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Naked Scientists Special Editions
What climate change does to kelp forests
2025/04/03
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In this episode, how climate change impacts kelp forests, selecting for less animal-friendly variants, refining AI models for better water infrastructure design, classifying extinct marine megafauna and when best to swim with them, the coast consequences of climate change, and why a better understanding of the planet's drylands is critical... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Hollywood helps brain scientists probe thoughts
2025/02/26
This month, how films are helping neuroscientists link brain activity patterns to specific thought processes, a breakthrough in managing opiate overdose, a technique to study animal teamwork, extracting more information from brain scan data, and how childhood adversity blunts later fear responses... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Personalised medicine, droughts, and dryland research
2024/12/24
Personalised medicine and gene screens for disease, why dinosaurs disappeared, planning for droughts, and new vistas in the drylands arena... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Evolving flu, and the desert decomposition conundrum
2024/12/20
Predicting how influenza viruses will evolve, how deserts decompose matter despite the dry, what worms are revealing about a gene linked to autism, and what makes mice fearful of cat smells. Dr Chris Smith talks to the authors of the latest leading research in eLife... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Cancer mood control, and birth products blocking pain
2024/11/01
This month, signs that cancers communicate with the brain to alter mood, why antibodies are unreliable in research, evidence that social training can cut stress and boost brain volume, and agents derived from birth products that suppress inflammation and kill pain... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Future cancer care, and the cost of large animal extinction
2024/10/25
In this episode, why approaches to cancer care need a pro-active approach in future, the opportunities arising for the cancer vaccine space, competency-based medical training, the environmental costs of losing large animals, and why water resilience needs careful planning now... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Vampire bacteria, "hangry" males, and ants using moonlight
2024/09/10
This month, Chris Smith hears how blood-thirsty bacteria sniff out wounds to trigger infections, how ants navigate at night, how male and female brains respond differently to starvation, and inflammation linked to premature labour... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Microbiomes control blood pressure, and the cost of water
2024/07/31
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This month, evidence that the microbiome is controlling blood pressure - so will we treat hypertension with probiotics in future? Also, plastic is everywhere and an urgent environmental threat, but is the public aware, or do they care? We also consider the economics of animal extinction and species conservation, the price we pay for water, and the role of the "blue carbon" in keeping CO2 in check... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Hibernation, Ketamine and Aphantasia
2024/04/19
This month, how animals hibernate and evidence that muscle myosin makes its own heat in the cold, brain scans to reveal how ketamine relieves resistant depression, the way the brain changes when animals build a bond, the evolution of flu outbreaks, and how aphantasia affects autobiographical memory. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
The proteins responsible for feeling cold revealed...
2024/04/02
A problem that's been puzzling scientists for decades is the way our bodies recognise cold stimuli, and researchers at the University of Michigan have finally got to the bottom of it. They've identified the protein GluK2 acts as a sensor in our bodies for cold temperatures, and Sannia Farrukh has been finding out more... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Apes reveal language origins, and being dyslexic in science
2024/03/08
This month we hear what orangutans can tell us about the origins of human speech, we ask if science making life even harder for dyslexics, where do the scientists we train end up and do they stay in science, and new insights into the songs whales sing underwater... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Making waves about coastline conservation, and plastic waste
2024/02/14
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This month the connections that human inhabitants have to the coast, why we're still in the middle of a worsening extinction crisis despite international laws and treaties designed to protect nature, the promise of pharmacogenomics and personalised medicine, the plastic pollution problem and how to tackle it, and why water management in the face of a changing climate needs more than just a single solution. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Bees can't taste pesticides, and how albatrosses get aloft
2023/11/30
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In the eLife Podcast this month, signs that bees are oblivious to pesticides in nectar, sea anemone stinging strategies, a new means of cell-cell communication to share growth factors and other signals, how plants make a comeback when ice sheets retreat, and how the world's biggest bird uses wind and waves to good effect to minimise the costs of takeoff... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Recycled plastics pollute food, and the value of water
2023/11/10
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Better awareness of the precious resource that is water, getting a grip on coastal ecosystems and the impact of pollution, why recycled plastics are a threat for food packaging and kitchen utensils, how we can help humans to step up in extreme environments, and the opportunity offered by "lived experience" when it comes to mental health all go under the microscope in this episode of the Cambridge Prisms Podcast. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Wildlife Trade Extinctions and 21st Century Psychology
2023/10/20
This time we hear how many species are being driven to extinction by human trade, why clinical psychology needs an update for the 21st Century, how non-specialists can help to plug the gap in mental health services, what art can do for science and conservation of coastal habitats, and the role of epigenetics in medicine... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Surviving a fusion bomb
2023/08/11
Ken Mcginley was there during some of the first tests of hydrogen bombs in the 1950s. We were lucky enough to hear his story... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Does our language affect our decision making?
2023/02/23
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There are many factors that might affect the way we make decisions: our age, our past experiences, even our mood that day. But now, a new study has suggested that the language we speak also plays a part in our willingness to wait for a reward. Researchers gave the choice of having an amount of money now, or a slightly greater amount later. But they put this choice to bilingual speakers, once in each language. So did the language in which the decision was put to these people affect their decision? Speaking to Will Tingle from Tel-Aviv University was Tali Regev and, kicking us off, Tamar... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Microbial life deep underground
2023/02/06
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Comparatively, we know an awful lot about life on the surface of planet earth. We know a lot less about the extent of life in our oceans, and we know even less about the life festering deep beneath us, in the rocks underground. Scientists estimate that 20% of the earth's biomass (that's the combined weight of all living things) are beneath our feet - microbes adapted to the extreme temperature and pressure down there. Geologists, like Andy Mitchell from the University of Aberystwyth, are determined to understand more about these microorganisms, and not just for scientific interest. If we are... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
How the pandemic affected child development
2022/10/21
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Babies born during the Covid-19 lockdowns are behind on their language development. That's the finding of a recent study comparing infants born during the pandemic with similar children born in previous years. The reason, as the Royal College of Surgeons Ireland's Susan Byrne explains to Risa Bagwandin, is that social isolation and face masks made it harder for developing youngsters to explore, socialise and interact in the key ways that help foster their communication skills... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
New Ultrasound Technique for Breast Imaging
2022/09/30
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A new non invasive technique to pick up breast cancer has been unveiled by UK scientists. Breast cancer is the most diagnosed form cancer in the UK. Dense breast tissue, particularly common in young women, is difficult to image using existing techniques. Now scientists at the National Physical Laboratory have developed a new technique , using ultrasound. Risa Bagwandin spoke to senior research scientist, Daniel Sarno... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Search and rescue rats
2022/06/15
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Apopo is a charity that trains African giant pouched rats for humanitarian purposes, with a view to combating some of the challenges faced by countries in the developing world. Originally, they trained these much shunned rodents to sniff out unexploded landmines left over from wars in countries like Mozambique. More recently, their keen sense of smell has also enabled trainers to develop them into excellent detectors of Tuberculosis carriers, so that patients can get diagnosed more quickly than before and receive treatment. Now, these Hero rats as they've been dubbed, are being prepared for a... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
TV is influencing careers
2022/06/07
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Did you end up in your dream job? Or did you end up pursuing a career quite intensely for some reason that eludes you? Perhaps the media representation of your profession had a part to play. Shrikanth Narayanan and colleagues from the University of Southern California created a dataset to analyse 4000 professions in the subtitles of over 136,000 movies and TV shows and found that their representation may have influenced some of us to take up a career we loved watching on screen... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
FIFA Fall Out with EA
2022/05/17
There's news of a huge rift in the world of video games... EA Sports, who made the first ever FIFA football game in 1993, have announced that they will no longer be licensing the FIFA name. Chris Berrow, from the Naked Gaming Podcast, has been finding out why and what the consequences might be... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Did the lockdown make us more creative?
2022/05/17
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Now, I want you to cast your mind back to that first lockdown (if you can bear it) and to think about the ways you chose to fill all that new found free time. Perhaps, like the participants of a survey conducted by the Paris Brain Institute to learn more about the effects of the pandemic on creativity, you decided to sharpen your culinary skills, or spent more time pottering in the garden. But what can this uptick in artistic endeavours in such strange circumstances tell us about the way we react to new situations? This and more was the topic of conversation between James Tytko and... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Dog and Dingo DNA sequences
2022/04/29
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Dingoes are native Australian dogs, although how and when they got to Australia isn't known. They were certainly already there by the time the first western explorers visited the continent, but fossil dingo remains go back only a few thousand years. So what is the relationship between dogs and dingoes, and the wolves they're both related to? Speaking with Chris Smith, Latrobe University's Bill Ballard got into this debate under slightly unusual circumstances... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Coffee without the coffee beans
2022/04/28
Coffee prices are on the rise and the plant is said to decline by 60% before 2050, meaning new coffee alternatives are being considered in order to give us that caffeine hit. Harry Lewis speaks to Charlie Shaw from Atomo coffee to find out how they've been making our favourite beverage, without the use of coffee beans... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Recreating smells from the past
2022/04/07
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If I asked you to give up one of your five senses, which one would you choose? Chances are, instead of giving up your ability to see or hear, your sense of smell would be in pole position for the chop. Scientists in Germany think we're under appreciative of smell in our evolution as a species, with new research from the Max Planck Institute exploring biomolecular methods to bring smells from the past back to life. James Tytko spoke with Barbara Huber... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
A new method for recycling plastics
2022/04/04
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The world has a huge problem with plastics. While they are a materials scientist's dream in terms of their properties, they are an environmentalist's worst nightmare, because they don't break down naturally and are very hard to recycle. But Athina Anastasaki, from ETH Zurich, has set herself the goal of making plastics that can be recycled more easily and now she thinks getting close. Chris Smith found out more... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Data storage in DNA
2022/03/24
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Researchers have been studying DNA as a method to store binary data. As data generation continues to increase in the information age, we need new methods to store it. DNA is extremely robust and can store data 100 times more densely compared to a computer hard drive. In order to capitalise on DNA as a data storage platform, modifications to the molecules that make up DNA are currently being studied. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Solving puzzles to help cancer research
2022/03/23
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Playing games may be something you do in your spare time or in the queue at the supermarket, but striving for that elusive high score can also now contribute to science! Julia Ravey grabbed her mobile and caught up with Marc Marti-Renom; he's part of a team at the Centre for Genomic Regulation in Barcelona, where they've built a game for your phone that will help contribute to cancer research... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Pig grunts indicate their emotions
2022/03/17
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There are over 7,000 documented languages in the world to date, and now we might have another to add to the list: the one spoken by pigs. No, this is not an April Fool come early. Elodie Mandel-Briefer, from the University of Copenhagen, has assembled a vast dataset of pig noises. And by correlating the noises the animals produced in response to positive or negative experiences, she can pin emotions on sounds. Julia Ravey got in touch to find out if the research team responsible are completely off their trotters... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Indoor pollution from cleaning
2022/03/11
Researchers from Indiana University studied the reactions of volatile compounds released when cleaning with ozone in the air. They found the reactions led to formation of nanoparticles classified as indoor pollutants. Evelyna Wang speaks to Phillip Stevens about this discovery... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
The Dangers of Nuclear Weapons
2022/03/10
Nuclear weapons are at the forefront of news but what are they and how do they work? Anoushka Handa reports... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Creating Oxygen on the Moon
2022/03/02
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As NASA aims to send humans back to the moon in the upcoming years, research on how to supply oxygen to future settlements on the moon are underway. Oxygen can be genearted from lunar resources such as ice. A team of researchers including Mark Symes, from the University of Glasgow and the European Space Agency, have been studying the effects of low gravity environments on oxygen production... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Roman faeces housing fossilised parasites
2022/03/01
Washing our hands has become paramount during the pandemic, but the Romans didn't seem to bestow any importance to this, leading to parasites and infections. Anoushka Handa spoke to Sophie Rabinow, to tell us more... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Blood clot tests with smartphones
2022/02/28
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Blood clotting is important in preventing excessive bleeding, but for millions of people, it can also mean increased risk of mortality due to certain medical conditions. Blood thinning medication is required for those suffering theses conditions as well as constant blood clot monitoring. A team from the University of Washington, including Justin Chan, has developed a method to take blood clot tests at home, using only a smartphone and a small drop of blood... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Shades of Blue Stop a Mosquito Biting You
2022/02/25
Have you ever got a horrible mosquito bite whilst on holiday and wondered 'why me again?' And was your travel buddy someone who never got one? It could very well be to do with their fashion sense. Anoushka Handa spoke to Jeff Riffell to find out more... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Magnetic Fields Guide Migratory Birds
2022/02/23
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There's a growing body of evidence that birds can detect magnetic fields like the one around the Earth, possibly by "seeing" them. And this, researchers think, accounts for how migrating birds, like reed warblers, manage to find their way, seemingly unerringly, half way around the planet. But it's more subtle than just using the magnetic field like a compass. What Oxford University's Joe Wynn thinks is happening is that the birds are pre-programmed by their upbringing to fly in a certain direction, but they use the angle - or inclination - of the Earth's field, to work out how far north or... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Car Dependence in Greenfield Housing
2022/02/17
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Greenfield housing developments are residential communities built upon land which was not previously occupied by anything else. These modern homes are often very energy efficient, but a new report by Transport for New Homes has found that these developments are offsetting their positive contribution to reducing greenhouse gas emissions because of a lack of planning around sustainable modes of transport. James Tytko went to see for himself... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Why don't plants freeze to death in Winter?
