Kidney research sheds light on harms of certain drugs
This is commonly used as a psychiatric medication and for conditions including bipolar disease.
Jan 25, 2019, 15:36 PM ISTAll animals have one common ancestor – Sea sponges: Scientists
The researchers found that models that can better describe the data favour sponges at the root of the animal tree.
Dec 03, 2017, 16:47 PM ISTResearchers develop new method to 3D print living tissues
In a step towards helping repair damaged body parts, scientists in Britain have developed a new method to 3D-print laboratory-grown cells to form living structures.
Aug 16, 2017, 18:49 PM ISTHuman noise can adversely affect animal's use of scent
Human-made noise can have a detrimental impact on an animal's use of information from scent, thereby putting them at greater risk of being attacked by predators, new research has found.
Oct 25, 2016, 16:53 PM ISTRevealed – Hypertension is controlled by rice-grain sized carotid!
Scientists at the University of Bristol have found that removing one carotid body from some patients suffering from hypertension can provide immediate and sustained fall in blood pressure.
Sep 19, 2016, 18:15 PM ISTEngineers develop shape-changing metamaterial
Metamaterials are materials engineered to produce properties that do not occur naturally and they are used to make artificial electromagnetic and vibration absorbers and high-performance sensors.
For many species, noise pollution can be deadly
The disoriented damselfish were six times less likely to dart away from an attack, and more than twice as likely to wind up as some other fish`s meal, the study found.
Feb 05, 2016, 23:50 PM ISTBreakthrough in human cell transformation for better health
The fuller understanding, at the molecular level of cell production leading on from this, may allow the researchers to grow whole organs from somebody's own cells, the findings, published in Nature Genetics, showed.
Jan 24, 2016, 16:31 PM ISTAnts don't respond to social information on the move: Study
The average speed increased in anticipation of a longer movement, suggesting that movement durations were somehow determined in advance.
Jan 17, 2016, 18:33 PM ISTThis row-bot loves dirty water
The Row-bot mimics the way a water boatman moves and the way it feeds on rich organic matter in the dirty water it swims in.
Nov 30, 2015, 17:10 PM ISTEarly ecosystems were more complex than previously believed
Using a computer modelling approach called computational fluid dynamics, they were able to show that Tribrachidium fed by collecting particles suspended in water.
Nov 29, 2015, 08:14 AM ISTFossil fireworm named after punk icon Henry Rollins
A muscly fossil fireworm, discovered by scientists from the University of Bristol and the Natural History Museum, has been named Rollinschaeta myoplena in honour of punk musician and spoken word artist, Henry Rollins.
Nov 22, 2015, 16:27 PM ISTAnts form 'superorganism' when threatened by predator
They suggest that just as organisms may respond to cell damage via pain, ant colonies respond to loss of workers via group awareness.
Nov 16, 2015, 16:13 PM ISTOur love for honey dates back to Stone Age
The study involved large scale investigation of sites across Europe, the Near East and Northern Africa.
Nov 12, 2015, 15:57 PM ISTHow jaws influenced dinosaurs' diets
Just how serious was the killer T rex dinosaur's bite? Researchers from the University of Bristol have now revealed that the feeding style and dietary preferences of dinosaurs were closely linked to how wide they could open their jaws.
Nov 04, 2015, 16:20 PM ISTNew method to starve lung cancer
Cancer cells use glucose at rates tens or even hundreds of times larger than that of normal cells.
Oct 22, 2015, 15:20 PM ISTCould early birds fly? 125m-yr-old wing holds clue to ancient mystery
125 million-year-old fossil discovered that reveals whether prehistoric birds could fly or not.
Oct 09, 2015, 08:58 AM IST