Science News
Remembering objects lets computers learn like a child
New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 00:00
Giving computers the ability to recognise objects while they scan a new environment lets them navigate more quickly - and understand what they are seeing
How The Media Covers Clean Energy [Infographic]
Popular Science - 6 Jun 2013 01:30
Coverage doesn't always reflect where the money is going. Whether that matters is a different story. Dow Jones, examining data from 2007 to 2012, created this infographic on how media coverage of clean energy deals and a...
Newswire: 5 June 2013 - Fermilab/ILC - Media Advisory: International Linear Collider to publish its Technical Design Report; U.S. Handover event to take place at Fermilab
Interactions - 6 Jun 2013 01:00
On June 12, 2013, the scientists working on the International Linear Collider, a next-generation particle collider to complement and advance the physics of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, will officially publish and h...
Remembering objects let computers learn like a child
New Scientist - 6 Jun 2013 00:00
Giving computers the ability to recognise objects while they scan a new environment lets them navigate more quickly - and understand what they're seeing
Carbon emissions helping to make Earth greener
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 23:30
Increased atmospheric carbon dioxide is stimulating photosynthesis and boosting Earth's plant cover - but the long-term consequences remain unclear
Photo of your face is all it takes to predict your BMI
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 23:00
Software that predicts your BMI from a snapshot of your face could provide a revealing portrait of your build, and even your risk of certain diseases
Newswire: 5 June 2013 - CERN/ILC - Media Advisory: International Linear Collider to publish its Technical Design Report
Interactions - 5 Jun 2013 23:00
On 12 June 2013, the scientists working on the International Linear Collider, a next-generation particle collider to complement and advance the physics of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, will officially publish and ha...
Egypt's city of bean counters suffered flash floods
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 22:30
The workers who built the pyramids at Giza lived in an admin centre that was repeatedly destroyed by floods - so why did they stay?
Old smartphones called in to save Indonesian forests
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 22:00
A forest project that uses solar-powered smartphones hanging from trees to listen for the sounds of chainsaws could help stop illegal logging
Today on New Scientist
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 21:00
All the latest on newscientist.com: mind-controlled drone, the ancestor of all primates and more
Our earliest primate cousin discovered in Asia
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 21:00
55 million-year-old Archicebus is the oldest primate skeleton found, the closest we've come to discovering our origins, and suggests we evolved in Asia (full text available to subscribers)
Is this the ancestor of all primates?
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 21:00
A tiny fossil from 55 million years ago could be a tarsier, a relative of ours - or it could be the ancestor of all living primates, including humans
Time cloak hides events by splicing them movie style
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 21:00
Data pulses can be hidden in gaps in a light beam, erasing any record of their presence and potentially allowing secret messages to be sent without a trace
Research agenda set for curbing US gun violence
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 20:16
The US government now has a wide-ranging list of priorities for research aimed at curbing gun violence - but who will pay for it?
Mid-town miners: The hunt for urban treasure
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 19:00
Could urban prospectors strike it rich under our streets? There is a vast and growing bounty of valuable, abandoned metals waiting to be mined (full text available to subscribers)
Researchers Unveil A Thought-Controlled Drone
Popular Science - 5 Jun 2013 16:30
A month ago this was Iron Man 3 level science fiction. Now? Reality. Researchers at the University of Minnesota today revealed a drone that can be controlled merely by thought, and that's not even the coolest thing about...
Finding the players in the symphony of IQ genes
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 15:54
A huge study of 125,000 people has found 10 genes linked to intelligence, but reinforces the idea that no particular genes have a large effect on IQ
Developing a cartography of fear
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 11:00
We need new words to describe the landscape of fear experienced by animals when predators are nearby - "isophobes", anyone?
Steered by thoughts, drone flies through hoops
New Scientist - 5 Jun 2013 03:01
Look, no hands... A pilot has used thoughts alone to guide a remote-controlled drone around an aerial obstacle course