Naked Scientists Special Editions

Special Editions

Probing the weird, wacky and spectacular, the Naked Scientists Special Editions are special one-off scientific reports, investigations and interviews on cutting-edge topics by the Naked Scientists team.
English United Kingdom Science
981 Episodes
652 – 672

Ebola Sierra Leone

Marie Blackman Northword is a biomedical scientists normally based in Cambridge, but at the moment she is working at the newly opened Ebola treatment centre in Sierra Leone. She spoke to Chris Smith about her experiences.
17 Nov 2014 7 min

Religion and nature

Religion and nature might have more to do with each other than you thought. In the biggest study of its kind, a team of evolutionary biologists, anthropologists, linguists and religious scholars examined the religions of societies from around the world to see if there was any link between where they…
14 Nov 2014 4 min

Body Clocks

Are you a morning person or a night owl? Whichever you are, your daily rhythm is determined by your circadian clock - powered by a small group of cells in the brain - and it tells you when to get up and when to sleep. Now Professor Bill Wisden and…
14 Nov 2014 4 min

Shift Work

Researchers say that doing anti-social shifts over many years can dent your brain power. In other words you can't think straight. The team collected data from three thousand workers in France, who underwent memory and other tests of brain function. Individuals who had worked shifts for over ten years had…
14 Nov 2014 4 min

How wildcats became kitty cats

Just a handful of genetic changes are what turned wildcats into domestic pets, scientists have now shown. And many of these changes are linked with genes that affect how the brain processes rewards and pleasure. In other words, humans won over cats by appealing to their desire for kitty treats…
13 Nov 2014 5 min

Women in Science

What do you do to fight gender inequality? Record a single on the subject, of course.Hannah Critchlow spoke to Tim Bussey, professor, budding rock star and performer behind this re-release from the 80s.
10 Nov 2014 3 min

Healthy Looking Leaders

Would you prefer your prime minister, president, or beloved leader to look healthy, intelligent, or both? Researchers from the VU University of Amsterdam say that given the choice, people prioritise healthy-looking candidates over intelligent ones.
10 Nov 2014 2 min

Imaging the Genome

The quest to understand the fundamental rules governing life has taken another step forward, as new research from the University of Cambridge reveals.
31 Oct 2014 4 min

ELife Episode 15: Flu, Cannabis and HIV

In this episode of the eLife podcast we hear about influenza pandemics, eating too much, cannabis and the brain, HIV cure research, and the evolution of sea squirts…
30 Oct 2014 30 min

Foreign species invading the UK

As international trade increases, particularly by sea, we're seeing more stowaways; but not of the human variety. Scientists are reporting that animals and plants are hitching rides around the world on boats - and even on fishing tackle. They then setup home in other countries where, with nothing to eat…
20 Oct 2014 5 min

Detection Dogs

Whilst Magic - a young golden retriever - may love chasing a stick, curling up on a rug and enjoying a biscuit as much as the next dog, he is certainly no ordinary dog. Trained by Milton Keynes based organisation Medical Detection Dogs, he can sniff out when his owner…
14 Oct 2014 5 min

14.09.30

This week in the Planet Earth Podcast: Tamara Galloway, Matt Cole and Ceri Lewis of the University of Exeter talk about their research on the effects of fragments of plastics from food packaging, drinks bottles and even facial scrubs on marine wildlife.
6 Oct 2014 10 min

Your nose knows death is imminent

Until recently when technology took over, a coal miner's best friend was a caged canary that would warn of a build-up of life-threatening gases. Now US scientists are saying that the sense of smell is the coalmine canary of human health, with people who fail a smell test being at…
1 Oct 2014 6 min

ELife Episode 14: Cost of corruption, and Ebola

In this episode of the eLife podcast we hear about the spread of the Ebola virus, the financial costs of research misconduct, aging in yeast, grooming in flies, and symbiosis between bacteria and fungal cells.
29 Sep 2014 31 min

The price of alcohol

Thousands die due to alcohol consumption each year, did raising the price of alcohol in the UK reduce these costs?
29 Sep 2014 3 min

The smartest part of our brain

Which part of our brain helped us become the social and (for the most part) intelligent creatures we are today?
29 Sep 2014 4 min

New solar cells

Hydrogen is regarded as an excellent candidate future fuel on the grounds that it is relatively easy to store and it burns cleanly to produce only heat and water. But present methods of production involve fossil fuels and are energy intensive, offsetting any benefits of the hydrogen. Instead, scientists would…
28 Sep 2014 4 min

How dinosaur arms turned into bird wings

You can forget Jurassic Park because actually dinosaurs are all around us! And I'm not joking because the fact is that when you see a chirping bird, you're actually looking at a modern dinosaur. Evidence has been growing for some time that our feathered friends are descended from small carnivorous…
28 Sep 2014 2 min

Common cold and asthma

During an asthma attack, inflammation in the airways leads to breathlessness, and severe cases can end up with sufferers being hospitalised or even dying.One culprit that can make asthma worse is the virus that causes the common cold, known as rhinovirus. But why does a cold mean a runny nose…
28 Sep 2014 4 min

Do baby fish speak?

We've all heard that whales and dolphins have a highly developed way of making sounds to communicate with each. However when it come to ordinary fish you'd have thought they're pretty silent things. But you'd be wrong. Marine biologist Erica Staaterman from the University of Miami believes that most animals…
27 Sep 2014 3 min
652 – 672