2022/02/14
Krzysztof wrote in to ask 'Why don't plants freeze to death during Winter?' and James Tytko tracked down Professor Howard Griffiths, from the University of Cambridge, to break the ice on this question. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Black hole seen forming new stars
2022/02/09
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Black holes are known for their awesome destructive powers, ripping stars apart piece by piece. But now, scientists have seen evidence of a black hole helping to form stars. Using the Hubble Telescope, researchers at Montana State University have seen a massive black hole at the centre of a small galaxy called Henize 2-10 triggering star formation around it. Robert Spencer spoke to Zachary Schutte to find out more... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Trees for the Jubilee
2022/02/06
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Planting trees has a great impact on creating a greener environment. The Queen's Green Canopy is an initiative to encourage people to plant a tree in honour of the Her Majesty's Platinum Jubilee. Robert Spencer and Anoushka Handa take a dive into the science of trees to find out more about these fantastic plants and to discover what they can do around Cambridge to help... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Game of Life still revealing secrets
2022/02/03
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Mathematicians Ville Salo and Ilkke Toermae from Finland have solved a long-standing problem in the field of cellular automata (The Game of Life). Despite being quite simple systems to describe, these automata often show quite complex behaviour. Now, though, we are starting to find out more about situations when these systems aren't quite so dynamic. Robert Spencer has more... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Organising our memories
2022/02/02
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Memories form a large part of human interaction. Scents, tastes and touch all can invoke us to remember particular events. But how do we know the order of these events? How do you remember that this time last week you were listening to our show... or at least we hope so! New research has shown that the human brain contains time cells to understand when an event has occurred. Anoushka spoke with Dr. Leila Reddy from the French National Center for Scientific Research... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Automating Blood Smears
2022/02/01
Blood smear analysis is a repetitive, laborious, and time consuming job. Research at the University of Cambridge has led to developing a 3D printed device which both speeds up the smearing process and the quality of the blood smears. Julia Ravey talks to Samuel McDermott... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Making new year's resolutions SMART
2022/01/28
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It's the new year, and with that comes a tradition to commit to new year's resolutions. But the typical goals of giving up drinking, or losing weight, can be hard to achieve, especially without support from friends and family. Tricia Smith asked sport psychologist Helen Davis whether there was a smarter way to go about achieving her goal to "get fit" in 2022... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Ichthyosaur found in Rutland
2022/01/27
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The astonishing discovery of this jurassic era creature has been covered on our show before, but this recording features special insight into the dig itself. Mark Evans from the British Antarctic Survey and Emily Swaby from The Open University describe the significance of finding the skeletal remains of this marine reptile to Harry Lewis... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
The Reforestation Re-evaluation
2022/01/26
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Tropical rainforests are deforested at an alarming rate to make way for cultivating crops and rearing livestock. But what happens when these forest areas are abandoned and left to recover in their natural way? Research published in the journal Science gives a message of hope, explaining how forests are able to recover to their original state on a much faster time-scale than first thought. Katie King spoke to lead author, Loorens Poorter, to find out more. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Sleep and Alzheimer's
2022/01/24
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Changing the way the brain controls how we sleep, as a new study suggests, might be a way to cut the risk of Alzheimer's Disease. Alzheimer's is the commonest form of a group of conditions known as senile dementia. They occur when brain cells are lost, progressively robbing us of our mental faculties. In Alzheimer's Disease it's caused by a buildup of a toxic chemical called a-beta; also known as beta amyloid. This naturally accumulates during the day and gets flushed out during a restful night's sleep. But, by studying mice that have been genetically programmed to develop a form of... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Do Asteroids Pose a Real Threat?
2022/01/19
Katie King interviews Huw James, from the Royal Astronomical Society, about the reality of the chances planet-killing asteroids could collide with Earth. What these objects are, how they are found, and what methods are being trialled to prevent any potential collisions... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Listening vs hearing
2022/01/13
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Hearing and listening... is there a difference? I am sure that we have all been guilty of letting our minds drift out of a conversation before realising and immediately trying to tune back in. New research published in Cell Reports describes how brain activity varies during listening and hearing and how this work sheds light on neural pathways linked to attention. Katie King spoke with author Tania Barkat to find out the difference between hearing and listening... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Language and the Brain
2022/01/12
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Understanding the human brain and how it completes complex tasks, like processing other people's speech as well as producing its own, is a complex task in and of itself. As it stands, neuroscience isn't able to tell us the underlying computations that lead to human language. New research from the US has taken an interesting approach to working this out: instead of just studying how real, human intelligence deals with language, these researchers have been looking at how artificial intelligence does it too. Cameron Voisey spoke to Ev Fedorenko from MIT to find out more. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
What is the impact of a black hole?
2022/01/10
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Astronomers believe that nearly every galaxy has a supermassive black hole at its centre, this being true for our very own Milky Way. These objects exert such strong gravitational forces on the matter contained within them that it cannot escape the black hole's pull. Scientists using the LOFAR telescope in the Netherlands have been studying the impact that such black holes have on the Universe on a mind-bogglingly large scale. One of the scientists working on the project, Marisa Brienza from the University of Bologna, told Cameron Voisey what they found. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
IVF embryos are more successful than expected
2022/01/07
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During IVF or in-vitro fertilisation, sperm and eggs are mixed together in a dish to produce fertilised embryos, one or two of which are placed in the uterus where the hope is they will trigger a successful pregnancy. Previously, embryologists would pick out and use only what they judged to be the most promising looking embryos. But now new research from the reproductive genetics company, Igenomix, has found that a large proportion of embryos that were previously being overlooked can in fact lead to successful pregnancies. Katie King spoke to lead author Antonio Capalbo about these findings... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Making antibiotics more effective
2022/01/04
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While the coronavirus pandemic is at the forefront of our minds, it's not the only health crisis looming on the horizon. Antimicrobial resistance has been called the "hidden pandemic". One of the ways to counteract resistance is by developing drugs that make current antibiotics more effective, and new research published by the University of Oxford reveals some promising candidates. Tricia Smith spoke with John Tregoning, a researcher in infectious diseases, but not affiliated with this particular study, to talk about the past, present, and future for these critical, and often "last-resort"... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Omicron update: what's in store for Australia
2021/12/19
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Dr Chris Smith joins Indira Naidoo on the ABC's Nightlife programme to discuss the latest developments in science and answer questions from listeners. This time they look at the difficult decisions confronting politicians and policymakers internationally and how they should react to the omicron new variant, which appears super transmissible but potentially a lot less lethal than other existing forms of SARS-CoV-2... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
The recent evolution of human beings
2021/12/16
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Us humans are thought to have appeared on Earth around 300,000 years ago. But how much have we changed since then? New research from Shanghai Jiao Tong University has found many of our most complex traits have continued to be tweaked, even in the past two to three thousand years. Julia Ravey spoke to Guan Ning Lin about our ancestors and how alike we really are. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
100 years of insulin
2021/12/15
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2021 marks 100 years since insulin was first discovered. The World Health Organisation estimates that 422 million people around the world have diabetes, a disease where the body either can't produce enough insulin or doesn't respond properly to insulin. In the UK, 1 in 15 people are affected, and that's only set to rise as more and more of us are overweight or obese. So what is insulin, how was it discovered, and how have we reached a place where millions of people can safely inject themselves with it every day? Sally Le Page explains... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Cooling down rapidly warming cities
2021/12/14
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More than 50% of the world's population now lives in urban areas and, in recent years, many major cities have been hit with extreme weather events due to the effects of climate change, like the flooding that hit the London underground - and Queen guitarist Brian May's basement - in the summer of 2021. A key reason for this might be that the urban environments themselves are exacerbating the heating effect, as Verner Viisainen heard from Iain Campbell, from the organisation RMI and the lead author of a new United Nations guide on cooling down cities... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Tree growth extended in urban jungles
2021/12/13
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Cities have been found to be warming at faster rates than the rest of the planet due to the materials used such as concrete absorbing heat more readily than organic materials. This is known as the "urban heat island" effect. One antidote, scientists have found, is to plant trees. But flipping the issue around for a moment, what do the trees make of these urban jungles? According to Lin Meng, at the University of California, Berkeley, tree growth in urban locations is different, as she explained to Verner Viisainen, based on research published in PNAS... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
The science of hugs
2021/12/09
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As we near Christmas, we will be subjected to a fair few more hugs than usual! Some of them can be great, and others... just downright awkward. But what makes a bad hug? What makes a good hug? New research has been published investigating the most pleasant hugging style. Katie King spoke to Anna-Lena Duren to find out why hugs are an important area to study. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Sleep schedules & healthier hearts
2021/12/06
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We know that sleep is critical for our physical and mental wellbeing, but as it turns out, the answer doesn't simply lie in the number of hours we spend unconscious each night. New research from digital healthcare company, Huma, suggests that a goldilocks bedtime between 10-11PM is linked with a lower risk of heart disease. Katie King spoke to Dr David Plans, Head of Research from Huma to find out why we all need a bedtime... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Omicron, variant of concern. What do we know?
