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Science blog network

The Guardian's science blog network hosts talented writers who are experts in their fields, from mathematics, particle physics and astronomy to neuroscience, science policy and psychology. By giving them the freedom to write on whatever subjects they choose – without editorial interference – they broaden and deepen our coverage of scientific research and debate
  • Raindrops are seen on a vehicle’s window as a woman walks by using an umbrella.

    Can't stand the rain? How wet weather affects human behaviour

    Rainfall can affect our mood, our propensity to commit crime and how hungry we feel – but why?
  • A man in the crowd at last year’s bonfire night celebrations in Lewes.

    Did you solve it? Gunpowder, reason and plot

  • Gunpowder Plot<br>Guy Fawkes and fellow conspirators planning the gunpowder plot to blow up the Houses of Parliament, circa 1605. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images) landscape;clothing;male;Europe;Britain;England;circa 1605;H 1/4;earlydate;H/HIS/(BRI)/1605/THE PLOT; Portrait of Guy Fawkes

    Can you solve it? Gunpowder, reason and plot

  • Coconut cake. Image shot 2008. Exact date unknown.<br>BJM9PE Coconut cake. Image shot 2008. Exact date unknown.

    Did you solve it? Cutting the perfect slice

  • Group of eight people reaching for slice of cake, close-up, overhead view<br>GettyImages-72983838

    Can you solve it? Cutting the perfect slice

  • Richard Suart as Ko-Ko and Stephen Richardson as The Mikado. Scottish Opera and D’Oyly Carte 2016 Press image from Emily.Henderson@scottishopera.org.uk

    Did you solve it? I've got a little (logical) list

  • Richard Suart (Ko-Ko) in The Mikado by Gilbert and Sullivan @ London Coliseum. An English National Opera production, directed by Jonathan Miller. (Opening 21-11-15) ©Tristram Kenton 11/15 (3 Raveley Street, LONDON NW5 2HX TEL 0207 267 5550 Mob 07973 617 355)email: tristram@tristramkenton.com

    Can you solve it? I've got a little (logical) list

  • Peru, Puno province, Titicaca lake, Uros Indian living on floating islands made by reeds<br>CN7NAN Peru, Puno province, Titicaca lake, Uros Indian living on floating islands made by reeds

    Can you solve it? The language of the lake puzzle

    A challenge for cunning linguists
  • Junk food advertising<br>Embargoed to 0001 Friday November 4 File photo dated 09/07/14 of a pile of cheeseburgers and french fries, as current laws protecting children from the digital marketing of junk food are “markedly insufficient” and policymakers must take action, health leaders have said. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Friday November 4, 2016. A World Health Organisation (WHO) report into digital marketing to children outlines a “landscape in which children and food marketers are active, parents have little awareness, and children receive little meaningful protection”. See PA story CONSUMER Digital. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire

    From diet pills to driverless cars: why we need to debate the politics of science and technology

    James Wilsdon, Jack Stilgoe and Kieron Flanagan
    It’s time to say goodbye to the Political Science blog at the Guardian – but we’re moving to a new home
  • Science bloggers were given the freedom to publish without direct editorial control – a model no other mainstream newspaper has ever tried.

    Farewell to the Guardian's science blog network

  • Display of pharmacy shelving in UK pharmacy

    Is Big Pharma really more evil than academia?

    Richard P Grant
  • Row of students at a graduation ceremony.

    Why universities need to talk to black people about race

    Stephen Curry
    If universities are to combat racial inequality in Britain, they should be talking more to the people at the sharp end
  • President Trump sits behind his desk

    I was deluded. You can't beat fake news with science communication

    Jenny Rohn
    The battle for evidence-based reason may have to move elsewhere, says Jenny Rohn
  • The armoured dinosaur Borealopelta markmitchelli

    Lost Worlds are Lost

    So long, and thanks for all the hits
  • Huge stack of books - Book wall<br>A lot of books stacked and forming a wall.

    Goodbye from Sifting the Evidence

    As the science blog network closes, Suzi Gage reflects on her time writing for the Guardian
  • Dominic Raab speaks about government plans in the event of a no-deal Brexit.

    A no-deal Brexit will betray British science

    Mike Galsworthy
    Mike Galsworthy: With more than £500m a year at stake, the scale of losses to UK research from a no-deal Brexit are becoming clear
  • Psychologists face a unique challenge: we use our minds to study the mind. The field is now in a better place to be able to do that robustly.

    Open science is now the only way forward for psychology

    Next week the Guardian will be closing the Science Blog Network. We take a final look at the journey psychology has made toward becoming a robust and mature science
  • How We See Animals Muséum National D’Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France 1982 Colour photograph by Richard Ross © the artist

    Lost Worlds wrapping up: dead birds, island hopping and the value of museum collections

    With the Science Blog Network closing, Hanneke Meijer reflects on her contributions to the Guardian’s Lost Worlds Revisited
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