Articles tagged with "In Depth"

Sort by

A light touch for ageing research

March 30, 2016
Dr Vladimir Chupin tells us how membrane proteins could be the key to unlocking the secrets of senesence and why optogenetics could revolutionise how we study it.

A personal interpretation

March 25, 2016
There is a clear move away from a ‘one size fits all’ approach to medicine and instead a new personalised medicine strategy is becoming more important. Mike Furness explains more...

Data takes on the dopers

March 23, 2016
New studies looking at the subtle changes that can occur when human blood is stored could help put an end to blood doping.

Symptom or cause? Autism and immune dysfunction

March 18, 2016
There are tantalising clues that anomalies in immune function may be related to autism spectrum disorders. In unpicking this connection, one lab needed a new approach to the immune assay…

Smashing the accelerator science skills gap

March 16, 2016
The emerging field of accelerator science promises so much for so many sectors – but do we have the skills to keep up?

A problem shared…

March 9, 2016
It isn’t just data sharing that is enjoying a boom period – reagent sharing could prove to be the next big thing to enable efficient and viable research.

Where is the Universe’s ordinary matter?

March 3, 2016
While we know how much matter was created at the Big Bang we can only observe a fraction of it. Forget dark matter – the question is: Where is all...

A map is worth a thousand words

February 26, 2016
Vibrational spectroscopy expert Dr Elizabeth Carter tells us how Raman mapping can help examine the what, where and maybe even the why of complex samples.

A clinical look at the future of pathology

February 23, 2016
Rapid change has become a defining feature of pathology – but can this change power a new generation of laboratory software to shape the role of the clinical laboratory of...

A brave new world of data

February 18, 2016
A more open future with data flowing between institutions will be a scientific utopia says Mark Hehnel.

Pin It on Pinterest