2021/12/04
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Virologist Chris Smith talks with Radio New Zealand National's Kim Hill on Saturday 27th November as the world contemplates the discovery of the Covid-19 variant that the WHO has dubbed "Omicron" and labelled as a "variant of concern". How will scientists investigate this agent, and how are policymakers responding? Will the vaccines rolled out internationally continue to work, or do they need to be updated? Is the apparent benign nature of Omicron actually a blessing in disguise? Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Whales eat (and poop) more than we thought
2021/12/03
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Earth's largest animals, whales, need a lot of food... that goes without saying. But, new research from a team at Stanford University have found that whales need 10-20 tonnes of food on a feeding day, which is up to three times more than initially thought. Of course that means three times more poop... and as whale poop drives nutrient recycling in the oceans, this could have a big impact on marine ecosystems. Katie King found out more from the lead author Matthew Savoca... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
NASA's planetary defence test
2021/12/02
Now this might have flown under your radar, but last Wednesday NASA launched the DART mission, a spacecraft on a one-way collision course with an asteroid, in the world's first full-scale planetary defence test. Tricia Smith asked Space Author Colin Stuart, if life as we know it is in danger... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Covid Surges in Europe
2021/11/29
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Covid cases in many European countries are suddenly substantially up. But in a dramatic role reversal, the UK has gone from the standout Covid-19 bad boy of Europe to one of the better performers in terms of daily cases and hospitalisations. According to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine's Lloyd Chapman, vaccination is the linchpin, and that's where the UK stands out... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Why does Covid-19 vaccine protection wane?
2021/11/20
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Covid is surging across Europe, but what's causing it, and will the UK follow suit, or are Europe hot on our heels? Should vaccines be mandatory, and would vaccine passports work? Why does Covid-19 vaccine protection wane with time, and are we looking at a relentless cycle of boosters indefinitely, or will one be sufficient? Dr Chris Smith joins RNZ's Kim Hill for a catch-up all about the current state of Covid-19... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Fusion experiment yields new record energy
2021/11/17
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When two atoms join together, the laws of physics tell us that a large amount of energy will be released, but the experiments performed so far by scientists to achieve nuclear fusion have always yielded a lot less energy than the inputs. This week, the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, which uses an approach called 'inertial confinement fusion', announced that they achieved a huge improvement in the record energy yield from a fusion experiment. Iacopo Russo heard from Debbie Callahan, a lead researcher on the project. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Dogs can pick out words from speech
2021/11/16
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The first part of understanding a new language is working out where one word stops and the next word starts out of a string of syllables. Researchers at ELTE University in Hungary have been looking at how dogs' brains respond to language to figure out if they can recognise words, as Sally Le Page found out from author Marianna Boros... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Facebook's Metaverse
2021/11/15
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Recently Facebook announced a name change for the company to Meta, which comes during the midst of a marketing plug by Mark Zuckerberg for his new take on an augmented reality universe. Facebook's metaverse. Harry Lewis finds out what the metaverse is from BBC technology editor Zoe Kleinman, but first here she is with what this rebrand means for us everyday users... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
What does oxytocin sound like?
2021/11/12
We talk a lot about proteins on this programme - what they do, how they work - but have you ever wondered what they sound like? A group of scientists at the National University of Singapore have been turning proteins into pieces of music, as Sally Le Page heard from author, Peng Zhang. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Antibiotics upgraded to tackle superbugs
2021/11/11
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Antibiotics are such an important part of modern medicine but their effectiveness has been waning in the last few decades as certain bacteria, so called superbugs, have become resistant to multiple common antibiotics, leading to the UN declaring that antimicrobial resistance is one of the top 10 global public health threats facing humanity. To tackle this issue, new approaches are needed and as new strains of antibiotics are hard to come by, one option is to modify existing antibiotics to make them more effective. Verner Viisainen spoke to Jennifer Payne from Monash University to find out... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Humans navigate inefficiently in cities
2021/11/10
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Have you ever noticed that you take one particular walking route to the shops, only to take a completely different route on the way back? If so, you might not be alone...based on recent paper published in Nature Computational Science, this is more common than you might think and could be because our brains try to always take the pointiest, not necessarily the fastest, route to their destination. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Hydrogen electrolyser wins Earthshot Prize
2021/11/09
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The Earthshot Prize is an ambitious environmental program created by His Royal Highness Prince William to find and develop solutions for the climate emergency. This year's prizes were awarded last month at a ceremony in London. The prize for the Fix Our Climate category went to company Enapter, which developed a technology called "AEM hydrogen electrolyser". Iacopo Russo heard from Enapter's co-founder Jan-Justus Schmidt, and from Cambridge University engineering professor David Cebon, to find out firstly what an electrolyser is and more importantly what hydrogen can do for us in a sustainable... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
COVID-19 nanotube-based sensor
2021/11/04
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"Test! Test! Test!" was the instruction from the World Health Organisation when the Covid-19 pandemic began to take hold around the world. Now scientists at MIT think they might have a solution, both for this pandemic and future ones: they've developed a sensor system comprising a fibre optic to which a special coating is applied that can recognise specific viruses. When it does so, it emits light of a specific colour, signalling a detection. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
How Alzheimer's Disease Unfolds
2021/10/29
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New research published this week has turned what we know about Alzheimer's disease progression on its head. Instead of the disease gradually spreading through the brain causing symptoms to get worse, the study found progression relied more on how quickly the number of disease-associated proteins increased in individual brain regions. Julia Ravey heard from Cambridge University's Georg Meisl, the study's author, on how this may impact future treatments. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Potential health benefits of winter swimming
2021/10/21
Wild water swimming is becoming ever more popular and, according to a new study published recently in Cell Reports Medicine, combining dips in cold water with time in a hot sauna could have potential health benefits. Verner Viisainen spoke with senior author Camilla Scheele to find out more... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
E-Waste Day: what to do with old electronics?
2021/10/20
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Who doesn't like to pick up a cold drink from the fridge and sit down to watch a show on their laptop or TV? Electrical appliances have made our lives easier and richer and yet, as much as we love them, we don't seem to be as good at properly maintaining or disposing of them. Thursday 14th October this year was International E-Waste Day, an event to raise awareness about the problem of waste electronics. Iacopo Russo heard from Pascal Leroy, the General Director of the WEEE Forum, the non-profit expert group which promotes the event... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
HeLa cells: do you own your own body parts?
2021/10/19
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A form of cultured cell, known as a HeLa cell, is at the centre of a lawsuit that is being brought against a large scientific company that uses these cells. HeLa cells are named after the person they were collected from originally, Henrietta Lacks. They are an "immortal" cell line that grows continuously in the culture dish. This means that the cells that exist today stem directly from Henrietta Lacks' original cell sample, which was taken back in 1951. The use of these cells today raises ethical questions, because Henrietta Lacks did not give consent for them to be collected or used. The case... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
New painkiller: local and long-lasting relief
2021/10/13
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Pain relief after surgery is a major headache as we don't have a lot of effective, and safe, options. Opioids in particular, like morphine, are very addictive and cause hundreds of thousands of deaths globally each year, and so doctors are desperate for alternatives. Now, scientists at the University of Buffalo have developed a long-lasting, local painkiller that can be injected into the site of injury to specifically prevent pain-transmitting nerve cells, or neurons, from passing on their painful messages to the brain. It works by stopping a process called endocytosis; this is where cells... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Vaccines passports in England shown the door
2021/09/25
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He said he'd introduce them, now Boris Johnson has stepped back from mandating vaccine passports across England for venues like nightclubs. But what's provoked this viral volte-face? Also, saliva tests for Covid-19, few fatal coronavirus cases among the unvaccinated, what's the role of hand sanitisers, and are Covid booster jabs the way forward? Dr Chris Smith joins RNZ's Kim Hill to discuss the latest Covid-19 news... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Self-assembling filter can remove fluoride
2021/09/23
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Fluoride is the stuff in toothpaste that helps strengthen teeth. But if there's too much fluoride in the water it softens bones, and children become susceptible to bone deformities. It's very difficult and expensive to remove dissolved fluoride ions from water. But, inspired by nature, scientists have used polymers to produce a membrane that can filter out fluoride, as Sally Le Page heard from Ayse Asatekin... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Moral outrage on Twitter is contagious
2021/09/22
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Twitter has been the subject of another study, looking at how people's tendency to post tweets in moral outrage is affected by other people on the site. Increasingly in recent years, celebrities and other well-known individuals have found themselves being "cancelled". This usually happens when they do or say something that other users disagree with. The outpourings of outrage reverberate across the social network with many piling in publicly to scorn and humiliate the perpetrator. But why do people resort to this Twitter equivalent of lobbing rotten tomatoes at someone in the stocks?... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
bit.bio: a new source of human cells
2021/09/17
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Scientists and doctors are always after good quality human cells for research and therapeutic purposes, but these can be hard to come by in sufficient quantities. Now, synthetic biology company bit.bio has opened up new headquarters in Cambridge to start supplying multiple different cell types by reprogramming stem cells. Eva Higginbotham heard more from founder and CEO Mark Kotter... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Feeding birds could be causing harm
2021/09/14
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Many of us love putting out bird seed and watching birds feast away, and feel we're doing a good deed too, but a new paper out of Manchester Metropolitan University suggests we may actually be doing more harm than good. Eva Higginbotham spoke to BBC science correspondent Victoria Gill, who spoke with lead author Alex Lees previously... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Schools Causing Covid Surges
2021/09/10
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Most schools across the UK are open and children are heading back to their classrooms. But to what extent will this affect the Covid case rates across the country and what can we do to avoid disrupting a third academic year? In Scotland, children returned to school sooner than their English counterparts: what can we learn from their experience? Chris Smith spoke with Linda Bauld, who specialises in public health at the University of Edinburgh... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Long COVID in children: what we know so far
2021/09/09
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Quite soon after the pandemic first struck a significant number of people began to complain of persistent symptoms in the aftermath of being infected with the new coronavirus. These manifestations have been dubbed "long covid". What's less clear is the extent to which this is happening not just to adults but also to children, and particularly teenagers. Terence Stephenson is at the UCL Gt Ormond St Institute of Child Health and spoke with Chris Smith... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Water vapour found on Ganymede
2021/09/07
We often look for water on remote planets and moons because, as far as we know, it's a requirement for life. Now a team of researchers using the Hubble Space Telescope to scrutinise Jupiter's largest moon, Ganymede, think they've found water in its atmosphere. Sally Le Page spoke with team member Kurt Retherford. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
What can NZ do about Delta?
