Doctor’s orders, Roman style
04 January 2011Rebecca Flemming from the Faculty of Classics works with ancient texts on health and reproduction.
Rebecca Flemming from the Faculty of Classics works with ancient texts on health and reproduction.
How do cells become equipped to generate a whole new organism?
A team studying the psychological well-being of children created by assisted reproduction has been awarded a prize for their work.
Research at Cambridge University's Autism Research Centre (ARC) has found that exposure to high levels of testosterone in the womb is related to the development of autistic traits.
Epigenetics is taking the biomedical research world by storm; three Cambridge scientists use examples from their own research to explain why.
A new online exhibition explores the visual culture of embryology as part of a research initiative on the history of reproduction.
A recently patented invention holds promise for understanding a debilitating disease that affects two million women in the UK.
Parents with children conceived through assisted reproduction are likely to have good family relationships, but if they are going to tell their child about their donor conception, they should do so at an early age, Cambridge researchers have revealed.
Most pregnancies develop normally but when complications arise they can have devastating effects. Two recent initiatives in Cambridge hope to deliver a new understanding of events during this critical period of human life.
Research conducted by the University of Cambridge in collaboration with the MRC Centre for Lifelong Health and Ageing, has revealed a link between weight at birth and depression and anxiety through the next five decades of life.