Folds in brain could predict intelligence
20 April, 2004
A study by Melbourne scientists has provided the first direct evidence that differences in the way the surface of the human brain is folded could be an indication of how smart a person is.
FRET and FRET-FLIM microscopy imaging of localised protein interactions in living cell nucleus
08 July, 2003 by Dr Ammasi Periasamy*
FRET microscopy imaging is widely used to detect protein-protein interactions inside living cells. This application note describes the use of one and two-photon FRET and in characterising the dimerisation of C/EBPa protein
Australian overturns 15 years of nano-science doctrine
08 April, 2003
Dr John Sader used established mechanical principles to prove that the popular V-shaped cantilever inadvertently degrades the performance of the instrument and delivers none of its intended benefits
Metal ions may play a big role in how we sense smells
08 April, 2003
Of the five basic senses, the sense of smell is the least understood. Now, scientists at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign have sniffed out potential clues to how olfactory receptors in the nose detect odours
The future of drug delivery
08 February, 2003
The burgeoning area of drug delivery research could some day produce insulin pills for diabetics, laboratory-grown organs for transplants and plastic surgery, and an under-skin pharmacy on a microchip
Studying corrosion phenomena
08 April, 2002 | Supplied by: CSIRO
Described as the biggest advance in microscopy since the electron microscope, the second-generation scanning Kelvin probe has been unveiled by Australian scientists