2021/08/21
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Is Delta more deadly, or just transmitting more rapidly? And are the vaccines we're using likely to defend against future coronavirus variants? Also, does it matter that levels of antibody dimish post-vaccination, or will immune memory make up for the shortfall? Meanwhile, are vaccinated people who still catch Delta equally infectious? Does Delta incubate at the same rate as classical coronavirus strains? And do tests work equally well against Delta? Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria in dogs
2021/08/09
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Researchers have reported a case of antibiotic-resistant bacteria passing between dogs and their owners. And these bacteria aren't just resistant to any antibiotic - they're resistant to colistin, an antibiotic of last resort that we use when all other treatments fail. Mark Holmes is a vet and a microbial scientist from the University of Cambridge - he wasn't involved in the research, but he took a look for us and spoke to Eva Higginbotham... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
The UK and Freedom Day: What The Numbers Say
2021/08/07
Chris Smith joins Radio New Zealand National's Kim Hill to talk Covid-19, including the impact of the July 19th UK Freedom Day on Covid case rates. They also touch on vaccine performance, variants, past pandemics and whether we'll all be getting boosters in future years... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
New malaria drug cures with one dose
2021/08/05
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Although Covid-19 is dominating the headlines perpetually at the moment, it's very important not to lose sight of other significant diseases that don't yet have vaccines and do have a higher cumulative death toll. Malaria is one of them and kills half a million people, mostly children, every year. One serious problem is that the parasite that causes the disease is rapidly becoming resistant to the remaining antimalarial drugs we're using, so scientists have been searching for new ways to treat the disease. So far, more than 7 million chemical compounds have been screened to try to discover new... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Increasing likelihood of extreme heatwaves
2021/08/04
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Earlier this year a devastating heatwave in the pacific northwest of the United States killed almost 200 people with record-shattering temperatures; and, in 2019, the UK recorded its highest ever temperature of 38.7 degrees here in Cambridge. Alarmingly, new research from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology suggests that there's more of this to come. Eva Higginbotham heard why from Erich Fischer... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Hygiene doesn't harm immune development
2021/07/14
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A question we're being asked quite a lot is whether the extra lengths we're going to in terms of hygiene to protect us from COVID-19 might cause us immune problems later because we're living lives that are too clean. This is the basis of what's dubbed the "hygiene hypothesis". But a report out this week says that, actually, it's the environment we've created - rather than the way we clean it - that matters, because modern living conditions and building materials select for the wrong sorts of microbes. Microbiologist and author of the report, Graham Rook, spoke to Chris Smith... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Rivers don't always recover after drought
2021/07/07
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The general view is that waterways, such as rivers and underground water sources, will dry up during severe drought - but eventually recover and resume their normal flow when the rains return. But new findings from Australia pour cold water on that idea. When researchers analysed 30 years of rainfall and flow data from 161 water catchments in southeast Australia, they discovered that one-third of these water catchments had not recovered almost eight years later. Charlotte Birkmanis heard more from Monash University's Tim Peterson... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
'Dragon Man' skull: our closest relative?
2021/07/06
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An ancient skull, uncovered decades ago in China, has recently been revealed to be possibly the closest ever relative to humankind. It's called "Dragon Man", and based on trace uranium inside the skull, it's been dated to at least 146,000 years old - but could well be much older! This puts it at a critical time period in human evolution, when our ancestors were first emerging within Africa. But there's some disagreement about whether the fossil is from an entirely new species, or is linked to other sets of fossils found in East Asia. Palaeoanthropologist John Hawks, who wasn't involved in the... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
T-rex teens fill mid-size predator gap
2021/07/05
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Few animals inspire the imagination like Tyrannosaurus rex. And the mighty tyrannosaurs did dominate the lands that eventually became central Asia and western North America for millions of years. But during that time, fossils show that medium-sized predators all but disappeared. Why? Thomas Holtz from the University of Maryland dug deep into the records, and - as he tells Charlotte Birkmanis - thinks teen T-rexes are the answer... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Sharks use Earth's magnetic field as a map
2021/07/02
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Previously, researchers knew that sharks can travel back and forth across entire oceans, accurately returning to specific locations. But what we didn't know was whether they memorise these routes, or if they have some sort of inbuilt GPS. To find out how sharks navigate, Charlotte Birkmanis mapped the course with Florida State University's Bryan Keller... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Pesticide antidote might help struggling bees
2021/07/01
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New technology may help save bees by providing an antidote for deadly pesticides. The new solution allows beekeepers to feed their bees 'pollen patties', a pollen-sized microparticle filled with enzymes to prevent the bees from ingesting certain pesticides. Carlotte Birkmanis chatted with Cornell University's James Webb to get the latest buzz on their sweet technology. Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Covid viruses, vaccines and variants
2021/06/30
Covid viruses, vaccines and variants: Chris Smith talks to Radio New Zealand National to bring Kim Hill up to speed with the latest developments on the pandemic front, including the recent case in NZ's Wellington... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Mouse plague in Australia
2021/06/28
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Eastern Australia is currently in the grips of a mouse plague. Mice live everywhere people do, often undetected. Right now though, highly favourable conditions have caused mice populations to explode in the eastern states of Queensland and New South Wales. A year of abundant rainfall after several years of drought has led to bumper crops, providing lots of food for mice, allowing them to not only thrive but also reproduce at an astonishing rate. Farmers are using zinc phosphide-coated wheat bait to combat the pests, the only registered in-crop rodent killer for the management of mice in... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Sperm and squid in space
2021/06/22
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Scientists have reported on some unusual things flying in space recently. In one paper, sperm, stored aboard the International Space Station for the last 5 years, has been brought back to Earth and used to fertilise eggs. Also, a group of glow-in-the-dark bobtailed squid headed spacewards to look at how microgravity affects their microbiome. Westminster University astrobiologist Lewis Dartnell talked Chris Smith through the different projects... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Cells reprogrammed to make synthetic polymers
2021/06/09
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The world is always on the lookout for new drugs - but they're not easy to make. Synthesising them is often an expensive and prolonged process. But what if we could employ a miniature assistant to do it for us? That's what a team from the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology have come up with. They're managed to genetically reprogramme living cells to build complex molecules - molecules that no living thing would ever normally produce. Phil Sansom learned how from researcher Jason Chin... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Motherless gorillas and how hummingbirds hum
2021/05/28
This month: how hummingbirds hum, how elephants evolved anti-cancer genes so they can sustain big bodies, gorillas that grow up without their mothers, and why deforestation causes peaks and then troughs in malaria cases... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
New process may transform mining
2021/05/27
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For thousands of years, humans have used traditional mining techniques involving sinking tunnels or large pits to recover relatively small amounts of useful metals like gold and copper. What remains is usually, at best, a scar on the landscape, large amounts of waste material, and habitat destruction. At worst, the practices have led to environmental catastrophes. Now an international team, including researchers from the University of Western Australia, have found a way to harness the power of electricity to achieve the same mineral recovery but without the environmental costs. By placing... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Vodka from Chernobyl on its way to UK
2021/05/19
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If you live in the UK, you should soon be able to drink vodka... from Chernobyl! Which might sound like a radioactive nightmare, but the stuff is - supposedly - completely safe to drink. Not only do radioactive particles get removed during the distillation process, there were few originally there at all - thanks to how well much of the environment around Chernobyl has recovered since the 1986 disaster. The project is the brainchild of researchers in Ukraine alongside environmental scientist Jim Smith from Portsmouth University. They've just distilled the first batch of their vodka, but... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Loan applications rejected more around midday
2021/05/14
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It's often hardest to think when you've been working all day - especially if your job involves making lots of decisions. Psychologists call this decision fatigue. And evidence has shown that the phenomenon has serious, real-world consequences... beyond making you collapse on the sofa. Now, a study from the University of Cambridge seems to demonstrate that it could make the difference between your bank loan getting approved - or rejected. Lead author Tobias Baer spoke to Eva Higginbotham... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Camera based on shrimp eye sees cancer cells
2021/05/13
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The mantis shrimp is a sea creature with a particular party piece. While our eyes are sensitive to three colours, red, green and blue, which our brain uses to make the full rainbow of colours we see, the mantis shrimp is sensitive to 12 to 16 different colours, giving them a much wider spectrum of colours. Scientists in the University of Illinois figured this might be useful, and have created a camera that can see colours we can't. The idea is that if you tag a cancerous tumour with a fluorescent chemical that we can't see, but the camera can, it will give surgeons a quick and easy way to... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
SciHub: are they stealing your data?
2021/05/10
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Alexandra Elbakyan is the founder of the website SciHub, and it came out this week that she is being investigated by the FBI. You see, SciHub is an illegal venture: it makes research papers available for free to people who want them, bypassing the fees and subscriptions that journals would normally charge for that access. In this respect they can claim the moral high ground: people who couldn't otherwise afford to access the material can read it. But the way SciHub obtains the journal articles it makes available is not legal; they are said to have obtained access codes from people at... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Plants affected by noise pollution
2021/04/30
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Noise pollution can be difficult to live with, and it turns out that plants are also impacted by too much noise, although not in the way you might expect. Jenny Phillips from Texas A&M in San Antonio has been studying the seedlings of native trees around gas wells in New Mexico. She's found that noise pollution can drive away the animals that some plants rely on to spread their seeds, as she explained to Katie Haylor... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists
Biological target for future anorexia drugs
2021/04/28
Ancient DNA extracted from cave dirt
2021/04/26
New treatment for paracetamol overdose
2021/04/20
Masks on the beach and in beer gardens? C'mon...
2021/04/16
Genetics behind why rabbits hop
2021/04/12
Spinosaurus: was it a giant, toothy heron?
2021/04/09
The world of fungi inside seed banks
2021/04/08
Eagle killer identified
2021/04/02
Industrial yeast impairs gut wound healing
2021/04/01
Wildfire smoke detected in stratosphere
2021/03/31
Cone snails seduce prey with pheromones
2021/03/17
Modelling concussion with eggs
2021/03/04
Diabetes drug trialled to treat obesity
2021/03/03
Bile ducts grown in lab can repair livers
2021/03/02
COVID: seeking herd immunity by vaccination
2021/03/01
Covid-19 latest and the flu surge in waiting
2021/02/28
Treating osteoarthritis with antidepressants
2021/02/23
An ancient freshwater Arctic ocean
2021/02/22
Traffic noise makes crickets pick bad mates
2021/02/16
Australia takes on Google
2021/02/11
Millipedes disrupting trains
2021/02/09
Growing roots in compacted soil
2021/02/05
Soothing surgical patients
2021/02/03
COVID Vaccines: the EU debacle
2021/01/30
Cats, catnip, and curious chemicals
2021/01/27
Knitting: a short history
2021/01/22
Flashy dinosaur fossil described
2021/01/05
COVID-19: can the new variant defeat vaccines
2020/12/23
Winter traditions: scientifically speaking
2020/12/22
Universal Flu Vaccine
2020/12/17
Inhaled vaccines cross from lungs to blood
2020/12/16
Dreaming during the coronavirus pandemic
2020/12/11
AstraZeneca's Covid Vaccine
2020/12/04
Alzheimer's: early detection via AI
2020/12/03
Octopuses taste with their tentacles
2020/12/02
Obesity: modelling the effects of TV ads
2020/12/01
Carlos Rodriguez: Founder of eSports team G2
2020/12/01
Drug discovery via sea squirt
2020/11/30
Brain cells making choices: pizza, or pasta?
