Making visible embryos
04 January 2009A new online exhibition explores the visual culture of embryology as part of a research initiative on the history of reproduction.
Research
A new online exhibition explores the visual culture of embryology as part of a research initiative on the history of reproduction.
Epigenetics is taking the biomedical research world by storm; three Cambridge scientists use examples from their own research to explain why.
Excavation and geophysical survey are uncovering the secrets of an exceptionally diverse Imperial Roman landscape.
The world's most expensive scientific instrument will be ready for full experiments in 2009; Andy Parker describes Cambridge's role in constructing and using the machine...
The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) supports research from across the social sciences, from sociology to anthropology, through to statistics, methods and computing.
Jason Rentfrow explains how analysis of over three-quarters of a million online surveys has been used to build a "map" of the USA.
At first glance, reasons for researching locations as different as the Arctic and Mexico are not self-evident. But comparison is at the core of Social...
The way a common virus hijacks the cell it infects could hold the clue to combating Parkinson's disease.
A recently patented invention holds promise for understanding a debilitating disease that affects two million women in the UK.
Cambridge neurologists have shown that an antibody used to treat leukaemia also limits and repairs the damage in multiple sclerosis.