Play has the power to boost focus, innovation and wellbeing. A new “What Happens Next?” episode offers expert insights into its transformative effects.
A small – literally – innovation is helping pave the way for more precise drugs to fight cancer by building three-dimensional models of tumour tissues.
Professor Chris Lawrence’s passion for Indigenous achievement has come full circle.
Muslim girls are one among many minority groups underrepresented in STEM in Australia. Diversity is important, not just ethically and socially, but also economically.
A career U-turn led Associate Professor Adeel Razi to the forefront of research aiming to develop next-generation mental health therapies.
Researchers have taken a giant leap towards claiming the holy grail of renewable energy by creating a lithium-sulfur battery that’s faster, cleaner, and lasts longer.
How did assumptions and biases find their way into machines? As groups around the world fight for social equality, is AI helping or hurting our progress?
The Citarum River in Indonesia is the focus of a revitalisation project, and a Monash University cross-faculty team has been called on to help make it happen.
How about uninterrupted internet three times faster than the NBN? Dr Susan Carland discovers that advances in space tech could see this happen within two years. Listen now.
In this episode of the What Happens Next? podcast we’re talking practical steps for embracing renewable energy in our own lives.
The federal government’s changes to university funding, making some arts and humanities courses more than twice as expensive, is misguided.
The need for physical autopsies may be reduced through a project in which digital 3D anatomical models can more accurately map bullet trajectories.
How can a university make sure that people, beyond its students and staff, benefit from its knowledge and presence?
A team of Monash students is competing in the 2019 international Mars Rover Challenge with its latest prototype.
A new study suggests the "dehumanisation" of cyclists could be contributing to acts of aggression towards them on the road.
Conceptual playworlds are turning preschool into a pipeline for female engineers.
The challenge of providing appropriate care to an ageing population means the rate of technological innovation needs to be stepped up and more smart homes created.
The construction industry must urgently be better-equipped to prevent more potential disasters.
Technologies being developed using one of the planet's most abundant materials will be a game-changer in solar energy.
The challenge is to integrate AI into our society just like we’ve done with other valuable but dangerous technologies in the past, like electricity and cars.
Artist, writer, military man, engineer, lawyer, aesthete, designer and a leader. Former Victorian premier Ted Baillieu regards him as the greatest Australian of all time.
The curtain has come down on the Victorian auto industry, but former workers are finding opportunities in the booming pharmaceuticals and medical technology sector.
A global-first collaboration is set to radically overhaul technology that's remained unchanged for more than a century.
By the 1920s, the man after whom Monash University was named was broadly regarded as “the greatest living Australian” .
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