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Image: Flickr/Alexandre Duret-Lutz
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Innovation & Technology
Weekly |
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This is the online version of the latest
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This week's headlines:
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Journal impact factor 'distorts science' |
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Is city growth driving malaria elimination? |
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Moon mission paves way to 'green' steel |
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Fast and painless way to better mental arithmetic |
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Novel material shows promise for extracting uranium from seawater |
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Gliding robot mimics flying fish |
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Reading the unreadable |
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Parcels find their way to you via the crowd |
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| Journal impact factor 'distorts science' |
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May 17, 2013 |
ABC News
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| An international declaration by more than 150 leading scientists and 75
scientific organisations is demanding a rethink of the role 'journal
impact factor' plays in the evaluation of research.
The Declaration on Research Assessment, released today, contains 18
recommendations for change and is signed by a coalition of scientists,
journal editors, publishers and scientific and funding bodies. The
statement was released to coincide with editorials in scientific
journals around the world. The declaration highlights growing concern at
the obsession in world science for publication in journals with a high
impact factor.
The most influential citation ranking system is the Journal Impact
Factor (JIF) that appears annually as part of the Thomson Reuters Web of
Knowledge. This ranking reflects the average number of times a journal's
papers are referenced or cited by other researchers during the preceding
two years. Many institutions and funding bodies rate the success of a
scientist based on the number of times they publish in a highly ranked
journal.
But signatories to the declaration say the system is flawed because its
use of an average, rather than median number of citations per journal,
means highly cited papers can artificially lift a journal's rankings.
The declaration recommends research impact should be judged on the
number of citations of the individual paper as well as other measures
such as health outcomes, policy changes or diagnostic impact. |
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| Is city growth driving malaria elimination? |
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May 16, 2013 |
SciDev / Malaria Journal
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| The elimination of malaria has closely followed patterns of urban growth
over the past century, raising hope that booming urbanisation in
developing nations will lead to further reductions in cases of what is
still one of the world's top killers, says a study.
Researchers from the UK and the US used global data on city growth and
malaria transmission maps to examine the relationships between the
changes in these factors between 1900 and 2000. They discovered that
when 50 countries where malaria had existed in 1900 were finally
certified as being malaria free, many more people were living in urban
areas and the percentages of urbanised land were higher than is the case
today in countries where malaria is still endemic.
Furthermore, the rate of urbanisation from 1900 was faster in those
countries that had eliminated malaria than in those where it remains.
The close link also held for 29 countries that contained both areas
declared malaria-free since 1900 and areas where malaria persists. In
three-quarters of these countries, mostly in Asia and the Americas,
malaria-free areas were more urbanised and urbanisation had increased
more rapidly than in areas that still had malaria.
The study also compared changes in malaria transmission in areas that
are urban today versus those that have remained rural in 158 countries
where malaria was endemic in 1900. It found that 82% of countries saw
malaria transmission fall by more in urban than rural areas since 1900.
The study says cities bring improved health, housing and wealth, all of
which may cut malaria by contributing to changes in the behaviour of
humans, mosquitoes and parasites. But it failed to resolve a
'chicken-and-egg' question: does increased urbanisation cut transmission
or does reduced malaria promote development? |
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| Moon mission paves way to 'green' steel |
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May 09, 2013 |
ABC News / AFP / Nature
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| The dream of 'green' steel is a reality with scientists from MIT
unveiling a new method of extracting metallic iron from its ore while
curbing CO2 emissions. The process uses electrolysis and may eventually
result in cheaper steel of higher purity. Critically the only other
by-product of the innovation is oxygen.
About 1.5bn tonnes of iron is produced worldwide annually, contributing
about five per cent of the world's greenhouse-gas emissions. Despite its
best efforts, until now the steel-making industry has had little success
in developing environmentally friendly processing.
The team's idea for the new approach arose while working on a NASA
project to look for ways of producing oxygen on the moon - a key step
toward future lunar bases. The researchers found a process called molten
oxide electrolysis (MOE) could use iron oxide from the lunar soil to
make oxygen in abundance, with no special chemistry. They tested the
process using lunar-like soil from Meteor Crater in Arizona - which
contains iron oxide from an asteroid impact thousands of years ago -
finding it produced steel as a by-product.
The original method used an iridium anode, but since iridium is
expensive and supplies are limited, it was not a viable approach for
bulk steel production. However the team identified an inexpensive metal
alloy of chromium and iron that can replace the iridium anode in molten
oxide electrolysis. Conventional steel plants are only economical if
they can produce millions of tonnes of steel per year, whereas MOE could
be viable for production of a few hundred thousand tonnes per year,
according to the researchers. |
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| Fast and painless way to better mental arithmetic |
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May 16, 2013 |
Science Daly / Current Biology
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| In the future, if you want to improve your ability to manipulate numbers
in your head, you might just plug yourself in. So say researchers who
report on studies of a harmless form of brain stimulation applied to an
area known to be important for math ability.
'With just five days of cognitive training and noninvasive, painless
brain stimulation, we were able to bring about long-lasting improvements
in cognitive and brain functions,' says Roi Cohen Kadosh of the
University of Oxford.
The improvements held for a period of six months after training. No one
knows exactly how this relatively new method of stimulation, called
transcranial random noise stimulation (TRNS), works. But the researchers
say the evidence suggests that it allows the brain to work more
efficiently by making neurons fire more synchronously.
