delivery by engaging patients and citizens in data collection, knowledge production, and community-based research. It highlights practical examples where participatory approaches contribute to more inclusive and responsive health systems.
23/04/2026 at 13:00
Dr. Anna Berti SUMAN
Medical Education in the Age of ICT and AI: Rethinking Learning and Teaching Beyond Directed Instruction
Information and Communication Technology (ICT), and especially artificial intelligence, fundamentally changes the conditions under which learning and teaching in higher education take place. When access to information, explanations, and procedural guidance becomes instantly available, traditional models of directed instruction centered on knowledge transmission lose much of their educational rationale. This transformation is particularly consequential for medical and health sciences education, where professional competence depends not only on knowledge acquisition but on clinical reasoning, ethical judgment, collaboration, and adaptive expertise. This keynote examines how ICT, and specifically AI, reshapes learning environments, student practices, and academic expectations in higher education. Drawing on socio-constructivist perspectives on learning and teaching, the talk argues that the central task of medical education is shifting from teaching students what to know toward designing learning environments in which students learn how to think, interpret, decide, and act under uncertainty.
27/04/2026 at 17:00
Prof. Robert REUTER
Who Benefits? Justice, discrimination, and better health outcomes in digital healthcare
This lecture explores the systemic consequences of AI and digitalisation in healthcare, covering severa key themes: bias in training data drawn from a narrow range of populations; digital divides that risk deepening existing health disparities; the tension between optimising for accuracy versus fairness across groups; and the current regulatory landscape, from the EU AI Act to WHO ethics guidelines. Together, these themes support a central argument — ethical AI in healthcare is not merely a technical challenge, but a structural and political one, defined by who builds these systems, whose data they rely on, and whose needs they serve.
04/05/2026 at 17:00
PD Dr. Nadia PRIMC
Immersive Surgical Edu
The surgical education learning process significantly relies on hands-on experience and the development of tactile abilities. Access to surgical training, however, is limited, and typical teaching techniques may not give the essential experience to acquire these abilities. Immersive technologies, including VR and AR, offer the potential to improve surgical training by allowing learners to practice and perfect their abilities in a safe and controlled setting. Haptic feedback may allow students to experience a realistic simulation of surgical operations by giving them with a feeling of touch, helping them to gain the essential motor skills and confidence in real-world surgical scenarios. Immersive learning may also be utilised in surgical education to address ethical issues. The main goal of this project is to design, build, and test a haptic-enabled immersive tool for surgical education. These tools will integrate cutting-edge VR and AR capabilities with wearable haptic devices, giving students a realistic and immersive learning experience in a safe and controlled setting, resulting in enhanced learning outcomes and patient care.
05/05/2026 at 11:00
Prof. Filippo Sanfilippo
Peer-to-peer tutoring activities in human anatomy with virtual tools and flipped classroom approaches
This lecture will provide a possible exploitation of virtual dissections in human anatomy teachings, empowering students making them the protagonist of the learning process via actions such as peer-to-peer tutoring and flipped classroom.
06/05/2026 at 16h00
Prof. Dr. Paola ALBERTI