Linking Data Today for a Better Tomorrow
The Population Health Research Network answers really important questions about our health and wellbeing and I was privileged to work on their Investment Plan 2023-2028, which is now available.
The Population Health Research Network answers really important questions about our health and wellbeing and I was privileged to work on their Investment Plan 2023-2028, which is now available.
Sleep is really important for staying healthy – but is there a correct sleeping position? And what does exercise have to do with it?
It seems playtime isn’t just for children and animals. Lab-kept bumble bees apparently roll small wooden balls around for no purpose other than fun,
The Black Plague ripped through Europe, Africa and Asia 700 years ago and killed around 200 million people. Genes that were associated with a survival advantage are still present in us today – but appear to make us more susceptible to autoimmune diseases.
Sometimes your best work comes from unexpected encounters. Mine happened at my hairdresser.
Analysis of 20,000 year-old hand stencils in Spanish caves have found they were likely to be made by 3–10 year-olds.
Dogs love to sniff and smell their environment and that includes us humans. To them, we smell different when we are stressed.
Ever wondered how spending time in nature makes you feel better? It’s all in your amygdala.
Some crops are better suited, and produce greater yields, when grown in the city.
When I think of amputation before modern medicine, I tend to think of brutal anaesthetic-free operations from the 1700s. But a skeleton from Borneo with an amputated left lower leg dates back to 31,000 years ago – the oldest ever recorded.
Much of the northern hemisphere is in drought, which is damaging farm economies, forcing water restrictions and causing massive fires. Millions of people, animals and fish are suffering. However, dry rivers are revealing much from the past.
The things people say to us can have lasting impacts, and recent research has found that even under unnatural conditions, a verbal insult is perceived in the same way as a slap in the face.
Female mosquitoes ‘smell’ humans’ cocktail of scents to detect the blood they need to nourish their eggs. But they have more than one way to achieve this.
Have you ever been exhausted after thinking too much? It’s likely the build-up of glutamate is poisoning your neurons.
It’s that time of year again, when too much science is never enough. That’s right, National Science Week, Australia’s annual celebration of science and technology is on from 13-21 August.