Nature Podcast
Summary: Nature is a weekly international journal publishing the finest peer-reviewed research in all fields of science. The Nature Podcast is a free weekly audio show featuring highlighted content from the week's edition of Nature including interviews with the people behind the science, and in-depth commentary and analysis from journalists covering science around the world. For complete access to the original papers featured in the Nature Podcast, subscribe to Nature.
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- Artist: Springer Nature Limited
- Copyright: © 2009 Nature Publishing Group, a division of Macmillan Publishers Limited. All Rights Reserved.
Podcasts:
This week, an impenetrable mathematical proof, toggling REM sleep on and off, and the latest results from the Rosetta mission.
This week, the future of digital currency; a new lead for antibiotics; and 25 years of cataloguing the human genome.
This week, looking back at malaria interventions, using private data for research, and how to twist a travelling neutron.
Promising results from the LHC, reproducing psychology studies, and unpicking interdisciplinarity.
This week, camouflaging nanoparticles to deliver drugs, science meets theatre, and getting a global picture of air pollution.
This week, thinking differently about autism, plankton poop in the clouds, and hack-proofing our data.
Steve Silberman's new book, Neurotribes, gives a detailed history of autism spectrum disorder. In this Podcast Extra, Geoff Marsh hears from Steve about how we, as a society, should embrace those who think differently.
Futures is Nature's weekly science fiction slot. Shamini Bundell reads you her favourite from August, The Shoulder of Orion, by Eric Garside
This week, weather forecasting, rethinking the water cycle, and a special segment to celebrate the podcast’s 400th episode.
In his new book, historian David Wootton takes us back to the scientific revolution around the turn of the 17th Century, and asks: was this really when modern science was born?
This week, a new look at the scientific revolution, accelerating positrons on a plasma wave, and squashing the unsquashable.
Japan’s nuclear restart, summer quiet descends in the newsroom, and our special guest Geoff Brumfiel compares science reporting at Nature and NPR.
This week, China’s emissions are lower than we thought, lessons from Hurricane Katrina 10 years on, and inheriting genes… sideways.
This week, making chemists’ lives easier, updating a centuries-old sunspot record, and anti-GM activists get their hands on scientists’ inboxes.
This week, lessons to learn from the Ebola epidemic, the reproductive habits of ancient organisms, and how the nuclear bomb changed the stories we tell about scientists.