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Chemistry World December 3, 2010 Harriet Brewerton |
Butterfly effect A way to identify individual butterflies from the same species has been designed by scientists in Hungary, who say that the technique could be used to analyse delicate museum samples without destroying them. |
Chemistry World December 3, 2010 Yuandi Li |
Microfluidics to fight cholera A cheap and portable device to detect cholera has been made by Italian researchers that could help significantly reduce the number of cholera related deaths. |
BusinessWeek December 2, 2010 Olga Kharif |
Innovator: Richard Huganir The Johns Hopkins neuroscientist says his research could lead to a drug that helps people forget painful experiences. |
Chemistry World December 2, 2010 Akshat Rathi |
Using fruit flies' sweet tooth Australian researchers have used fruit flies' sweet tooth to help in attempts to develop new sugar alternatives. |
Chemistry World December 2, 2010 James Urquhart |
Micro organ system to test cancer drugs Japanese researchers have created an organ-on-a-chip system that simultaneously tests how liver, intestine and breast cancer cells respond to cancer drugs. |
Chemistry World December 1, 2010 Laura Howes |
Cancers imaged and monitored using firefly glow US scientists have developed a new glowing probe that can signal the presence of hydrogen peroxide in the body, an indicator of tumors or disease. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2010 Versace & Chandler |
MoNETA: A Mind Made from Memristors DARPA's new memristor-based approach to Artificial Intelligence consists of a chip that mimics how neurons process information |
Chemistry World November 29, 2010 James Mitchell Crow |
DNA readers ratchet closer Rapid, cheap DNA sequencing has just edged a step closer, thanks to a new technique to control the motion of single DNA strands as they pass through a protein nanopore 'reader'. |
Chemistry World November 26, 2010 Amaya Camara-Campos |
Enriching the origin of life theory An enantioenrichment of the amino acid valine, which could shed light on the origin of chirality on Earth, has been achieved by scientists in Spain. |
Chemistry World November 26, 2010 Rebecca Brodie |
Printing on bioactive paper An enzyme printing process that prints the product of an enzyme-catalysed reaction, but not the enzyme molecule itself, has been designed by scientists in Australia to produce bioactive paper. |
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