Archive for April, 2012

Social media make people smarter


There may be those that think Twitter and other social media are part of a general ‘dumbing down’ of society, yet the emerging evidence suggests that social media are making people smarter.

Professor Andrew Jackson, of the Theoretical Ecology Group at TCD, and his PhD student, Luke McNally, have devised ingenious methods of testing whether increasing social interactions by media like Twitter, makes us smarter.

They created ‘digital brains’ that played games that replicated how people interact in society, over and over again, for a period of time that equated to 50,000 human generations. The results were fascinating.

LISTEN: Interview with Andrew Jackson

Broadcast on Science Spinning on 103.2 Dublin City FM on 16-04-2012

READ: The article below appeared in The Sunday Times on 12-04-2012

Trinity ‘SMART Arm’ gives stroke survivors hope


As many as 10,000 Irish people each year have a stroke, and the vast majority of that number cannot currently gain benefit from rehabilitation programmes since they don’t have enough movement left in their damaged arm.

SMART Arm, a device invented by Richard Carson, Professor at the Institute of Neuroscience at TCD, and colleagues in Australia, takes the small remaining movement left in the damaged arm of even the most severely affected stroke survivors and enhances that movement electrically. This opens up the possibility of rehab for all stroke survivors.

The article below was published in The Sunday Times on 29-04-2012

When rocks start ‘talking’: The science of geo-chemical fingerprinting


Geochemistry can get rocks to ‘talk’ about how they were formed, and when (credit: http://www.crsbooks.net)

We have all heard of DNA fingerprinting, where the DNA in a person’s blood is identified, for example, at the scene of a crime, or on a victim, leading to a criminal prosecution.

But, what exactly is a geochemical fingerprint? Well, the same principle applies, but this time it concerns rocks. The geochemistry of a rock can provide information about how it formed, when, and what has happened to it since.

It can also be used for a variety of non-geological purposes, such as, for example, determining where a neo-lithic person lived from the examination of the carbon and oxygen isotopes in their teeth enamel.

This provides clues as to what they ate, and what water they drank.

LISTEN: Interview with Professor Balz Kamber

Broadcast on Science Spinning on 103.2 Dublin City FM on 12-04-2012

‘Ambient assisted living’ research at CLARITY can improve life for the elderly


There are a number of ways that devices connected to the web can help improve the quality of life and health of the elderly. This picture depicts a 2012 trial of ‘ambient assisted technology’ by Siemens in the homes of people aged 50 or over in Potsdam, Germany (credit: Siemens)

Technology connected to the web can help improve the quality of life of older people and also act as an important monitor on their health.

That’s according to Professor Gregory O’Hare, based at UCD’s CLARITY: Centre for Sensor Web Technologies.

Ambient assisted living is the term giving to the linking of web-enabled devices that can do everything from sending out a warning to a GP, if an older person hasn’t moved, to reminding them that it’s time to watch their favourite TV show.

LISTEN: Interview with Prof Gregory O’Hare

Broadcast on Science Spinning on 103.2 Dublin City FM on 19-04-2012

DCU scientist comes up with a greener, cheaper way to make drugs


DCU researcher and ‘green chemist’ Dr Nick Gathergood, has developed a cheaper, greener way of producing new antibiotic drugs.

LISTEN: Interview with Dr Nick Gathergood

Broadcast on the weekly Science Spinning show on 103.2 Dublin City FM on 05-04-2012

READ: The article below was published in The Sunday Times, Irish Edition, on 08-04-201

Eye gaze technology helps disabled speak & write


The use of eye gaze technology is helping people that have lost the use of the limbs following spinal injury, or a range of degenerative disorders, to speak and write again, and achieve greater control over their lives in general.

LISTEN: Interview with Dr Mick Donegan

This interview was broadcast on the weekly Science Spinning show on 103.2 Dublin City FM on 12-04-2012

READ: The article below was published in The Sunday Times, Irish edition on 08-04-2012

‘Gold rush’ to the bottom of the ocean threatens rare life forms


Black smoke emerging from a hydro-thermal vent located on the mid-Atlantic ridge at the bottom of the Atlantic ocean (Source: Wikipedia)

Hydro-thermal vents, or ‘black smokers’ such as the one pictured here on the right are akin to small volcanoes, located at the bottom of our deep oceans.

These vents are home to undiscovered new animal species that survive without light and under great pressure.

The vents are also home to valuable metals, including gold, silver, copper and zinc.

Mining companies long knew of a ‘pot of gold’ at the bottom of the ocean at these vents, but they didn’t have the technology that would allow them to retrieve them.

That’s changing and new technology has allowed for the first mining operation at a deep-sea hydro-thermal vent to begin off the coast of Papua New Guinea.

In the next decade, it is likely that mining companies will have the technological capability to mine for metals at all hydro-thermal vents, even those that might be located at the bottom of a 3,000 metre column of water.

In these circumstances, it is crucial that a code of practice be put in place to guide companies that will seek to mine for metals at the bottom of the ocean, according to Dr Patrick Collins, marine scientist based at NUI Galway.

A workshop at NUIG will be held next week to try and put some international guidelines in place, and there will be contributions from scientists in many countries, as well as the mining company working at the Papua New Guinea vent.

LISTEN: Interview with Dr Patrick Collins

Broadcast on 103.2 Dublin City FM on 05-04-2012

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