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The FT’s fifth annual ranking of the region’s businesses by revenue growth.
...“And I love the science bit of it,” she said. “If I hadn’t studied philosophy, I probably would have studied biology.”...
...Peter CalowProfessor, Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota,Minneapolis, MN, US...
...Markets and Power in Digital Capitalism By Philipp Staab Manchester University Press, £20, 184 pages Diane Coyle is professor of public policy at the University of Cambridge...
...Higgs’s ideas have had “a profound impact on our understanding of the universe, of matter and of mass”, said Alan Barr, professor of particle physics at Oxford university....
...They routinely undervalue any but Stem subjects (science, technology, engineering and maths), although many tech and other significant businesses are successfully run by liberal arts graduates....
...“The collection and processing of data will be at the heart of science — and increasingly it will involve the use of clever AI algorithms.”...
...Steven SchwarzEmeritus Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of California, Berkeley, CA, US...
...“It’s a new paradigm in how to understand these conditions and develop drugs,” said Sergiu Pașca, project leader and Stanford’s professor of psychiatry and behavioural sciences....
...of the Ministry of Defence and intelligence agencies....
...Why We Remember: The Science of Memory and How It Shapes Us by Charan Ranganath Faber £20, 304 pages Join our online book group on Facebook at FT Books Café and subscribe to our podcast Life & Art wherever...
...Even when tech companies such as Google are involved in quasi-academic research and publishing research papers, he points to the power of the universities of Stanford and Berkeley in the San Francisco Bay...
...But she managed to avoid deportation and found positions at the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences outside Washington DC, then at the University of Pennsylvania....
...FT Books Café and subscribe to our podcast Life & Art wherever you listen...
...Rather than a stable refuge, science becomes the source of intensified metaphysical and dramatic disorder. The tantalising ambiguities of modern physics are well-trodden theatrical terrain....
...Why We Die: The New Science of Ageing and the Quest for Immortality by Venki Ramakrishnan Hodder Press £25/ William Morrow, $32.50, 320 pages How We Age: The Science of Longevity by Coleen T Murphy Princeton...
...Perhaps technological progress depends more on a stream of results from university research labs, and cannot be rushed — in which case, patience is the relevant virtue and a huge splurge on new technologies...
...Visitors to Making Sense of Colour, an exhibition co-created by Google with art and research lab Chromasonic, have been asked to consider that question....
...If we really want a scientifically literate population, then we must put the needs of the majority to the fore and think how we can offer them a glimpse of the awe and intellectual achievements...
...on research institutions, incubators and accelerators building the next generation of European tech....
...Campus-style hubs often rely on a pipeline of innovation from nearby universities, which create spin-off commercial ventures for promising science and technology research....
...of art, science and technology....
...“Strangers in a strange land” — the title chosen for the review you ran about Olivier Roy’s book The Crisis of Culture (Life & Arts, March 23) would seem to be an echo of Robert Heinlein’s science fiction...
...The study was led by political scientist Jon Miller at the University of Michigan, who has for decades surveyed US citizens on their attitudes to science by asking what they have sought scientific information...
...The art of noise Ask someone to do a quick pencil sketch of a loudspeaker and they’ll invariably draw a rectangular box with a couple of circles on the front....
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