NOW Science!
An invitation to open your mind

Computer screen pop-ups may slow down your work more than you think, according to new research funded by the Economic and Social Research Council.

Although the actual interruption may only last a few moments, the study shows that we then lose more time when we try to find our place and resume the task that was [...]

Scientists have shown in the laboratory that metal nanoparticles damaged the DNA in cells on the other side of a cellular barrier. The nanoparticles did not cause the damage by passing through the barrier, but generated signalling molecules within the barrier cells that were then transmitted to cause damage in cells the other side of [...]

A detailed picture of the seeds of structures in the universe has been unveiled by an international team co-led by a Cardiff University scientist.
The team has obtained extremely precise data about the early universe, using a telescope near the South Pole in the Antarctic.
Their measurements of the cosmic microwave background – a faintly glowing relic [...]

Obama - born to lead?

Why did Barack Obama win the US election and did the fact he is over six feet tall influence the voters? In a synthesis of research, published in Current Biology this month, the authors of the paper ‘The Origins and Evolution of Leadership’ argue that due to ‘a hangover from our evolutionary past’ factors like [...]

A major report on managing the health effects of climate change, launched jointly by ‘The Lancet’ and UCL today, says that climate change is the biggest global-health threat of the 21st century.
Lead author Professor Anthony Costello (UCL Institute for Global Health) says that failure to act will result in an intergenerational injustice, with our children [...]

Categories: Computing | Add a Comment
Dr Daniel Müllensiefen

Software developed by an academic at Goldsmiths, University of London could spell the end for future melody plagiarism.
Dr Daniel Müllensiefen, from the Department of Psychology and formerly working in Computing, has co-published research on how to predict court decisions on music plagiarism using cognitive similarity algorithms.
The study has recently been published by the European specialist [...]

John Burn: We believe that aspirin may have an effect on the survival of aberrant stem cells in the colon.

A daily dose of aspirin can prevent the occurrence of cancer in people with a genetic predisposition towards Lynch syndrome, a Newcastle University scientist has told Europe’s largest cancer congress.
Lynch syndrome is a condition which accounts for around 5 per cent of all colon cancers.
Professor John Burn, from the Institute of Human Genetics at Newcastle [...]

Categories: Medicine | Add a Comment

The University of California is launching an unprecedented statewide collaboration for breast cancer patients with the goal of revolutionizing the course of their care by designing and testing new approaches to research, technology and health care delivery.
Named the ATHENA Breast Health Network, the groundbreaking project will initially involve 150,000 women throughout California who will be [...]

A new study by researchers at the University of Southampton has found that sea levels have been rising across the south coast of England over the past century, substantially increasing the risk of flooding during storms.
The team has conducted a major data collection exercise, bringing together computer and paper-based records from across the south of [...]

Categories: Food science | Add a Comment

In 1976, the Royal College of Physicians and the British Cardiac Society recommended eating less fatty red meat and more poultry instead because it was lean. However, recent research has shown that this may not be the case today.
A new paper published in the journal Public Health Nutrition by Cambridge University Press describes analysis of [...]

Paleomagnetic data from volcanic rocks studied by Princeton University scientists at Mamainse Point in Ontario, Canada, are helping researchers understand continental motion during the assembly of the ancient supercontinent Rodinia. Here, Adam Maloof, an assistant professor of geosciences at Princeton, observes these rocks along the edge of Lake Superior as part of the study. (Photo: Nicholas Swanson-Hysell)

Princeton University scientists have shown that, in ancient times, the Earth’s magnetic field was structured like the two-pole model of today, suggesting that the methods geoscientists use to reconstruct the geography of early land masses on the globe are accurate. The findings may lead to a better understanding of historical continental movement, which relates to [...]

Scientists from the University of Bath have helped to develop new mobile phone software that will help epidemiologists and ecologists working in the field to analyse their data remotely and map findings across the world without having to return to the lab.
Dr Ed Feil and PhD student Fadaa al Own from the Department of Biology [...]

NOW Science! | An invitation to open your mind
An invitation to open your mind