Students at the Heart Conference - Have your say!
Submit your ideas now for presentations
Submit your ideas now for presentations
Students improved employability skills through COIL project
What can fossil bones tell us about the ecology and behaviour of extinct species? In two recent publications, Dr Carlo Meloro from the School of Natural Sciences and Psychology has worked with international teams to demonstrate how we can interpret palaeoecology (the ecology of fossil animals and plants) of extinct wild dogs by looking at their fore-limb and skull shape.
Link-up comes after successful fact-finding trip
Master's student competes in final of UK industry competition
Partnership tackles problem of 'accidental managers'
A pioneering new study is set to help surgeons repair hearts without damaging precious tissue.
The discovery of a virtually complete Neanderthal skeleton in Northern Iraq is set to reopen the debate about whether our closest ancient human relatives buried their dead.
An anthropologist at Liverpool John Moores University and other researchers have played down links between modern Asian physiology and a recently discovered early human species, Denisova hominins.
Reader in Experimental Psychology Dr Ruth Ogden writes for The Conversation on the extraordinary experience of Beatriz Flamini.