Egyptology in prisons
08 February 2008The project Accessing Virtual Egypt is breaking new ground in knowledge transfer between museums and prisons, with empowering results
Research
The project Accessing Virtual Egypt is breaking new ground in knowledge transfer between museums and prisons, with empowering results
Humans often use diagrams for reasoning, but can computers do the same?
‘I raised to my lips a spoonful of the tea in which I had soaked a morsel of the cake. […] And suddenly the memory...
The discovery in southern India of a well-preserved quarry dating from a million years ago is helping researchers to answer: how intelligent were our ancestors?
Enabling computers to understand language might help users to overcome online information overload.
New research in Cambridge is deciphering neural control signals that create the right brain state for the right situation.
Cambridge researchers have analysed millions of patterns of potential moves to model the uncertainty of play in the ancient game of Go.
Most pregnancies develop normally but when complications arise they can have devastating effects. Two recent initiatives in Cambridge hope to deliver a new understanding of...
An innovative new project spearheaded by Cambridge Enterprise Ltd and researchers in the Department of Chemistry is taking a proactive approach to intellectual property (IP)...
A fascinating study of wartime artefacts is uncovering a story of symbolic resistance and creative necessity in the Channel Islands 60 years ago.