2020/11/27
Smelling history: from AI to chemistry
2020/11/26
Pfizer vaccine: an immunologist explains
2020/11/19
MS vaccine using your own brain cells
2020/11/17
Pfizer announce Covid-19 vaccine
2020/11/15
COVID: The Swedish Strategy
2020/11/14
AI for infertility, and scar-free healing
2020/11/13
HFpEF: heart failure type is underserved
2020/11/11
UK Back in Lockdown
2020/11/09
Covid control and the economy
2020/11/06
Ten equations that rule the world
2020/11/05
Daylight Saving Time: a history
2020/11/04
Plastic recycling: the one pot method
2020/11/03
Glitter litter: the dark side of dazzle
2020/11/02
How not to get fooled by graphs
2020/10/31
Stop littering in space!
2020/10/29
Protected land: UK facing biodiversity crisis
2020/10/28
Bee microbiome smells tell nestmates apart
2020/10/26
Alien life: a zoologist's guide
2020/10/19
Jim Gazzard: adapting teaching to Covid-19
2020/10/14
Naked Gaming's Chris & Leigh interviewed!
2020/10/13
UK Covid-19 second wave
2020/10/08
Prostate cancer prediction and bonobo culture
2020/10/08
Cambridge and Covid: a new academic year
2020/10/02
The many ends of the universe
2020/10/01
Magical manipulation... of animals?
2020/09/25
Gene editing to reverse myotonic dystrophy
2020/09/22
When will we get a Covid-19 vaccine?
2020/09/21
Bradykinin and Covid-19: what's the link?
2020/09/13
Dream analysis with AI
2020/09/07
Why is Death Valley so hot?
2020/09/04
Smartphones that can tell if you're drunk
2020/09/01
Genetic risk for PTSD
2020/08/28
Covid-19 update: spread, tests and vaccines
2020/08/23
Goosebumps cause hair growth
2020/08/21
Big carnivores disappear from panda reserves
2020/08/19
Sperm Movement: Swim 'N' Roll
2020/08/17
ITER - The build begins
2020/08/13
Covid outbreaks: local lockdowns
2020/08/12
Red light restores vision in aged eyes
2020/08/06
Artificial liver progress
2020/08/05
Painted fruit and veg reveal plant origins
2020/07/31
Deafness gene identified
2020/07/29
Covid: Are we facing a second wave?
2020/07/13
Is COVID-19 causing a global food crisis?
2020/07/10
Mining for metals in the deep sea
2020/07/09
Chatty chimps: we hear you!
2020/07/02
Sugar on the brain, HIV, and science sex bias
2020/06/30
Baby planet: image shows signs of formation
2020/06/19
Do eggs prefer one sperm over another?
2020/06/17
Mini human livers transplanted into rats
2020/06/15
COVID-19 six months in: are we managing it?
2020/06/12
Storks: a cultural history
2020/06/11
Covid: conspiracies, chloroquine and immunity
2020/06/09
Far-UVC light to kill the coronavirus
2020/06/04
8000 coronavirus cases a day in the UK
2020/06/03
Goats get the point
2020/06/01
Care homes: how badly has COVID-19 hit?
2020/05/28
Vaccines, antibodies and Covid19 in Sweden
2020/05/25
Covid-19 news update
2020/05/23
Covid-19: Here to stay?
2020/05/16
Are ring-tailed lemurs sniffing out a date?
2020/05/11
Cancer gene vital for heart regeneration
2020/05/04
Catching coronavirus twice: fact or fiction?
2020/05/02
Cambridge University and Covid: Stephen Toope
2020/04/29
Phthalate linked to premature births
2020/04/28
Grow your own veg: a novice's guide
2020/04/27
Covid-19: Vaccines and facemasks
2020/04/25
Science Stand Up: Supernovae and Forks
2020/04/23
Social distancing: is 2 metres enough?
2020/04/19
Covid-19: Can you catch it again?
2020/04/13
Can I catch coronavirus from my shopping?
2020/04/11
Smart birds flourish in cities
2020/04/08
Coronavirus: do facemasks help or hinder?
2020/04/04
Is space lettuce good for you?
2020/03/25
COVID-19: Will lock-down work?
2020/03/21
Seagulls prefer food touched by humans
2020/03/18
The World's Wasted Wastewater Potential
2020/03/18
Covid-19: is the UK's reaction the right one?
2020/03/14
The plants with three parents
2020/03/06
Covid-19: What's happening?
2020/03/03
Cannabis and False Memories
2020/03/02
Improving zoos
2020/02/15
Pop the question with a lump of coal?
2020/02/14
Wasp nests help date ancient aboriginal art
2020/02/13
Coronavirus outbreak: where do we stand?
2020/02/08
Coronavirus: What is happening?
2020/02/07
Zika immunity and falling body temperatures
2020/02/06
Should kids run a mile a day?
2020/02/06
Self-cleaning surfaces
2020/02/02
Wuhan City coronavirus: an update
2020/01/30
Towards an HIV cure
2020/01/29
Doug Cockle: The voice of The Witcher
2020/01/21
Motor neuron disease: a link to cholesterol
2020/01/21
Smokers: less dependent, less likely to quit
2020/01/15
CO2-consuming bacteria
2020/01/12
Large planet orbiting a white dwarf
2020/01/03
The voice of Ash from Pokemon!
2019/12/30
The Holly and the Ivy: why go evergreen?
2019/12/24
Why are Christmas trees a thing?
2019/12/23
AI to Detect Tuberculosis
2019/12/19
How measles suppresses immunity for years
2019/12/18
Deprivation and male depression
2019/12/17
Avalanche survivor: Lawrence's story
2019/12/10
Climate change: what does net zero look like?
2019/12/09
Why planting trees isn't always a good idea
2019/11/28
Lakes, carbon and microbes: a hidden world
2019/11/25
Food micronutrient-protecting capsules
2019/11/21
Staphylococcus aureus biofilm vaccine
2019/11/19
Bird societies
2019/11/18
Voyager 2: leaving the Solar System
2019/11/15
Oil wastewater makes earthquakes stronger
2019/11/07
Glass recognises numbers just by looking
2019/11/04
How many new mutations from Mum and Dad?
2019/10/31
Brain changes in obese children
2019/10/29
Old books reveal how happy we once were
2019/10/25
Gene boost makes cancer more visible
2019/10/23
Robots in blood vessels
2019/10/16
Cooling that comes with a twist
2019/10/15
Prostheses that can restore lost sensation
2019/10/01
Astronauts, geese and realistic retinas
2019/09/26
Are phone masts going to get larger?
2019/09/05
Antimicrobial resistance and future plastics
2019/08/21
Stronger earthquakes from oilfield wastewater
2019/08/02
The science behind heatwaves
2019/07/29
Decoding the Minimum Genome
2019/07/26
The world's biggest patch of seaweed
2019/07/24
The nervous systems of worms
2019/07/23
Oumuamua NOT Alien Technology
2019/07/19
Extremely Fast: The Future of Electric Racing
2019/07/03
Making crops more light-sensitive
2019/06/28
Boaty McBoatface and the Antarctic mystery
2019/06/27
Smarter, safer robots
2019/06/26
Fish: a small world after all
2019/06/25
Asthma: mapping the human lung
2019/06/24
Cracking the secret of Antarctic ice holes
2019/06/21
Pitch perception - a special skill?
2019/06/21
Recyclable crisp packets using nanotechnology
2019/06/20
Higher fatal flu risk for CRISPR twins
2019/06/12
How to mend a broken heart
2019/06/11
An antibiotic made from metal
2019/06/10
Bacteria not slowed by obstacles
2019/05/24
Sensing air pollution
2019/05/24
Hiroshima buildings found in beach sand
2019/05/20
Reducing harassment online
2019/05/15
Mystery of the miniature T-Rex
2019/05/14
Biodegradable bags might not biodegrade
2019/05/10
Caster Semenya and testosterone limits
2019/05/10
DNA unveils origins of farming in Britain
2019/05/03
Premature labour: understanding the mechanics
2019/05/02
AI predicting battery performance
2019/04/18
EHT sheds light on M87 black hole
2019/04/15
Renewable energy beats carbon capture technology
2019/04/15
A new look at an old star
2019/04/12
Exotic particle discovery from LHC
2019/04/02
Low temperature catalysts reduce emissions
2019/03/31
Metamaterials solve equations
2019/03/29
Precision-injecting smart needle
2019/03/08
Creating cannabis chemicals in yeast
2019/03/06
Climate impact of lab-grown meat
2019/03/01
How bacteria physically resist antibiotics
2019/02/25
Grasses are genetic thieves
2019/02/22
Possible new treatment for asthma
2019/02/18
Brain centre for laughter
2019/02/12
Ancient javelins
2019/02/12
Dieting mosquitoes prevent disease
2019/02/10
Hundreds of genes control the body clock
2019/02/07
Managing Cardiomyopathy
2019/02/06
Improving carbon capture
2019/02/05
Martian rock discovery surprises scientists
2019/02/04
Rocking adults to sleep
2019/02/01
Muscles really do have "memory"
2019/01/25
Whats inside your E-cigarette?
2019/01/21
Rare Pigment Fossilised in Teeth
2019/01/20
Opioid overdose detection via app
2019/01/18
Sleep quality and Alzheimers disease
2019/01/15
Podcasts: Chris Smith talks to Lawrence Jones
2019/01/01
Cheers to the liver!
2018/12/21
Bio-inspired robot swarms
2018/12/21
New test for cervical cancer
2018/12/20
Carbon neutral Christmas!
2018/12/19
Harnessing sunlight to clean water
2018/12/17
'Nano-tweezers' extract the contents of cells
2018/12/13
Language development through childhood
2018/12/07
Cuddly Robots Feel Hugs
2018/11/30
Modelling Malaria
2018/11/23
Real fake tan fights cancer
2018/11/19
Cancer-killing immune cells
2018/11/19
How WW1 can help head injuries
2018/11/13
Can artificial intelligence make medicines?
2018/11/09
Glioblastomas Effect on Genes
2018/11/02
Targeting immune cells to treat periodontitis
2018/10/31
Cosmic Collisions: Supermassive black holes
2018/10/30
1000 years of Tuberculosis
2018/10/26
English youths drinking less
2018/10/12
NASA: Now and Next
2018/10/09
Gene drive to wipe out mosquitoes
2018/10/04
Using gallium as an antibiotic
2018/10/01
Robotic Skin turns everyday objects into robots
2018/09/26
New conductive and magnetic material
2018/09/24
Bonobo Apes Won't Share Toys
2018/09/21
Back to School: Mistakes help us learn
2018/09/14
Audio cues improve driver safety
2018/09/05
Goats prefer happy people
2018/09/05
Origins of childhood kidney cancer
2018/09/01
The Science of St John's
2018/08/31
Testing for Tuberculosis
2018/08/16
How did early life evolve?
