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Chinese construction workers

China's infrastructure investments 'threaten its economic growth'

News

The study authored by Atif Ansar, Bent Flyvbjerg, Alexander Budzier and Daniel Lunn is based on the largest dataset of its kind. It analyses 95 large Chinese road and rail transport projects, and 806 transport projects built in rich democracies.

Ethiopian boys want high status jobs but there are scarce opportunities, says research.

The economy's improving but many Ethiopian boys still 'feel hopeless'

News

A picture has emerged of many boys being taken out of school to work on the family farm or business, or in paid work. Girls had greater flexibility to combine their household responsibilities with their schooling so were able to progress academically.

Liverpool Football Club fans.

Downs as well as the ups of a football club's fortunes build fans' loyalty

News

Anthropologists have discovered that intense experiences of crucial wins and losses shared with fellow fans bind them more tightly to one another and their club.

The sun emits a solar flare. Such activity increases radioactivity in the atmosphere and this change is detected in tree-rings.

'Clocks' in tree-rings that could reset chronologies across the ancient world

News

Until now scholars have had only vague evidence for dating when events happened during the earliest periods of civilisation, with estimates being within hundreds of years.

Uber

New research challenges Uber's claims about making roads safer

News

Researchers from the Universities of Oxford and Southern California examined whether road traffic deaths related to drunk driving declined in counties where Uber had started operating.

A capuchin using a stone stool to crack a cashew nut in Serra da Capivara National Park in northeast Brazil.

Monkeys in Brazil have used stone tools for hundreds of years at least

News

Researchers say, to date, they have found the earliest archaeological examples of monkey tool use outside of Africa.

Paris skyline

Deaths during heatwave in two cities 'due to man-made climate change'

News

They calculate that in Paris, the hottest city in Europe during the heatwave in summer 2003, 506 out of 735 summer deaths recorded in the French capital were due to a heatwave made worse by man-made climate change.

Blombos Cave, South Africa.

Innovation of Stone Age humans 'not linked with climate change'

News

Environmental records obtained from archaeological sites where there are Middle Stone Age deposits are the subject of the study published in the journal, PLOS ONE.

40% of carers said they had not received any support following abuse allegations.

Foster carers facing allegations of abuse 'need better support'

News

The study drew on 190 records of unproven allegations against foster carers from all over England.

Running club in a city

Different ethnic groups 'not likely to join the same local clubs'

News

The research, published in the American Sociological Review, focuses on how Turkish and Moroccan immigrants have integrated in the Netherlands in the last decade by looking at joining and leaving rates for sports, leisure and neighbourhood associations of different ethnic composition.

Researching the Reef: fish and coral of the Caribbean

Researching the Reef: fish and coral of the Caribbean

Video

Dominic and Vanessa are DPhil candidates investigating the impact of human activity on the soft corals and fish populations off the coast of Honduras. Their work is supported by the Fisheries Society of the British Isles (FSBI) and Operation Wallacea.

Researchers sampled online conversations around time of Ethiopian elections.

Mapping online hate speech

News

Researchers from the University of Oxford and Addis Ababa University examined thousands of comments made by Ethiopians on Facebook during four months around the time of  Ethiopia's general election in 2015.

Dancing children

Dancing to the same beat connects groups of children

News

Around 100 children who took part in the Oxford University study were divided into groups and performed their moves facing one another, wearing headphones for their rhythmic cues.

Tackling Adolescent to Parent Violence

Tackling Adolescent to Parent Violence

Video

Adolescent to parent violence has remained under-explored and largely unarticulated within the fields of youth justice, domestic violence, policing, and criminology, particularly in the UK. The project aims to map the contours of the problem, exploring how it is defined, experienced and negotiated by parents and adolescents and how violent assaults committed by adolescents within the home are currently processed and managed within the criminal justice system.

Reading of online news.

Half of online users get news from Facebook and other social platforms

News

Its fifth Digital News Report says the combined effects of the rise of social platforms, an accelerating move to mobile devices and a growing rejection by consumers of online advertising has undermined many of the business models that support quality news.

Dame Carol Robinson

Oxford spinout OMass Technologies provides native mass spectrometry to pharma and biotech

News

OMass Technologies, a spinout from the University of Oxford's Department of Chemistry, is the first company to conquer the challenge of deciphering the interactions of membrane proteins by using...
Cornmarket Street

Leading female scientists get on their soapboxes

Oxford Science Blog

Some of the UK's top female scientists will be taking to their soapboxes in Oxford this weekend to share their passion for their subjects with the public.

Cells

No boundaries: ending a century of intrigue around 'membraneless' cell compartments

Oxford Science Blog

We've been able to see them for over a hundred years, but only now are scientists beginning to get to the bottom of what's happening inside membraneless organelles – compartments within cells that really do have no boundaries.

Escitalopram molecule

Anti-depressant drugs enhance feelings of control in depression

Oxford Science Blog

It can take some time before anti-depressant drugs have an effect on people. Yet, the chemical changes that they cause in the brain happen quite rapidly. Understanding this paradox could enable us to create more effective treatments for depression.

Google FHI

How Oxford and Google DeepMind are making artificial intelligence safer

Oxford Arts Blog

Oxford academics are teaming up with Google DeepMind to make artificial intelligence safer.

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