• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

HSE University Strengthens Ties with Central Asia

HSE University Strengthens Ties with Central Asia

© HSE University

Experts from the HSE Faculty of Urban and Regional Development (FURD) took part in the international forum ‘The SCO in the Era of Digital Diplomacy: Scientific Initiatives for Global Balance.’ The event, held in Astana, was organised by the Eurasian Association for International Studies and the Institute for the Study of Regional Integration (Kazakhstan).

The forum brought together leading experts on integration processes across the Eurasian space, including specialists from SCO member states—China, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, and Russia—as well as from Turkey, an SCO observer state.

Victoria Khomich, Deputy Dean for International Affairs at the HSE Faculty of Urban and Regional Development and a forum participant, highlighted the key challenges facing the region’s countries: the establishment of unified standards and approaches to information security, the management of urbanisation processes and city development, and scientific, technological, and educational integration.

Victoria Khomich (centre)
© HSE University

‘We presented the main directions of international cooperation in urban studies. Following the discussions, certain topics emerged as particularly relevant for Central Asia: master planning, socio-economic development strategies, transport planning, and the smart city concept,’ commented Victoria Khomich.

Evgeny Mikhaylenko

Previously, Dean of the HSE Faculty of Urban and Regional Development Evgeny Mikhaylenko emphasised that international cooperation is a vital tool for addressing complex urban and regional development challenges. ‘Participation in international forums and partnership projects enables us to analyse emerging challenges, assess achievements, and shape future plans, as well as generate ideas for academic research,’ he noted.

Experts from neighbouring countries particularly praised the faculty’s high level of expertise and its practice-oriented approach to dialogue.

Notably, following the event, representatives of relevant institutions from SCO countries—primarily colleagues from Central Asia—expressed strong interest in FURD’s professional development programmes, as well as in the potential for designing customised continuing education programmes for municipal officials from Central Asian countries.

The parties agreed to continue developing cooperation in academic, research, and project-based areas.

Such events are especially significant in the run-up to the SCO’s 25th anniversary in 2026. After a quarter of a century of active integration efforts across the Eurasian region—building trust, strengthening humanitarian ties, establishing legal frameworks, and creating tools to enhance economic effectiveness—there is a pressing need for a joint shift towards a more fundamental and practice-based level of cooperation, in which cities may play a central role.

See also:

‘It Is a Great Honour for Us to Be Partners’

In late March 2026, an official meeting took place between a delegation from HSE University and delegations from Vietnam National University, Hanoi (VNU); the Government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam; and the Embassy of Vietnam in the Russian Federation. The participants discussed key areas of cooperation that will help strengthen ties not only between the universities, but also between the two countries.

How the Brain Processes a Word: HSE Researchers Compare Reading Routes in Adults and Children

Researchers from the HSE Center for Language and Brain used magnetoencephalography to study how the brains of adults and children respond to words during reading. They showed that in children the brain takes longer to process words that are frequently used in everyday speech, while rare words and pseudowords are processed in the same way—slowly and in parts. With age, the system is reorganised: high-frequency words shift to a fast route, whereas new letter combinations are still analysed slowly. The study was published in the journal Psychophysiology.

How Neural Networks Detect and Interpret Wordplay: New Insights from HSE Researchers

An international team including researchers from the HSE Faculty of Computer Science has presented KoWit-24, an annotated dataset of 2,700 Russian-language Kommersant news headlines containing wordplay. The dataset enables an assessment of how artificial intelligence detects and interprets wordplay. Experiments with five large language models show that even advanced systems still make mistakes, and that interpreting wordplay is more challenging for them than detecting it. The results were presented at the RANLP conference; the paper is available on Arxiv.org, and the dataset and the code for reproducing the experiments are available on GitHub.

HSE Holds Exams, Quizzes, and Selection Rounds for School Students in Tashkent and Bishkek

More than 3,000 international school students took part in the INTO HSE International Olympiad, whose award ceremonies were held in Tashkent and Bishkek in March 2026. The university’s outreach events also included final examinations, presentations of academic programmes, and on-site selection tests for prospective applicants. In Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, nearly 200 participants received diplomas as winners and prize-winners. The best of them will be eligible to apply for state-funded places at HSE.

BRICS International School Held in Delhi

The results of the BRICS International School: New Generation, which was held in Delhi, proved that young people have become key participants in the global dialogue. The event brought together 200 young leaders from leading universities and expert centres in India. The programme was organised by the BRICS Expert Council–Russia, based at HSE University, together with the Russian House in New Delhi with the support of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation.

HSE Researchers Experimentally Demonstrate Positive Effects of Urban Parks on the Brain

Scientists at HSE University have investigated the effect of parks on the cognitive and emotional resources of city dwellers. The researchers compared brain electrical activity in 30 participants while they watched videos of walks through parks and along busy highways. The results showed that green urban environments with trees produce a consistent effect across individuals, helping the brain calm down and relax. By contrast, walks along busy streets were found to be distracting. The findings have been published in Scientific Reports.

HSE to Launch Laboratories in Space Research and Nanoelectronics with One of India’s Top Universities

Scientists from the HSE University and the Indian Institute of Technology Bombay (IIT Bombay) will carry out joint research in the storage, transmission, and processing of data in space systems. A second major project will be a laboratory for superconducting spintronics—a promising field in modern nanoelectronics.

Scientists Show That Peer Influence Can Be as Effective as Expert Advice

Eating habits can be shaped not only by the authority of medical experts but also through ordinary conversations among friends. Researchers at HSE University have shown that advice from peers to reduce sugar consumption is just as effective as advice from experts. The study's findings have been published in Frontiers in Nutrition.

HSE University to Host Second ‘Genetics and the Heart’ Congress

HSE University, the National Research League of Cardiac Genetics, and the Central State Medical Academy of the Administrative Directorate of the President will hold the Second ‘Genetics and the Heart’ Congress with international participation. The event will take place on February 7–8, 2026, at the HSE University Cultural Centre.

HSE University Develops Tool for Assessing Text Complexity in Low-Resource Languages

Researchers at the HSE Centre for Language and Brain have developed a tool for assessing text complexity in low-resource languages. The first version supports several of Russia’s minority languages, including Adyghe, Bashkir, Buryat, Tatar, Ossetian, and Udmurt. This is the first tool of its kind designed specifically for these languages, taking into account their unique morphological and lexical features.