Saturday, October 1, 2011

Today on New Scientist: 29 September 2011

Ig Nobel Prize ceremony 2011 live stream

We'll be live-streaming the quirky science awards for "achievements first make people laugh, and then make them think"

China launches first space lab

The Tiangong 1 prototype science lab is a key step in China's plans for a crewed space station by 2020

'Autistic' mice created - and treated

Some of the classic symptoms of autism - limited language development, irregular social interaction, and repetitive behaviour - have been recreated in mice

Apes as Family: the first film made for chimps

Apes as Family is a film designed to appeal to apes of the non-human variety

The good and bad of sharing online

Art at London's Alpha-ville festival brings home just how much information flows around the web, whether you like it or not

The vast Asian realm of the lost humans

The Denisovans, the mysterious cousins of the Neanderthals, displayed a level of adaptability thought to be unique to modern humans

Autumn colours in North America and Europe

A Polish scene shows birch trees turning yellow and beech red in autumn, with pine remaining green - why are colours different across the Atlantic?

Eating your greens alters your genes

A landmark study suggests that eating plants changes the behaviour of your genes in ways that are new to science

An insider's guide to modern particle physics

In Knocking on Heaven's Door, Harvard physicist Lisa Randall gives a candid account of cutting-edge efforts to understand the universe

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