An Olympic Effort - Keeping Crowds Safe

An Olympic Effort - Keeping Crowds Safe

Later this month, the 2012 Olympics kicks off in London. With hundreds of thousands of people expected from overseas, is this the perfect trigger for a pandemic? This week we're looking at the public health implications of events like London 2012. We discover why an understanding of crowd psychology can avert disasters, and how mathematical models can predict and prevent jams in human traffic. Plus, a new technique to communicate with "locked in" patients, the evidence for warm blooded dinosaurs, and does ice really help to treat an injury? Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

Episoder(1235)

AI passes Turing Test, and new drug for Covid

AI passes Turing Test, and new drug for Covid

In the news, the old liver drug that turns out to be able to prevent Covid-19 infection, the artificial intelligence systems that pass the Turing test and can write their own computer programmes, and ...

9 Des 202227min

8 billion: an overpopulation crisis?

8 billion: an overpopulation crisis?

Last month, we were told, the 8 billionth person was added to Earth's human population. But despite many acknowledging that some of the biggest threats facing us and the planet, like climate change - ...

6 Des 202230min

New Alzheimer's treatment, and mussel memory

New Alzheimer's treatment, and mussel memory

A new Alzheimer's drug shows some promise in trials, but are the risks from side effects worth it? A new contraceptive inspired by Roman history and shellfish... And the surprising discovery about ant...

2 Des 202228min

Personality testing: no wrong answers?

Personality testing: no wrong answers?

If you've recently applied for a job, you may have been asked to fill out a personality test. From banks and consultancy firms to fast-food outlets, they're increasingly being used as a way to improve...

29 Nov 202228min

Disease breath tests, and Perseverance papers

Disease breath tests, and Perseverance papers

In the news this week, we hear about the novel approach to diagnosing diseases by looking at the chemical compounds in patients' breath, a new way of attacking viruses without damaging our cells, the ...

25 Nov 202232min

Q&A: How did we outpace the big bang?

Q&A: How did we outpace the big bang?

This week, it is time to put your questions to a panel of excellent experts in one of our Q&A shows! We are going to be investigating how we track disease outbreaks, why our ears go pop, and why neand...

22 Nov 202259min

Reproducibility: science's consistency issue

Reproducibility: science's consistency issue

This week, we're talking about the so-called scientific reproducibility crisis: an alarming sounding study was released earlier this year which concluded that less than one third of breast cancer rese...

15 Nov 202230min

Growing blood in the lab, and talking to ET

Growing blood in the lab, and talking to ET

In this episode, How researchers are growing new blood in the lab, the scientists planning for potential alien communications, and why fertiliser may be fooling bees' ability to spot flowers... Like t...

11 Nov 202228min

Populært innen Vitenskap

fastlegen
tingenes-tilstand
rekommandert
jss
forskningno
sinnsyn
liberal-halvtime
tomprat-med-gunnar-tjomlid
rss-rekommandert
rss-paradigmepodden
fjellsportpodden
villmarksliv
tidlose-historier
dekodet-2
smart-forklart
rss-overskuddsliv
vett-og-vitenskap-med-gaute-einevoll
nordnorsk-historie
diagnose
abid-nadia-skyld-og-skam