When Dr Shane is away… the show goes on as normal because it’s very well organised!
This week Chris KP and Dr Susi discussed how an acid in our blood helps determine the construction of our retinal cones, plus Dr Emma Bennett from School of Biological Sciences at Monash University shared her work looking at the impact of wind farms on micro-bats and other wildlife.
Michael Mews from the School of Physics, University of Melbourne, went deep into his subterranean experiments using sodium-Iodide with active background rejection to better understand dark matter. We also spoke to Rebecca Russell Saunders from Wesley College to tell us about her students designing space settlements at the University of Queensland, as part of the Australian Space Design Competition.
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B cells, P waves and sound rage
Eating disorders, malaria causing parasites and infectious diseases
Forensic Anthropology, Psychotic Disorders, Cognitive Health
Antimicrobial Peptides, Cancer and Cognition, Rain in the U.A.E.
20 PHD students in 20 minutes special
Scikus, Near Earth Object and Day of Immunology
Daylight saving madness!
Atrial Fibrillation, Plasmalogens, Urban Moths, Science Comedy Event
Big brain surgery, big health data and big math to model disease
Dark Matter, Bipolar Disorder, Healthcare Statistics
Dark matter, blood transfusion for dogs and Australian abalone
Extreme Environments, Detecting Neutrinos, and the Heaviest Animal Debate
Tinnitus, detecting dark matter and molecular movies
Endometriosis, Histology and Antarctica
ALS, Invasive Ants and Kenya's Lions, Aerotrophs
Women's pain, cerebral palsy prevention, and AC joints
Planet earth, fungal pathogens, deep sea plastics, Mars helicopter, fruit flies
Arctic adventures, exhibition design and chronic fatigue
Good and bad T cells, bats!
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