Nature Podcast
Channel Details
Nature Podcast
The Nature Podcast brings you the best stories from the world of science each week. We cover everything from astronomy to zoology, highlighting the most exciting research from each issue of the Nature journal. We meet the scientists behind the results and provide in-depth analysis from Nature's jour...
Recent Episodes
906 episodes
Togetherness: How co-operation built the world
In this episode, we speak with science journalist Rowan Hooper, whose book Togetherness: Symbiosis and the Hidden Story of Life's Greatest Collaborati...
Audio long read: Is the peptide craze backed by science? The promise behind the hype
Peptides — short chains of amino acids — have become huge online. The popularity of these molecules has skyrocketed and they are now the latest cure-a...
Briefing Chat: What tickling a chimpanzee can tell us about the evolution of speech
Nature staff discuss how apes share a rhythm of laughter, and how AI use may degrade skills in medicine and computer science.
Natu...
Medical records could be revealed by AI training-data vulnerability
In this episode:
Research article: Knolle et al.
Correction: The story about medical AI-data privacy incorrect...
Briefing Chat: Testosterone and sperm may get a boost from obesity drugs
Nature staff discuss preliminary data on the effects of GLP-1 drugs on male fertility plus a two-year trial of a brain-computer interface.
DNA from hunter-gatherer teeth reveals secrets of ancient plague
In this episode:
Research article: Macleod et al.
Nature: Bones of Iron Age skeleton were whittled into tools<...
Briefing Chat: The epic journey of Stonehenge’s central stone
In this episode:
BBC Science Focus: We may have just cracked one of Stonehenge's greatest mysteries
Nature: An...
Newly-discovered whale graveyard dates back millions of years
In this episode:
Research article: Peng et al.
News & Views: A vast whale necropolis has been found
Natu...
Briefing chat: Spinosaurs with salt glands could have lived in marine environments
In this episode:
Science: Some spinosaurs cried salty tears to thrive in brackish waters
Nature: Bang! Explodi...
Your phone can use tiny skin-colour changes to measure your heart rate
In this episode:
Research article: Liao et al.
Nature: A star gone rogue tears through the Galaxy
Nature...
Briefing Chat: When to trust eyewitness memory – according to science
In this episode:
Nature: Memory on trial: the new science of when to trust eyewitness testimony
Nature: Nature...
Major Ebola outbreak is escalating: what happens next
On 17 May the World Health Organization (WHO) declared an ongoing Ebola outbreak a public health emergency of international concern. Centred on the De...
AI ‘scientists’ promise to accelerate research — how do they work?
In this episode:
Research article: Ghareeb et al.
Research article: Gottweis et al.
Nature: Teams of AI agents boost s...
Briefing Chat: Hantavirus — what this outbreak reveals about the disease
In this episode:
Nature: Hantavirus outbreak exposes uncertainty about how disease spreads
Nature: There is no vaccine for d...
Red-light therapy is all the rage — does it work?
In this episode:
Disclaimer: The opinions and assertions expressed herein by Juanita Anders are those of the speaker and do not re...
Audio long read: The air is full of DNA — here’s what scientists are using it for
Although scientists have long been able to gather DNA from water and soil, it's only recently that they've started to see the air as a source of genet...
Briefing Chat: Can't focus? It's not your attention span, it's your notifications
Nature Feature: Are attention spans really shrinking? What the science says
Nature News Explainer: AI data hubs in space: when wil...
Anaesthetized brains can still process podcasts
In this episode:
Research Article: Katlowitz et al.
Nature: Even the unconscious brain can learn — and predict what you’ll s...
Briefing Chat: Stressed mitochondria spawn new 'organelles' in cells
In this episode:
Nature: Mitochondria can spawn new ‘organelles’ — hinting at how modern cells evolved
Nature:...
Immunity gets a boost from a surprising place — breakfast
In this episode:
Research Article: Kumar et al.
