Synopsis
Getting out in the field and the lab to bring you New Zealandstories about science, nature and the environment.Our Changing World is a finalist for Best Daily or Weekly Programme - Factual at the 2019 NZ Radio Awards.
Episodes
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Restoration - battling predators and planting trees
24/11/2021 Duration: 26minKaty Gosset speaks to a PhD student designing new tech to catch predators and Claire Concannon meets the team who are working to restore a unique landscape on the South Island's West Coast.
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100 years of radio and the spectrum of light
17/11/2021 Duration: 27minOn the 100th anniversary of radio in Aotearoa, Claire Concannon learns about the very first broadcast, explores how radio works, and finds out about current research into communicating using light.
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Sniffing out cancer
10/11/2021 Duration: 28minClaire visits the team at K9 Medical Detection Charitable Trust to learn how their dogs are being trained to detect bowel and prostate cancer.
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Totara treasure hunt
03/11/2021 Duration: 28minClaire Concannon hits the Central Otago hills with Botany PhD student Ben Teele to imagine the landscape as it use to be, and to follow the clues to find leftover pockets of tōtara trees.
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Favourite plants
27/10/2021 Duration: 30minClaire Concannon hears how the the New Zealand Plant Conservation Network's favourite plant competition is shaping up, while Katy Gosset learns about research to improve the quality and growth efficiency of grapevines.
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The details behind the data
20/10/2021 Duration: 28minThis week on Our Changing World, Aotearoa Science Agency's Damian Christie speaks to three scientists about the world of data.
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The New Zealand genetic frontotemporal dementia study
13/10/2021 Duration: 28minClaire Concannon hears from Dr. Brigid Ryan of the University of Auckland about the New Zealand genetic frontotemporal dementia study and speaks to some of the family members involved in this unique research study.
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Using bioengineering to enhance healthcare
06/10/2021 Duration: 28minStories about the potential of bioengineering to transform health care. A new tracheostomy kit design that has halved the time for emergency operations and 3D bioprinting of tissues to help healing.
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Physics on ice
29/09/2021 Duration: 39minStories of physics research in Antarctica - into, under, and from within the ice. Claire finds out about measuring sea ice thickness and supercooling. Katy Gosset learns how scientists detect neutrinos from outer space.
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Brain stories - Parkinsons disease & perceiving masked emotions
22/09/2021 Duration: 30minClaire Concannon learns about experiments aimed at slowing Parkinson's Disease progression. Sonia Yee explores research into our perception of emotions in a mask-filled world.
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The kaka's return
15/09/2021 Duration: 28minThe return of South Island kākā to the the Ōtepoti Dunedin area has been a bit of a rollercoaster ride. