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science
Books & arts
Sleeping on it
Sally Ferguson
27 April 2018
Books
| You are how you sleep, according to a persuasive new account of the science of not being awake
Essays & reportage
A kind of groove
Katherine Wilson
17 October 2017
Extract
| Gilda Civitico’s story illuminates the art and the science of tinkering
Essays & reportage
Digging deeper into a 65,000 year story
Billy Griffiths
28 July 2017
Don’t be dazzled by the numbers. What counts is how this latest archaeological find contributes to our understanding of Australia’s deep and dynamic history
Books & arts
Going under
Nick Haslam
3 July 2017
Books
| When does consciousness end and unconsciousness begin?
Books & arts
Lost in translation – or should that be transcription?
Merlin Crossley
21 February 2017
Books
| This account of the latest research on genes and society poses some of the right questions
Books & arts
The truth about torture
Tom Hyland
26 January 2017
From the archive
| Outside TV drama, “enhanced interrogation” fails the evidence test, writes
Tom Hyland
in this review first published in June 2016
Podcasts
In Melbourne, progress on chronic fatigue
Peter Clarke
24 November 2016
Peter Clarke
talks to Bio21 researcher
Chris Armstrong
about new research that challenges popular views of this enigmatic illness
Podcasts
Toads on the evolutionary road
Rick Shine & Terry Lane
22 October 2016
Can evolution be used to control the spread of cane toads? In this 2005 interview, biologist Rick Shine reports from the field
National affairs
The price of secrecy
Brian Toohey
4 October 2016
A new account of Britain’s nuclear tests in Australia reveals a long history of damaging suppression
National affairs
Malcolm Roberts versus a century and a half of science
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
31 August 2016
Diary of a Climate Scientist
| If the new One Nation senator wants empirical evidence, he can take his pick from 150 years of research, says
Sarah
Perkins-Kirkpatrick
Essays & reportage
Red spot specials: the fall and rise of Australian measles
Frank Bowden
11 March 2016
Vaccination is not only justified by self-interest. It is also an act of altruism
National affairs
CSIRO and climate: the devil in the detail
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
25 February 2016
Diary of a Climate Scientist
| Cutting funding at this stage of climate change research comes with enormous risks, writes
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
National affairs
Innovation: the test is yet to come
John Quiggin
10 December 2015
Education is the sector that most urgently needs to be freed from the Abbott legacy, writes
John Quiggin
National affairs
Asking the right questions about extreme weather
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
24 November 2015
Diary of a Climate Scientist
| It’s not a simple case of cause and effect, writes
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
National affairs
How should we feel about climate change?
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
23 September 2015
Diary of a climate scientist
| Where do emotions fit into the work of scientists who study climate, asks
Sarah Perkins
International
Wherever you are, heatwaves are getting relatively worse
Sarah Perkins-Kirkpatrick
25 August 2015
Diary of a climate scientist
| Even the “top of Europe” suffers in a heatwave, writes
Sarah Perkins
. And worldwide they’re becoming more frequent and more intense
International
Pope 1, Lomborg 0
Daniel Nethery
23 July 2015
A new website allows scientists around the world to assess the quality of media coverage of climate change, writes
Daniel Nethery
Books & arts
Lives in motion
Sylvia Lawson
28 January 2015
Cinema
|
Sylvia Lawson
reviews
Wild
,
Birdman
and
The Imitation Game
Books & arts
Are we going to die on Wednesday?
Jane Goodall
28 January 2015
Television
| Science broadcaster Brian Cox navigates the line between two kinds of uncertainty, writes
Jane Goodall
Books & arts
The compulsion in the quest
Sylvia Lawson
18 December 2014
Cinema
|
Sylvia Lawson
reviews
Particle Fever
,
The Dark Horse
and
Finding Vivian Maier
, and farewells Margaret and David
Books & arts
Pregnancy: guidelines and timelines
Jacinta Halloran
6 November 2014
Two accounts of getting, and being, pregnant tell only part of the story about conception and childbirth
Essays & reportage
Natural born killers
Frank Bowden
27 August 2014
With one-in-two people dying within days of becoming ill, it’s little wonder that Ebola causes panic. But the real threat can only be assessed if we understand the history…
Books & arts
Spaceship of the imagination
Martin Bush
8 June 2014
Cosmos: A Spacetime Odyssey
is an important chapter in the evolution of how we learn about science, says
Martin Bush
. But it’s far from being the last word
Books & arts
Unpredictable to whom, and in what way?
Ben Eltham
28 March 2014
Not only is he an anti-Chomskyan, Philip Lieberman is also an enemy of evolutionary biology and pop neuroscience, writes
Ben Eltham
National affairs
Injecting a dose of science
John Quiggin
6 September 2013
Opposition to vaccination has something in common with well-funded anti-science lobbies, writes
John Quiggin
, but its roots in genuine confusion mean it should be handled…
Essays & reportage
Eye on the sky
Marilyn Moore
30 April 2013
Amateur astronomers are making a unique contribution to science’s understanding of the universe, reports
Marilyn Moore
Essays & reportage
Germ warfare opens a new front
Melissa Sweet
1 March 2013
Overuse of antibiotics is not only creating resistant bacteria but also changing the ecology of the human body, writes
Melissa Sweet
Books & arts
Unlucky in love
Anna Cristina Pertierra
9 October 2012
Has the market economy changed the way we love?
Anna Cristina Pertierra
looks at three new books dealing with the difficult intersection of love, sex and gender
Books & arts
A networker’s manifesto for open research
Michael Gilding
24 June 2012
Michael Gilding
reviews a lively manifesto for an important cause
Books & arts
Genetic injustices
Jeremy Gans
7 June 2012
DNA evidence has exonerated nearly 300 prisoners in the United States, but an Australian case highlights its potential to mislead
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