Nature: Cosmic-ray detection heralds era of mega-observatories...
Inside the evidence revolution — how decision-making became data driven
In this episode of Nature hits the books, we speak with Nature's Helen Pearson whose book Beyond Belief: How Evidence Shows What Really Works looks at...
Meet Ace, the table-tennis robot that can beat elite players
In this episode:
Research Article: Dürr et al.
News and Views: Robot can beat elite players at table tennis
Briefing Chat: Penguins pick up PFAS pollution
In this episode:
Science: Penguins become marine detectives, thanks to pollutant-detecting anklets
Nature: One...
Giant cancer study reveals effectiveness of 'off label' treatments
In this episode:
Research Article: Verkerk et al.
Nature: Microbial hockey: bacteria can spin a ‘puck’ just by...
Behind the scenes with Artemis II’s scientists during the historic Moon fly-by
In this episode:
On Monday, reporter Alexandra Witze was in the heart of the Artemis II mission’s science operations. She tells us about the exp...
Briefing Chat: The tongue trick that helps sunbirds suck
In this episode:
Nature: Eye drops made from pig semen deliver cancer treatment to mice
Nature: Motherhood der...
Artemis II is go: humans head to the Moon after half-century absence
In this podcast we'll talk about NASA's Artemis II launch, which has ushered in a new era of lunar exploration.
Nature: Lift off! Artemis II mis...
These scientists chased a jet to learn more about ‘lean-burn’ contrails
In this episode:
Research Article: Voigt et al.
Nature: Sunken Soviet nuclear submarine’s radioactive release<...
Briefing Chat: ‘Zombie cells’ resurrected with new genes
Nature staff discuss some of the week's top science news.
Nature: ‘Zombie cells’ return from the dead — after a genome transplant
<...
Why insects aren't huge: a new challenge to a decades-old idea
Research Article : Snelling et al.
Nature: Faster ticking of ‘biological clock’ predicts shorter lifespan
Nature: Mighty min...
Briefing Chat: Are scientists funny? The evidence is in — and it's no joke
In this episode:
Nature: Memory loss is fuelled by gut microbes in ageing mice
Nature: Knock knock, no one’s t...
Botanical mystery solved: how plants make a crucial malaria drug
In this episode:
Research Article : Lombe et al.
Nature: Electric-vehicle batteries toughen up to beat the hea...
Briefing chat: ‘Can it run Doom?’ — why scientists got brain cells and a satellite to play the classic game
Nature: How the classic computer game Doom became a tool for science
Subscribe to Nature Briefing, an unmissable daily round-up of science news,...
This fish shouldn’t exist — the weird genetics of clonal vertebrates
A study reveals how the asexual Amazon molly defies evolutionary expectations — plus, evidence of what may be powering superluminous supernovae.
...
Briefing chat: What Galileo’s scribbled margin notes reveal about his scientific journey
In this episode:
New Scientist: Paediatricians’ blood used to make new treatments for RSV and colds
Heart surgery with quick-setting magnetic fluid could prevent strokes
Injectable fluid safely fills area in which blood clots can form, in animal trials — plus, strong evidence that an elusive form of diamond has been ma...
Audio long read: Many people have no mental imagery. What’s going on in their brains?
This is an audio version of our Feature: Many people have no mental imagery. What’s going on in their brains?
Hosted on Acast. Se...
Briefing chat: Pokémon turns 30 — how Pikachu and pals inspired generations of researchers
In this episode:
00:15 How Pokémon inspired fields as diverse as evolution, biodiversity and research integrity
Nature: Pokémon turns 30 —...
How earthquakes and lightning help explain squeaky sneakers
High-speed footage reveals shoe squeaks can start with a tiny bolt of lightning — plus, evidence that a debated brain phenomenon exists in humans.
Briefing chat: How hovering bumblebees keep their cool
Nature: Brain differences between sexes get more pronounced from puberty
Science: How do busy bees avoid overheating from flying?<...