4.5 • 1.3K Ratings
🗓️ 28 August 2014
⏱️ 29 minutes
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Manipulating mouse memory Optogenetics allows researchers to use light to turn the genes involved in memory, in the brain, off and on. It's a powerful tool for seeing exactly where specific types of memory are formed and processed. Researchers at MIT have been using the technique to manipulate fearful or pleasurable memories associated with a particular location, in mice. This is so they can see how memories are overwritten in the brain's processing regions.
London pollution Cities in Britain have moved on a great deal from air pollution events, like the London smog of 1952, where 4000 people died in a week. But a recent report has put London air pollution levels as bad as some of the worst in the world, on a level with Mexico City and Beijing. Pollution is a mixture of gases and tiny particulate matter (or PM) -particles too small to be filtered out by our noses, and which end up going straight into our lungs. Dr Rossa Brugha and reporter Marnie Chesterton take a bicycle ride through London's busy streets and parks with an air pollution monitor. Back in the studio, Rossa and Adam talk through the results...
Nature of knowing Philip Ball, the programme's on-call polymath and author of 'Invisible, the Dangerous Allure of the Unseen', comes into the studio to answer a listener's question about how science can possibly understand the unseeable, if it is supposed to be dealing with the observable universe.
Snail fur and how to grow a new head Why is it that some animals can regrow lost body parts and others, like us, can't? Even some closely related species, for instance salamanders, can regrow a lost tail, but fellow amphibians, the frogs, can't regrow lost legs? One of the best-studied 're-generators' is the sea creature - Hydractinia, or Snail fur, because it grows like fur on the back of the snail-shell homes of hermit crabs. By studying Hydractinia's regenerative powers at the cellular level, researchers think that most animals, including us, may have the potential to regrow lost limbs using stem cell systems lying dormant within us.
Producer: Fiona Roberts.
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| 0:00.0 | Choosing what to watch night after night the flicking through the endless |
| 0:06.8 | searching is a nightmare we want to help you on our brand new podcast off the |
| 0:11.8 | telly we share what we've been watching |
| 0:14.0 | Cladie Aide. |
| 0:16.0 | Load to games, loads of fun, loads of screaming. |
| 0:19.0 | Lovely. Off the telly with me Joanna Paige. |
| 0:21.0 | And me, Natalie Cassidy, so your evenings can be a little less |
| 0:24.9 | searching and a lot more watching listen on BBC sounds. |
| 0:29.1 | Hello you this is the podcast of BBC Inside Science first broadcast on the 28th of |
| 0:34.4 | August 2014 I'm Adam Rutherford and I literally have never looked at these |
| 0:39.2 | terms and conditions but I am required to tell you that they can be found at |
| 0:42.4 | BBC.co. |
| 0:43.4 | UK slash Radio 4. |
| 0:46.0 | The days of P-Soopers and London smog and mercifully gone, but the capital still contains |
| 0:50.4 | some of the most polluted streets in the world. We sent our reporter on her bike |
| 0:54.6 | to get a lungful of the invisible health risks in our cities. And it's not just the |
| 0:59.4 | unseen dangers of car emissions, it turns out most of the universe is invisible. We attempt to answer |
| 1:05.8 | a fiddly listener's question on how science can reveal the fabric of reality when we can't |
| 1:11.0 | see almost all of it. And a little bit up the scale from |
| 1:14.7 | invisible to the very very small a species that lives on the shells of hermit crabs |
| 1:20.1 | and has the alarming ability to regrow its own head. |
| 1:23.0 | It's a neat trick and one we might be able to learn from, though not actually copy. |
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