The team had shown previously that another form of brain stimulation
could make people better at learning and processing new numbers. But
TRNS is even less perceptible to those receiving it. TRNS also has the
potential to help even more people because it has been shown to improve
mental arithmetic - the ability to add, subtract, or multiply a string
of numbers in your head, for example - not just new number learning.
Mental arithmetic is a more complex and challenging task, which more
than 20% of people struggle with.
Ultimately, with better integration of neuroscience and education, this
line of study could really help humans reach our cognitive potential in
math and beyond. It might also be of particular help to those suffering
with neurodegenerative illness, stroke, or learning difficulties,
according to the researchers. |
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| Novel material shows promise for extracting uranium from seawater |
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May 16, 2013 |
Technology Review
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| The world’s oceans contain nearly a thousand times as much uranium as
conventional reserves, and researchers have spent decades trying to
develop an efficient way to extract it. Experts say it is important to
develop such technology because it could serve as insurance in case
supplies of uranium for nuclear reactors ever become scarce.
The most advanced system today employs plastic fibres with
uranium-binding chemical groups grafted onto their surface. Now,
researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have
designed a metal-organic framework (MOF) to collect common
uranium-containing ions dissolved in seawater. In lab tests, the
material was at least four times better than the conventional plastic
adsorbent at drawing uranium from artificial seawater.
Metal-organic frameworks are considered very promising for certain
technological applications, including gas storage and chemical
separation. Their structure can be tuned for different purposes. This
allows them to be made extremely porous, resulting in very high surface
areas—an order of magnitude larger than that of zeolites, a porous
material already used in many commercial adsorbents. And like organic
polymers, metal-organic frameworks have surfaces that can be modified so
as to bind to specific molecules. |
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| Gliding robot mimics flying fish |
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May 19, 2013 |
New Scientist
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| It mimics the leaping glides of flying fish and needs no external power.
The Jump Glider could be the first in a new generation of robots,
harnessing aerodynamic lift to travel further than it would if it simply
hopped, and without using additional energy.
Researchers at Stanford University in California created the robot,
which is 30 cm long and has a battery charged by a solar cell. Its motor
compresses a lightweight carbon-fibre spring, which when released flings
the robot into the air. The robot's wing then pivots to maximise lift.
At the peak of its leap, the wing flattens out to prolong glide time. In
tests, the Jump Glider managed to fly about 5 metres per hop.
The way in which the robot stores and releases energy is impressive,
says Chris Melhuish, director of the Bristol Robotics Laboratory in the
UK, who develops robots that scavenge energy from their environment.
Because the Jump Glider uses the sun's rays to recharge, he envisages
that the robots could be deployed in a swarm, communicating wirelessly,
to carry out coordinated environmental monitoring or mapping missions
across vast areas like the Australian outback. |
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| Reading the unreadable |
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May 16, 2013 |
TG Daily
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Pioneering X-ray technology is making it possible to read fragile
rolled-up historical documents for the first time in centuries.
Old parchment is often extremely dry and liable to crack and crumble if
any attempt is made to physically unroll or unfold it. The new
technology, however, eliminates the need to do so by enabling parchment
to be unrolled or unfolded ‘virtually’ and the contents displayed on a
computer screen.
Developed at Cardiff University and Queen Mary, University of London,
the breakthrough means historians will be able to access previously
unusable written sources and gain new insight into the past.
No other technique developed anywhere in the world has the capability to
make text concealed in rolled or folded historical parchments genuinely
legible. The system has now been tested successfully on a medieval legal
scroll provided by the Norfolk Record Office.
In a completely innovative approach to the problem, the technique works
by scanning parchment with X-rays in order to detect the presence of
iron contained in ‘iron gall ink’ – the most commonly used ink in Europe
between the 12th and 19th centuries.
Using a method called microtomography, a 3-dimensional ‘map’ showing the
ink’s exact location is built up by creating images made from a series
of X-ray 'slices' taken through the parchment. |
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| Parcels find their way to you via the crowd |
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May 16, 2013 |
New Scientist
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| Jane yawns and climbs the stairs from the subway at 145th Street, New
York. She's almost home. A stranger rises from a bench as she
approaches, catching her eye. 'Jane Murphy? Here's your package.' This
is the ultimate aim of a crowd-powered delivery system dreamed up by a
group of Microsoft researchers.
Fictional Jane never has to deviate from her normal route to pick up her
package. Instead, it is sent via a chain of people – an algorithm
calculates the fastest route using aggregated location data from New
York tweeters. The idea, dubbed TwedEx, could make it possible to
deliver purchases to customers on the move, as well as making it cheaper
to send them.
Basic crowdsourced systems already exist, which hire strangers from the
internet to deliver packages. But TwedEx is different because it taps
into existing human journeys. All the sender need do is write the
recipient's unique identifier on the package, their Twitter handle, for
example, and let the TwedEx algorithm and the crowd do the rest.
By learning people's average movements from their past Twitter data,
TwedEx predicts which people to hand a package to at intermediate
locations based on the package's final destination. A user would tell
the network they had a package, the system would work out the best route
and then each person in the chain would be told who to give the parcel
to, as well as where, and when.
So far, TwedEx only exists in a simulation, but Microsoft is discussing
building an app for a real-world pilot. |
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