2018/08/13
Evolution of the Skeleton
2018/08/10
Circumcision Prevents HIV
2018/07/27
Chemputer: Chemistry goes digital
2018/07/21
Blocking immune memory cell survival to cure vitiligo
2018/07/20
Growing new blood vessels
2018/07/10
Why the high-life can shrink your arms
2018/07/04
Should we be worried about asteroids?
2018/07/02
From Tiny to T-Rex: Why Life Got Large
2018/06/29
Dementia in a Dish
2018/06/28
A new method of diagnosing osteoarthritis
2018/06/26
World's first robotic eye surgery
2018/06/22
CRISPR-Cas9: Cure or Carcinogen?
2018/06/18
Regenerating tooth enamel
2018/06/08
"Fish Elevator" Invented to Study Deep Sea Fish
2018/06/07
How are new robots helping with surgery?
2018/06/05
Active commutes may improve heart health
2018/05/25
Kangaroo care: the science of snuggles
2018/05/24
An update on Hawaii's eruptions
2018/05/21
Could exercise at work be bad for you?
2018/05/18
Where is Earth's Freshwater Going?
2018/05/17
Understanding neurodegeneration mechanisms in disease
2018/05/04
Can birds cope with the extreme spring weather?
2018/05/03
Tackling Cancer in Tasmanian Devils
2018/04/27
Why are some people tastier to mosquitoes?
2018/04/23
Mice with Motorneurone Disease
2018/03/22
A new model for motor neurone disease
2018/03/20
Ivory, bear bile and tiger skins: Confiscated contraband
2018/03/07
Reprogramming Skin Cells to Treat Multiple Sclerosis
2018/02/26
My whiskers! Faster stroke recovery in mice
2018/02/07
Is walking with friends better than walking alone?
2018/02/05
New treatment for heavy periods
2018/01/29
Toothpaste Ingredient Fights Malaria
2018/01/22
Find out about the Flu
2018/01/18
Tinnitus therapy trial success
2018/01/10
Could lifes building blocks have formed in space?
2017/12/21
Environmental implications of healthier eating
2017/12/15
Falcon-inspired drone technology
2017/12/11
The corals that matter most on the Great Barrier Reef
2017/12/04
The future of HIV research
2017/12/01
Could reflective particles limit climate change?
2017/11/22
Type 2 Diabetes Reversed in Rats
2017/11/15
Sleep and fear learning
2017/11/02
AI learning without human guidance
2017/10/30
Voice in the crowd
2017/10/20
Good cholesterol protects heart cells against damage
2017/10/20
Kidneys in a dish
2017/10/18
LiFi one step closer to our homes
2017/10/18
Molecule dashes hopes for interstellar signs of life
2017/10/12
Neonicotinoids in majority of worlds honey
2017/10/09
Making robot muscle
2017/10/03
Algal protein may boost crop growth
2017/09/26
How do tissues grow?
2017/09/25
Baby-like skulls are key to bird success
2017/09/22
Microbes in Saliva
2017/09/22
Measuring Tectonic Plate Strength
2017/09/20
New antimicrobials show promise in battle against superbug
2017/09/16
Where do New Drugs come From?
2017/09/15
Old maps highlight new understanding of coral reef loss
2017/09/14
Uterus age may affect pregnancy success
2017/09/13
Can bacteria affect the sex life of animals?
2017/09/01
Our hairy insides
2017/08/25
Whats behind the rise in osteoarthritis?
2017/08/23
Foraging for food
2017/08/21
The link between cellular garbage disposal and Alzheimers disease
2017/08/14
Violence weakens short term memory
2017/07/28
How Does Sleep Affect Dementia?
2017/07/21
Searching for super-fast stars
2017/07/11
Can brain training slow the progression to Alzheimers?
2017/07/10
What Causes Coastal Erosion?
2017/07/07
Magnetic control of vision
2017/06/30
The Rise of Deadly Heatwaves
2017/06/29
What Lies Behind an Egg's Shape?
2017/06/29
What is Wannacry?
2017/05/22
Ancient protein thwarts virus attack
2017/05/17
Methane to Methanol
2017/05/11
Blood test for autism
2017/03/20
Dental detectives shed light on ancient diets
2017/03/10
Making Goodwill Go Viral
2017/02/21
The battery powered by stomach acid
2017/02/16
Sex-specific virulence in viruses
2017/02/08
Plankton Change Genes to Combat Climate Change
2017/01/24
Shark chemical wards off Parkinson's Disease
2017/01/23
Big Brains Boost Deer
2017/01/06
Dissecting a Cheetah
2016/12/19
Climate 'Clamity'
2016/12/15
Antidote to Silent Killer
2016/12/14
Does deforestation drive disease?
2016/12/12
Dark Energy Mapped
2016/12/09
A new dimension for graphene production
2016/12/07
Bullying increases overweight risk
2016/11/18
Malaria's drug-resistance genes found
2016/11/16
How to be an astronaut
2016/11/15
Quantum leaps in quantum technology
2016/11/11
Bionic plant sensors
2016/11/10
Lunar Origins Explained
2016/11/10
Ice-free summers in the Arctic?
2016/11/09
Are aliens out there?
2016/11/08
Non-invasive prenatal DNA screening
2016/11/07
How small lies escalate
2016/10/28
First ever fossilised dinosaur brain found
2016/10/27
UK opiate deaths double
2016/10/25
Gender equality in STEM
2016/10/24
Practising Medicine
2016/10/18
A powerful duo against HIV
2016/10/17
Hospital Histories
2016/10/14
Balancing the methane budget
2016/10/10
Genes linked to friendly dogs
2016/10/07
Bee Happy!
2016/10/06
Are humans born violent?
2016/10/05
Is the Bermuda Triangle really cursed?
2016/10/05
Good fat fights bad fat
2016/10/04
Older drivers drive safely
2016/09/15
How pollution harms your lungs
2016/09/08
Dawn of the Anthropocene
2016/09/07
Gold from garbage
2016/09/06
The secrets of Ceres
2016/09/05
See-through rats bare their brains
2016/08/26
Meet the Octobot - the soft robot octopus
2016/08/25
Empathy speeds up learning
2016/08/23
Why does female fertility fall with age?
2016/08/12
Sunflowers dance to their own beat
2016/08/11
Dinosaurs stuggled with arthritis
2016/08/10
Great Red Spot storm warms up Jupiter
2016/08/09
Zika vaccine breakthrough
2016/08/09
Data Mining Helps Pneumonia Diagnosis
2016/08/05
New anti-cancer patch
2016/08/04
Chewing robot lives on a paleodiet
2016/07/21
Power of positive thought
2016/07/13
Electronic nose senses pesticides and terrorism threats
2016/07/12
Royal Society Summer Exhibition
2016/07/11
Cyborg Cardiac Patch
2016/07/08
Getting every last drop
2016/07/07
Life-saving helium discovery
2016/07/06
Juno probe plunges into Jupiter
2016/07/05
Two Zika vaccine candidates discovered
2016/07/04
Silky sounds - making violins from silk
2016/06/30
Mini-guts for testing cystic fibrosis theraphy
2016/06/30
Solar powered jet makes historic crossing
2016/06/30
Iron Up Against Heart Failure
2016/06/22
Sudden cardiac death in the young
2016/06/16
Turning Carbon Dioxide Into Stone
2016/06/10
The Longest Tunnel Ever Built
2016/06/08
Fish Prefer Pastic Over Food
2016/06/07
Immune System Surprisingly Adaptive
2016/06/07
Universal Cancer Vaccine
2016/06/06
Does salt increase blood pressure?
2016/05/27
Botox Effects are More than Skin Deep
2016/05/23
Boiling Frogs?!
2016/05/20
500 Years of Robots
2016/05/19
New link in how life began
2016/05/16
The Maths of Gambling
2016/05/16
Mouse Model Shows Zika Causes Birth Defects
2016/05/16
Limbs from Gills?
2016/04/25
Archaeology Undisturbed?
2016/04/21
Brains: the bigger the better?
2016/04/20
Will your doctor be prescribing LSD soon?
2016/04/18
Have STIs led to monogamy?
2016/04/18
Invisible allies: the future of satellites
2016/03/25
New Horizons reveals Pluto's secrets
2016/03/23
New stroke rehabilitation technique
2016/03/22
ExoMars spacecraft launches successsfully
2016/03/21
What's killing the bees?
2016/02/26
Coercion - It's easy to be bad
2016/02/25
Game changing cancer cure?
2016/02/24
Mapping climate change
2016/02/19
Here Comes Science: They Might be Giants
2016/02/18
Gravitational Waves Discovered!!
2016/02/12
Zika declared public health emergency
2016/02/10
Gene editing human embryos
2016/02/08
What beached the sperm whales?
2016/02/03
Could conspiracy theories be true?
2016/02/02
Behind the scenes at Call the Midwife
2016/01/27
Free radicals - a miracle cure?
2016/01/25
National Security Algorithm
2016/01/18
New Leukemia Therapy
2016/01/18
Why Do Dogs Slurp So Sloppily?
2015/12/22
Tim Peake Rockets To Space
2015/12/21
COP21 The Results
2015/12/21
Plants communicate to trade with fungi
2015/12/18
Science Breakthrough of the Year 2015
2015/12/18
ARM: 25 years as Britain's biggest tech company
2015/12/15
Can genetics help you stop smoking?
2015/12/07
Why loneliness can kill
2015/12/02
Sex addicts hooked by online porn
2015/12/01
Supergenes can determine behaviour
2015/11/27
Puberty Timing and Health
2015/11/13
Sounds to make you emotional
2015/11/13
Cambridge Graphene Technology Day
2015/11/11
How Random are DNA Mutations?
2015/11/11
Can we prevent breast cancer?
2015/11/10
How Healthy are E-Cigarettes?
2015/11/09
New Vaccine For RSV
2015/11/09
Eye drops to treat cataracts
2015/11/07
The problem with childbirth
2015/10/30
Frost prevented by new material
2015/10/28
Is personality linked to birth order?
2015/10/24
Slippery steel that repels bacteria
2015/10/24
£21m for Engineering Grand Challenges
2015/10/21
Do people spread disease?
2015/10/09
How are our lives are mapped on our brains?
2015/10/09
Getting high from marathon running
2015/10/09
Extinct animal colours revealed
2015/10/08
Concussion and the Rugby World Cup
2015/09/30
Fidgeting could prolong your life
2015/09/29
A cooling layer for solar cells
2015/09/29
Extremely Large Telescope
2015/09/28
3D-printing body parts
2015/09/26
Paralysed man walks again
2015/09/25
A new insight into parasites
2015/09/25
Good beetle parents die younger
2015/09/24
Does stress affect elephant fertility?
2015/09/23
Lovey-dovey finches
2015/09/18
Age related diseases associated with 'biological age'
2015/09/15
Dusty farms protect children from allergies
2015/09/06
Green Highways
2015/08/27
Keeping clocks accurate
2015/08/26
Hidden memories explained
2015/08/25
Dogs evolved with climate change not prey
2015/08/24
Premature birth affects personality
2015/08/10
GCSE success: it's in your genes
2015/08/05
A pill on a string!
2015/08/04
Can de-worming really improve school attendance?
