Why do we have pubic hair?

Why do we have pubic hair?

In this week's podcast, we're taking on your questions! From how we make decisions to why do we go temporarily deaf when we yawn and if light wears out, these are some of the many conundrums you asked and we answered with the help of an expert panel. Plus, the top headlines in the world of science, including the four new elements discovered, why you can blame your neanderthal heritage for bad allergies and how Harry Potteresque screens could be the next big thing... Like this podcast? Please help us by supporting the Naked Scientists

Avsnitt(1223)

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

Tuberculosis: tackling the troubling uptick

Tuberculosis: tackling the troubling uptick

Before Covid, the bacterial infection "tuberculosis" was the number 1 infectious disease killer on the planet. Every day it claims the lives of thousands, with the impact particularly marked in lower ...

8 Nov 202227min

Gene therapy for epilepsy, and beastly botany

Gene therapy for epilepsy, and beastly botany

In the news this week, the novel gene therapy for epilepsy which reduces side effects, how birdsong can provide listeners with a mental health boost, we take a terrifying tour of Cambridge University'...

4 Nov 202228min

Clocks, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll

Clocks, Drugs and Rock 'n' Roll

We mark the clocks going back with a look at our circadian rhythms: that's the mechanism by which our bodies mark time and keep our biological processes ticking over. Some drugs work better at certain...

1 Nov 202230min

Charged up bees and deep, dark seas

Charged up bees and deep, dark seas

In the news this week, a new health study of unprecedented scale launches in the UK to improve disease detection, CAR-T therapy is administered without tailoring it specifically to the patient, the sh...

28 Okt 202228min

Populärt inom Vetenskap

p3-dystopia
pojkmottagningen
svd-nyhetsartiklar
dumma-manniskor
allt-du-velat-veta
kapitalet-en-podd-om-ekonomi
det-morka-psyket
rss-vetenskapsradion-2
rss-vetenskapsradion
halsorevolutionen
bildningspodden
medicinvetarna
rss-spraket
rss-ufobortom-rimligt-tvivel-2
sexet
dumforklarat
vetenskapsradion
4health-med-anna-sparre
pengar-och-politik
naturmorgon