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Title details for New Scientist Australian Edition by New Scientist Ltd - Wait list

New Scientist Australian Edition

Aug 29 2020
Magazine

New Scientist covers the latest developments in science and technology that will impact your world. New Scientist employs and commissions the best writers in their fields from all over the world. Our editorial team provide cutting-edge news, award-winning features and reports, written in concise and clear language that puts discoveries and advances in the context of everyday life today and in the future.

Elsewhere on New Scientist

A note from the editor

Overcoming prejudice • Insights into the neural roots of bias suggest ways to fix the problem

New Scientist

Getting less deadly? • The proportion of people in Europe dying after being infected by the coronavirus seems to be falling. Adam Vaughan investigates why

The rush to develop a vaccine • Streamlining the approval process could help produce an urgently needed coronavirus vaccine, but some shortcuts might undermine safety, finds Michael Le Page

How vaccines get to the front line

How likely are you to catch the coronavirus on a plane?

Why some people cannot wear a face covering

AI outguns a human fighter pilot • Artificial intelligence defeats a human pilot in simulated air combat

Strange burial mystery unearthed in Spain

Man sees half of every face like it’s melting

Return of the dolphins? • Four common dolphins spotted in the Adriatic Sea

Supercomputer reveals tardigrade secrets

Tumour microbiome may predict chances of cancer survival

Alcohol-powered beetlebot flexes its muscles

The sun’s lost sibling may have nabbed Planet Nine

Greenland lost a record amount of ice in 2019

Defeating the IQ test • Simple tutorials boost scores, undermining the validity of IQ tests

Walking catfish are the first fish known to ‘smell’ on land

New type of plastic may be infinitely recyclable

Cancer cells grab a coat to keep them safe

Sea turtles work as hurricane forecasters

Really brief

Ancient marine reptile was killed by its meal

Millions of missing female births predicted in India

Eye-tracking mask gauges reactions

Scientists urgently needed to tackle common spinal cord disease • Welcome to our Signal Boost project – a weekly page for charitable organisations to get their message out to a global audience, free of charge. Today, a message from Myelopathy.org

The fight for the internet • The internet’s infrastructure is starting to fall apart, and that is leaving us all insecure, says James Ball

This changes everything • Wholesome memes could save us all It is time to rekindle the idea of netizens – upstanding internet citizens who band together to tackle important global problems, writes Annalee Newitz

Your letters

Mating moves

Travel plans on hold? Explore the world with New Scientist

Rewriting reproduction • Moving away from outdated, gendered ideas about reproduction could transform our health and improve society, finds Jessica Hamzelou

Wake up to plant power • From murder to magic mushrooms, Kew’s first podcast challenges us all to appreciate the role plants play in our world, says Gege Li

Don’t miss

The film column • Short, but long on ambition A brief documentary about eccentric UFO hunter John Shepherd, who built his own kit to contact aliens by broadcasting reggae and jazz into space, is extraordinary and moving, says Simon Ings

Fellowships for Postdoctoral Scholars

Exposing unconscious bias • How much of the prejudice that shapes our worlds is unconscious, and can we truly measure it, asks Pragya Agarwal

How the bias test works

Ways to tackle your prejudice

The roots of racism • Our prejudices arise from learned responses. That means...

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Languages

  • English