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| New Scientist TV - August 2010 |
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| One way of growing and harvesting cellulose to use in the production of clothes + can maths help rowing teams to go faster? |
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| New Scientist TV - July 2010 |
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| Rates of decomposition of a dead body must be calculated differently for smokers & non-smokers, due to toxins deterring insects + reducing hydrogen fuel's overall carbon footprint |
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| New Scientist TV - June 2010 |
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| How can a shark can smell a drop of blood in an ocean of water? + How our brains perceive ambiguous objects and images |
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| New Scientist TV - May 2010 |
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| Ultra-realistic movement within new animation technology, an affordable machine which can make plastic moulded pieces, and a computer game technology which acts on eye movements |
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| New Scientist TV - April 2010 |
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| A 150mph low energy electric car which is being designed to compete for an X-Prize, why so many frogs have been growing extra limbs, and an advanced robot which is modelled on a 2 year old |
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| New Scientist TV - March 2010 |
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| A new prototype design for space stations which will include mostly fabric shells, a robot which is being conditioned to copy an artists style, and a wedding party is blood tested for hormone changes |
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| New Scientist TV - January 2010 |
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| How scientists are attempting to understand why solitary locusts become crop eating crowds, the advancements in the study of ancient human teeth, and a pollinating cricket |
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