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  2. Research Horizons

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_37_research_horizons.pdf
    9 Oct 2018: With this latter aim in mind, the team at Entomics has been working with Dr Andrew Grant from Cambridge’s Department of Veterinary Medicine and Dr Graham Christie from the Department ... When you think about other electronic devices, you’re generally
  3. Cambridge makes Hay | University of Cambridge

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/cambridge-makes-hay-0
    Thumbnail for Cambridge makes Hay | University of Cambridge 7 Apr 2017: Dr Hugh Hunt, Reader in the Department of Engineering, will talk about whether it is possible to refreeze the Arctic. ... the Department of Psychology, who will view the Peter Pan stories through the eyes of a neuroscientist in order to explore J.
  4. Sleight-of-hand magic trick only fools monkeys with opposable thumbs…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/sleight-of-hand-magic-trick-only-fools-monkeys-with-opposable-thumbs
    Thumbnail for Sleight-of-hand magic trick only fools monkeys with opposable thumbs | University of Cambridge 3 Apr 2023: Nicola Clayton FRS, senior author of the study from Cambridge’s Department of Psychology. ... Another co-author of the study, Clive Wilkins, Artist in Residence at Cambridge’s Department of Psychology, is a professional magician and Member of the
  5. Flu season 2021: how worried should we be?

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/influenza
    Thumbnail for Flu season 2021: how worried should we be? 12 Oct 2021: Simone Schnall, Professor of Experimental Social Psychology in the Department of Psychology, agrees. ... virus. Professor Simone Schnall, Professor of Experimental Social Psychology in the Department of Psychology aims to understand human social
  6. The Power of Positive Psychology | University of Cambridge

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/the-power-of-positive-psychology
    17 Mar 2004: On Thursday, March 18, Dr Nick Baylis, Times columnist and Lecturer in Positive Psychology in the Department of Social and Developmental Psychology at the University of Cambridge, will introduce the fast ... Positive Psychology is a whole new field of
  7. OCD patients’ brains light up to reveal how compulsive habits develop …

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/ocd-patients-brains-light-up-to-reveal-how-compulsive-habits-develop
    Thumbnail for OCD patients’ brains light up to reveal how compulsive habits develop | University of Cambridge 19 Dec 2014: Trevor Robbins. The research, led by Dr Claire Gillan and Professor Trevor Robbins (Department of Psychology) is the latest in a series of studies from the Cambridge Behavioural and Clinical Neuroscience ... more insidious way, shaping our preferences,
  8. It’s a kind of magic

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/stories/akindofmagic
    Thumbnail for It’s a kind of magic 6 Mar 2020: As Professor of Comparative Cognition in the University of Cambridge’s Department of Psychology and Fellow of the Royal Society, she is particularly interested in corvids, the family of birds including ... Since 2012 he has been Artist in Residence in
  9. University of Cambridge Research Horizons Issue 13

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/system/files/issue_13_research_horizons.pdf
    10 Nov 2010: Angiotensinogen showing its buried renin site. Scientists in the Department of ChemicalEngineering and Biotechnology, withcollaborators from the United States, aredeveloping a low-cost, modified nipple shieldthat dispenses antiviral compounds to
  10. The impulsive brain | University of Cambridge

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/the-impulsive-brain
    31 May 2001: Now researchers at the University of Cambridge's Department of Experimental Psychology have discovered some of the underlying brain systems probably responsible for such impulsive behaviour. ... Rudolf. The University of Cambridge's Department of
  11. Why reading nursery rhymes and singing to babies may help them to…

    https://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/why-reading-nursery-rhymes-and-singing-to-babies-may-help-them-to-learn-language
    Thumbnail for Why reading nursery rhymes and singing to babies may help them to learn language | University of Cambridge 30 Nov 2023: Instead, rhythmic speech helps babies learn language by emphasising the boundaries of individual words and is effective even in the first months of life. ... Their study, published today in the journal Nature Communications, found that phonetic

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