2015/08/03
Music tastes linked with brain type
2015/08/01
Rocket-powered Punting
2015/07/31
Sugary drinks increase diabetes risk by 20%
2015/07/31
Growing Human Hearts
2015/07/24
Volcanoes may have ended the Roman Empire
2015/07/17
Benefitting medically from marijuana
2015/07/15
Climate change is bad news for bees
2015/07/14
Why do our brains age?
2015/07/14
Predicting depression and anxiety
2015/07/13
RoboCabs: the key to curbing emissions?
2015/07/13
Men and women may feel pain differently
2015/07/04
What do fish and aircraft have in common?
2015/07/03
Just give me a second...
2015/06/30
PPI's Increase Heart Attack Risk
2015/06/23
Self-unrolling Brain Implant
2015/06/22
75 million year-old Dinosaur Cells found
2015/06/22
Hawkmoths Shadowy Existence Uncovered
2015/06/22
Exploring Saturn's Newest Ring
2015/06/15
Ending Earthquakes With Water
2015/06/12
Coffee staves off depression
2015/06/12
Sequencing Schizophrenia
2015/06/05
Choose Your Treatment Wisely
2015/05/18
Winter Immune Blues
2015/05/18
A Study in Scarlet
2015/05/18
Baboon Buddies
2015/05/18
Selective Hearing
2015/05/18
Cells Turn Inside-Out
2015/05/15
Facebook leads to biased views
2015/05/14
Males donate competitively
2015/04/24
Modern lifestyles reduce gut bug diversity
2015/04/22
How do we hear time within sounds?
2015/04/21
GM Salmonella shrinks cancers
2015/04/21
Dark matter may not be completely 'dark'
2015/04/20
How the Moon was Made
2015/04/14
Evidence of dinosaur cannibalism
2015/04/13
Yeast: Rising from the bread
2015/04/02
Listening to the bat highway code
2015/03/26
When humans made their mark on the world
2015/03/15
How light can transmit WiFi
2015/03/15
Adapting to Arsenic
2015/03/09
Sophie the Stegosaurus
2015/03/07
What can we learn from NASA's Dawn probe?
2015/03/06
FameLab: the snapping shrimp
2015/02/25
Holes give diamonds their colour
2015/02/22
Space Worms
2015/02/15
Detecting dark matter
2015/02/13
Positive thinking improves your health
2015/02/07
Differences between male and female brains
2015/02/06
From venom to medicine
2015/02/06
Mitochondrial Diseases: 3 Parent Embryos
2015/02/04
Chicks can count too!
2015/02/02
How close are we to the next mass extinction?
2015/02/02
Nano-Scale Quill Pen
2015/01/27
Super-slippery, water repellent surfaces
2015/01/24
Sea turtle sat nav
2015/01/17
Crashing Cars
2015/01/16
Geese fly over the Himalayas like a roller coaster
2015/01/16
Can cycling keep you younger?
2015/01/13
Could a brain scan predict your future?
2015/01/12
Cartoons are deadly (for lead roles)
2014/12/24
Has Curiosity found life on Mars?
2014/12/20
Machine makes people more empathic
2014/12/19
Feeling old shortens your life
2014/12/19
Foraging for Fossils
2014/12/15
reCAPTCHA with Luis von Ahn
2014/11/30
Does your dog understand you?
2014/11/27
The science behind fasting
2014/11/27
The fight against Ebola
2014/11/17
Shift Work Shafts Brains
2014/11/14
How wildcats became kitty cats
2014/11/14
Body Clocks
2014/11/14
Religion and nature
2014/11/14
Healthy-Looking Leaders
2014/11/10
Women in Science
2014/11/10
Imaging the Genome
2014/10/31
Foreign species invading the UK
2014/10/21
Detection dogs
2014/10/15
The price of alcohol
2014/09/30
The smartest part of our brain
2014/09/30
How plastic pollution may harm marine life
2014/09/30
Your nose knows death is imminent
2014/09/29
New solar cells
2014/09/29
How dinosaur arms turned into bird wings
2014/09/29
Common cold and asthma
2014/09/29
Do baby fish speak?
2014/09/28
Best place for cardiac arrest
2014/09/26
Strategic decision making revealed
2014/09/25
Worrying world population
2014/09/19
Ant-sized radios
2014/09/17
Modifying mice memories
2014/09/15
Sex and back pain
2014/09/14
Mental health support online
2014/09/11
EPSRC's Rising Stars
2014/09/10
Bereavement suppresses the Immune System
2014/09/09
Parkinson's 'pocket-doctor'
2014/09/09
Unlocking Stonehenge's secrets
2014/09/09
Sudden death in athletes
2014/09/09
Your Immune system vs Cancer
2014/09/08
Colour changing cuttlefish
2014/09/08
The problem with passports
2014/08/27
A Wired Society
2014/08/20
Star dust
2014/08/20
The evolution of the British peppered moth
2014/08/19
Our leaky ancestor
2014/08/19
How to make energy from oil-eating microbes
2014/08/09
Remembering to live to a ripe old age
2014/08/06
In Conversation with Martyn Poliakoff
2014/08/05
Will reading as a child make you a smarter adult?
2014/07/29
Do you own a jealous dog?
2014/07/29
Is there a genetic link to schizophrenia?
2014/07/29
How windfarms affect seals?
2014/07/28
The true cost of farming?
2014/07/28
Gut bacteria seek out injuries
2014/07/18
Obesity affects learning
2014/07/17
Is your sleep account in credit?
2014/07/08
Morality and Motivation
2014/07/06
People prefer shocks to thoughts!
2014/07/03
The Summer Science Exhibition 2014
2014/07/03
'Neonics' linked to honeybee decline
2014/06/28
Can we use faces as passwords?
2014/06/27
Do we need another whooping cough vaccine?
2014/06/26
Why stress causes heart attacks
2014/06/26
Cheaper Solar Panels
2014/06/26
UK government bans 'Qat'
2014/06/26
Mobile Microbiomes
2014/06/26
Why Salamanders can't get legless
2014/06/24
The Science of Making Colour
2014/06/23
The Future of Flooding in Britain
2014/06/21
Mountaintop blasted to build largest telescope
2014/06/20
Renewable Bioplastics
2014/06/19
One-two punch for evolution
2014/06/09
Massive Super-Earth
2014/06/07
Seabirds Chase Ships for Food
2014/06/06
Does Nicolas Cage cause drownings?
2014/06/05
The Battle of the Sexes
2014/03/16
Selecting Species to Save
2014/03/14
The Naked Mole Rat
2014/02/27
David Willetts AAAS Audio Blog
2014/02/20
David Willetts Speech to the AAAS
2014/02/15
Packing Up a Museum
2014/02/12
Can we eradicate Polio?
2014/01/27
Naked Scientists Guide to Genetics
2013/12/13
#genes2shape: Tubby - from obesity to drought tolerance
2013/11/28
#genes2shape: Asymmetry... in snails
2013/11/28
Afghanistan on the brain
2013/11/27
A weather forecast, for the dinosaurs
2013/11/21
Bodyguard drugs and TB
2013/11/01
Packing plants with eco energy
2013/10/24
How important are the microorganisms all around us?
2013/10/23
Diagnosing Emerging Disorders
2013/10/16
Stopping HIV Spread
2013/10/06
Red-tailed Black Cockatoo Conservation
2013/10/03
Tackling the tangles in Alzheimer's Disease
2013/09/26
2013.09.17 - British Science Festival 2013: Ancient Parasites Treat Allergies
2013/09/17
British Science Festival 2013: Victorian Science
2013/09/17
British Science Festival 2013: Ugly Animal Preservation Society
2013/09/13
Diabetes Management - On your phone!
2013/09/12
British Science Festival 2013: Sugata Mitra's School in the Cloud
2013/09/12
Autism and dancing
2013/09/11
British Science Festival 2013: Healthy Life Simulation
2013/09/11
Self-Healing Concrete
2013/09/11
British Science Festival 2013: Ceri Brenner, Lasers
2013/09/10
British Science Festival 2013: Cosmic Rays and Technology
2013/09/10
Diamond Lasers - Just a James Bond fantasy?
2013/08/09
The Science of Spin Bowling
2013/08/09
The Science of the Working Lunch
2013/08/02
What Makes Plumes on Enceladus - Matt Hedman
2013/08/02
Cycle Safety
2013/07/30
Exercise away the risk of stroke?
2013/07/30
Brain scans to improve autism diagnosis
2013/07/19
Giant Water Lily
2013/07/14
National Astronomy Meeting: Thursday
2013/07/04
National Astronomy Meeting: Wednesday
2013/07/03
The Enigma Machine
2013/07/03
National Astronomy Meeting: Tuesday
2013/07/02
National Astronomy Meeting: Monday
2013/07/01
Technology and Tennis
2013/06/30
How do we make the right decisions?
2013/06/26
Catalysts
2013/06/17
Naked in Cheltenham
2013/06/14
What is Random?
2013/05/17
Science Toys, for Boys?
2013/05/13
Touching Up On Art Restoration
2013/05/03
Science In-Situ
2013/03/25
BANG! Naked Science Festival
2013/03/17
Tidal energy, turtle mating habits
2013/03/12
What does DNA sequencing do for me?
2013/03/12
Ice-Quakes in Svalbard
2013/03/11
Benedict Cumberbatch
2013/03/06
Our ancient ancestors, deep sea worms
2013/02/19
Using Genetics to Save the Ash Tree
2013/02/05
Pseudomonas aeruginosa - Martin Welch
2013/02/01
Avian pox in UK great tits, top conservation issues
2013/01/22
Climate tipping points, basking sharks, primates
2013/01/08
Protecting Nerves from Damage
2013/01/05
Planet Earth Podcast highlights from 2012
2012/12/26
The Best of Synchrotron Science in 2012
2012/12/21
Extra Questions - The Science Behind Broadcasting
2012/12/18
Citizen science projects, plants and greenhouse gases
2012/12/11
Bat calls, weather balloons, telomeres and ageing
2012/11/27
Solutions to urban flooding, peatland carbon storage
2012/11/15
Stories from the Synchrotron
2012/11/15
Unique plants in Bristol, contraceptives and fish
2012/10/30
Man-made salt marshes, ground heat, storms
2012/10/19
Sir John Gurdon, Nobel Laureate
2012/10/13
Future-proofing forests, noisy gannets, Antarctica
2012/10/03
Forecasting solar storms, fish personalities
2012/09/18
Entering the Infra-Red Zone
2012/09/10
BSF 2012 - Subglacial Lakes & Food on the Brain
2012/09/07
BSF 2012 - Finding Higgs and Mining Heat
2012/09/06
BSF 2012 - Seeing through Clothes and Water Voles
2012/09/05
Monitoring your Mobile Phone
2012/09/04
BSF 2012 - Caring Technology and Colourful Fossils
2012/09/04
Early tetrapods, upland rivers, North Anatolian Fault
2012/09/04
Saving Satellites
2012/09/01
Bees and sex, acid rain's legacy, cold water corals
2012/08/14
Mars Curiosity Extra
2012/08/06
Early African dairy farming, seabird migrations
2012/07/31
Brown water, bats and streetlights, plant methane
2012/07/18
Exciting new technologies that are revolutionising neuroscience
2012/07/17
The Naked Scientists unravel the connections in your brain
2012/07/16
The Naked Scientists strip down the brain in Spain
2012/07/15
Making a Material World
2012/07/05
Urban heat, ancient cave art, bold birds
2012/07/05
Bees, nanomaterials, and methane on Mars
2012/06/19
Medical diagnostics, the value of nature
2012/06/06
Cold water corals, meteorites, new greenhouse gases
2012/05/23
Drought and record rainfall, indoor avalanches
2012/05/10
How Intelligence Happens
2012/05/08
Microscopic plants, using volcanic ash for dating
2012/04/25
Fungal threats, hydrothermal vents, green buildings
2012/04/16
Air pollution, dwarf elephants and water footprints.
