Hallucinations linked to differences in brain structure
17 November 2015People diagnosed with schizophrenia who are prone to hallucinations are likely to have structural differences in a key region of the brain compared to both...
Research
People diagnosed with schizophrenia who are prone to hallucinations are likely to have structural differences in a key region of the brain compared to both...
How do we get better at taking the research knowledge from our science and engineering base and turning it into technologies, industries and economic wealth?...
Populations of hunter-gatherers weathered Ice Age in apparent isolation in Caucasus mountain region for millennia, later mixing with other ancestral populations, from which emerged the...
Hannah Rowland (Department of Zoology) discusses why different animals have different tastes when it comes to food.
A new report by the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL) reveals that global investment portfolios could lose up to 45 per cent...
New research indicates that cockroaches use a combination of fast and slow twitch muscle fibres to give their mandibles a “force boost” that allows them...
Astronomers have discovered some of the oldest stars in the galaxy, whose chemical composition and movements could tell us what the Universe was like soon...
Jaideep Prabhu (Cambridge Judge Business School) discusses the business deals we can expect to be struck as a result of Narendra Modi's visit to the...
John Pollard (Faculty of History) discusses the latest book exposing battles for power and misbehaviour in the Vatican.
The Cambridge Animal Alphabet series celebrates Cambridge’s connections with animals through literature, art, science and society. Here, X is for Xenarthran. A must-have item...