Traders’ biology may play a bigger role than their rationality
13 January 2009Financial traders' success may depend more on their biological traits than on their ability to make rational choices, researchers at the University of Cambridge have...
Research
Financial traders' success may depend more on their biological traits than on their ability to make rational choices, researchers at the University of Cambridge have...
A new book published by the Cambridge Archaeological Unit (CAU) suggests that population density in the later prehistoric / Roman Cambridge area may have been...
Studies in La Paz, the highest city in the world, are helping to uncover a link between prenatal conditions and heart disease in later life.
A new online exhibition explores the visual culture of embryology as part of a research initiative on the history of reproduction.
Epigenetics is taking the biomedical research world by storm; three Cambridge scientists use examples from their own research to explain why.
A recently patented invention holds promise for understanding a debilitating disease that affects two million women in the UK.
Cambridge neurologists have shown that an antibody used to treat leukaemia also limits and repairs the damage in multiple sclerosis.
Changes in the clothing industry have fashioned a new look for how manufacturing and retail is managed globally.
An ambitious project is making accessible some of the most important visual resources for research into international polar exploration.
Excavation and geophysical survey are uncovering the secrets of an exceptionally diverse Imperial Roman landscape.