Public health experts urge government to put health at centre of levelling up...
Based on decades of research around tackling health inequalities at local and regional level, the guidance is aimed at central and local government as well as other agencies with a stake in improving...
View ArticleCommunity of ethical hackers needed to prevent AI’s looming ‘crisis of trust’
The Artificial Intelligence industry should create a global community of hackers and “threat modellers” dedicated to stress-testing the harm potential of new AI products in order to earn the trust of...
View ArticleMore than 900 A-Level students will join STEM SMART widening participation...
Every eligible student who applied by the 31 October deadline has been offered a place on the course which will support them through the final year and a half of their A-Levels. They will receive...
View ArticleGentrification changes the personality make-up of cities in just a few years
Rising house prices may change the personality make-up of US cities within a few years, with residents becoming increasingly open-minded – not just as wealthier people move in, but also among...
View ArticleNew model improves accuracy of machine learning in COVID-19 diagnosis while...
The international team, led by the University of Cambridge and the Huazhong University of Science and Technology, used a technique called federated learning to build their model. Using federated...
View ArticleFilm: the vaccine for fake news
Sander van der Linden has a nickname: Cambridge’s professor of “defence against the dark arts”. His team works with governments and organisations such as Google to find ways to fight against...
View ArticleOmicron may be significantly better at evading vaccine-induced immunity, but...
As the SARS-CoV-2 virus replicates and spreads, errors in its genetic code can lead to changes in the virus. On 26 November 2021, the World Health Organization designated the variant B.1.1.529, first...
View ArticleCould acid-neutralising life-forms make habitable pockets in Venus’ clouds?
It’s hard to imagine a more inhospitable world than our closest planetary neighbour. With an atmosphere thick with carbon dioxide, and a surface hot enough to melt lead, Venus is a scorched and...
View ArticleNew grafting technique could combat the disease threatening Cavendish bananas
Grafting is the technique of joining the shoot of one plant with the root of another, so they continue to grow together as one. Until now it was thought impossible to graft grass-like plants in the...
View ArticleClues to treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder found in recently...
They say these new proteins can be used as biological indicators to distinguish between the two conditions, and to identify patients more prone to psychosis or suicide.Schizophrenia and bipolar...
View ArticleControlled burning of natural environments could help offset our carbon...
The finding points to a new method of manipulating the world’s natural capacity for carbon capture and storage, which can also help to maintain natural ecosystem processes. The results are published...
View ArticleTemplating approach stabilises ‘ideal’ material for alternative solar cells
The researchers, from the University of Cambridge, used an organic molecule as a ‘template’ to guide perovskite films into the desired phase as they form. Their results are reported in the journal...
View Article‘Battle of the sexes’ begins in womb as father and mother’s genes tussle over...
As the fetus grows, it needs to communicate its increasing needs for food to the mother. It receives its nourishment via blood vessels in the placenta, a specialised organ that contains cells from both...
View ArticleCambridge's finest recognised in 2022 New Year's Honours
Among those awarded is Emeritus Professor James Diggle who receives the CBE for Services to Classical Scholarship. He was Professor of Greek and Latin from 1995 until he retired in 2011 and is a Fellow...
View ArticleSuperbug MRSA arose in hedgehogs long before clinical use of antibiotics
Staphylococcus aureus first developed resistance to the antibiotic methicillin around 200 years ago, according to a large international collaboration including the University of Cambridge, the Wellcome...
View ArticleCambridge launches new Leverhulme Centre for Life in the Universe
The Leverhulme Centre for Life in the Universe will bring together an international team of scientists and philosophers, led by 2019 Nobel Laureate Professor Didier Queloz.Thanks to simultaneous...
View ArticleLearning through ‘guided’ play can be as effective as adult-led instruction
Teaching younger children through ‘guided’ play can support key aspects of their learning and development at least as well, and sometimes better, than traditional, direct instruction, according to a...
View Article‘Slushy’ magma ocean led to formation of the Moon’s crust
The scientists, from the University of Cambridge and the Ecole normale supérieure de Lyon, have proposed a new model of crystallisation, where crystals remained suspended in liquid magma over hundreds...
View ArticleObesity: genes vs environment – podcast
What role do our genes play in influencing our body weight and what we like to eat? Why do some people gain weight more easily than others, and is it all down to genes or are there other factors at...
View ArticleCurbing COVID-19 in schools: Cambridge scientists support CO2 monitor rollout
Scientists from Cambridge, Surrey and Imperial College London are supporting the rollout of portable monitors to UK schools as part of project CO-TRACE. The researchers behind the collaboration have...
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