2012/03/27
Ten Years of Diamond
2012/03/25
What happens when we screw with our sleep patterns?
2012/03/22
Invasive signal crayfish, shags, night-shining clouds
2012/03/14
A global classroom brings the oceans alive
2012/03/07
River Thames pollution, Arctic freshwater bulge
2012/03/05
Mental Maps in the Brain
2012/02/28
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Opening up Your Mind
2012/02/21
Testing satellites on Earth, hedgerow wildlife
2012/02/17
Revitalising urban rivers, hot conservation topics
2012/01/31
Day to Day Diamond
2012/01/23
The Hoff Crab, North Sea fisheries, flood prediction
2012/01/17
Discovering the world's deepest deep sea vents
2012/01/13
Brain Control of Appetite and Body Weight
2012/01/10
Parkour and orang-utans, risks from solar storms
2012/01/09
The Thames Barrier, the colour of prehistoric birds
2011/12/12
How Nicotine Switches the Brain onto Cocaine
2011/12/05
Chemistry at the Synchrotron
2011/12/05
The Ozone Hole, Starlings in Fair Isle, Forest Fires
2011/11/22
The Biology of Behaviour
2011/11/22
Contagion Special
2011/11/11
Treating snakebites, and European shags
2011/11/08
Neanderthal mammoth hunters in Jersey
2011/11/02
HIV, Haemophilia and Muscular Dystophies
2011/10/30
Cancer and Ocular Gene Therapies
2011/10/29
Respiratory Disorders and Muscular Dystrophies
2011/10/28
Public Engagement in Gene therapy
2011/10/27
The deep sea, ancient proteins, Arctic research
2011/10/11
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - NHS Rationing
2011/10/11
Spreading aliens, Arctic experience, and Antarctica
2011/09/28
Looking into the Light!
2011/09/19
Engineering the climate to tackle climate change
2011/09/14
Australopithecus Sediba Special
2011/09/08
Stonehenge, microscopic plants, and baboons
2011/08/23
Where do all the salmon go, and making CO2 bricks
2011/08/12
How Plants Attract Bats
2011/07/29
Searching for life in Lake Ellsworth
2011/07/26
Rip Currents and Carbon Capture
2011/07/12
WWII bunkers, thugs and aliens, and calving glaciers
2011/07/07
Inside Diamond
2011/07/07
Bumblebee declines, microbes, and amazing birds
2011/06/17
Learning about Sheep Learning
2011/06/14
The Pressures of the Deep Sea
2011/06/10
Cuckoos at Wicken Fen, snow, and radiocarbon dating
2011/06/03
Picturing the underwater world
2011/06/02
Taking a lobster's view on the oceans
2011/06/01
Exploring the wonders of the deep
2011/05/31
Flood defences, the Southern Ocean, and whiter clouds
2011/05/24
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Zero Degrees of Empathy
2011/05/17
Science from a plane, and forecasting space storms
2011/05/06
Volcanic ash and sediment time machines
2011/04/27
The Power of Magnetism
2011/04/18
Um, How Toddlers Learn Language
2011/04/15
The Earth's magnetic field, snow, and Chernobyl
2011/04/08
Fish poo, dead whales, and the Japan earthquake
2011/03/23
Reefs at Risk Revisited
2011/03/10
Carbon capture and storage, floods, CryoSat-2
2011/03/09
Tracking insects with a Big Dish, Australian floods
2011/03/01
Alzheimers on the Mind
2011/02/17
Smart Way to Rehab
2011/02/11
Romans recycling, dinosaur colour, gravity mission
2011/02/10
Spectacular Synchronous Coral Spawning
2011/02/10
An Optimist's Tour of the Future
2011/02/07
Eroding Coastlines and Holy Grails - A look back at 2010
2011/01/31
Noisy coral reefs, melting ice sheets and whale speak
2011/01/28
Essex coral reefs, malaria in the UK, and Antarctica
2011/01/12
An audio diary special edition
2011/01/05
Back in the Saddle: Getting Paralysed People Riding and Rowing
2010/12/26
Light Shed on Dark GRBs
2010/12/21
Red squirrels and a tropical Antarctica
2010/12/09
Animal Pathology - National Pathology Week 2010
2010/12/09
Pathologists in Pregnancy - National Pathology Week 2010
2010/12/08
Arctic Expedition Special
2010/12/07
Behind the Scenes at Great Ormond Street - National Pathology Week 2010
2010/12/07
Palm oil plantations, charcoal, and a flea circus
2010/11/23
Science through Structure!
2010/11/17
Leeches, earthquakes and weird sea-life
2010/11/16
Kew Gardens, Antarctica and ancient trees
2010/11/10
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - DNA and Cancer
2010/11/09
Splitting Earth, space weather and robotic dolphins
2010/11/08
Bowerbirds, a yellow sub and measuring CO2
2010/11/04
Barrel jellyfish and supercooled water
2010/10/28
The risks of following the herd and banded mongooses
2010/10/21
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Dementia and an Ageing Population
2010/10/19
Butterflies, buoys and the English Channel
2010/10/18
HIV Treatment in Rural Africa
2010/10/12
Orangutans, green buildings and an Antarctic GP
2010/10/11
Plastics in the oceans and tracking satellites
2010/10/08
The Psychology of Shopping
2010/10/08
Breaking the GM Taboo
2010/10/07
Lake Windermere and walking with dinosaurs
2010/10/05
Earthquakes: Past, Present and Future
2010/10/01
Protecting our Environment
2010/09/27
Malaria - The Gorilla's Gift
2010/09/24
Rockpools and ocean acidification
2010/09/23
Computing with a Quantum Walk
2010/09/16
Antarctica, wild geese and ash plumes
2010/09/12
Hi-tech physics, toxic soils and mussel shells
2010/09/11
Climate science, Vikings and other invasive species
2010/09/10
Oil palm plantations and coral reefs
2010/09/09
A New Look for Corneal Transplants
2010/09/06
The Royal Society Summer Exhibition
2010/07/22
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Synthetic Biology
2010/07/14
The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks
2010/06/18
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Gambling and the Brain!
2010/06/16
Diamond Light Source - Entering the Clinic
2010/06/04
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Do Our Genes Cause Obesity?
2010/05/19
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Ape Research in Indonesia
2010/04/28
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Jumping to Delusions!
2010/03/24
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Our Place in the Cosmos!
2010/02/24
Communicating with Patients in Persistent Vegetative States
2010/02/07
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Pandemics: Where Do New Infections Come From?
2010/01/27
Diamond Light Source - The Machine
2010/01/22
Heart Transplant - National Pathology Week 2009
2009/12/17
Anatomy of a Heart Attack - Pathology Week 2009
2009/12/16
Think Heart - Pathology Week 2009
2009/12/15
The Art of the Heart - Pathology Week 2009
2009/12/14
Cambridge Cafe Scientifique - Nanofoods Archived
2009/11/12
Cafe Scientifique - Nanofoods
2009/11/11
Diamond Light Source - Engineering our Industries
2009/11/06
Diamond Light Source - Probing our Cultural Heritage
2009/09/16
Conversations from the Darwin Festival - Sandra Herbert
2009/08/24
WCSJ 2009 - Development Strand
2009/08/13
Conversations from the Darwin Festival - Sir Terry Pratchett
2009/08/12
WCSJ 2009 - New Media Strand
2009/08/11
Reporting Biomedical Science
2009/08/05
Conversations from the Darwin Festival - Brian Rosen
2009/08/04
Conversations from the Darwin Festival - Sir John Sulston
2009/07/28
Conversations from the Darwin Festival - Ruth Padel
2009/07/21
The Rap Guide to Evolution - Darwinian Hip Hop
2009/07/16
The Daily Darwin - Friday - From The Naked Scientists
2009/07/10
The Daily Darwin - Thursday - From The Naked Scientists
2009/07/09
The Daily Darwin - Wednesday - From The Naked Scientists
2009/07/08
The Daily Darwin - Tuesday - From The Naked Scientists
2009/07/07
The Daily Darwin - Monday - From the Naked Scientists
2009/07/06
Peering into the Nano World - The Diamond Light Source Podcast
2009/07/03
Embargoes, Pharmaceuticals and Blogs at the World Conference of Science Journalists
2009/07/03
Public Relations and Investigative Journalism at the World Conference of Science Journalists
2009/07/02
Predicting the Future of Science Journalism
2009/07/01
World Conference of Science Journalists
2009/06/30
World Hepatitis Day
2009/06/10
The Diamond Podcast - Life Science Special
2009/04/29
The Diamond Light Source Podcast
2009/02/09
National Pathology Week - The Autopsy
2009/01/04
National Pathology Week - Self Testing
2009/01/03
National Pathology Week - Plague Outbreak
2009/01/02
National Pathology Week
2009/01/01
Getting Wet and Seeing Stars - The Cambridge Science Festival Podcast
2008/03/20
The science of happiness, love and everyday life-The Cambridge Science Festival Podcast
2008/03/19
Building Brains and The Science of Dr Who - The Cambridge Science Festival
2008/03/17
Revealing our Memory and Holidays in Space- Cambridge Science Festival 08
2008/03/15
Renewable Energy and Venetian Acoustics - The Cambridge Science Festival Podcast
2008/03/13
Revealing our Minds and Saving our Planet.
2008/03/11
Cracking Physics, Countdowns, and Drunken Fleas - Cambridge Science Festival
2007/04/02
Chemistry, Bacteria and Eyeballs - Cambridge Science Festival
2007/03/27
DNA and Cosmic Rock Guitar - Cambridge Science Festival
2007/03/22
Silent Aircraft, Astronomy and Robots - Cambridge Science Festival
2007/03/19
BA Festival of Science - Thursday - Animal Emotions and Deep Sea Hydrothermal Vents
2006/09/07
BA Festival of Science - Wednesday - Volcanoes and the Big Bang
2006/09/06
BA Festival of Science - Tuesday - Diet, Exercise, Health and Antibiotics
2006/09/05
BA Festival of Science - Monday - Superstition and Sport
2006/09/04
Naked Scientists, In Short Special Editions Podcast
https://www.thenakedscientists.com/podcasts/short
Probing the weird, wacky and spectacular, the Naked Scientists Special Editions are special one-off scientific reports, investigations and interviews on cutting-edge topics by the Naked Scientists team.
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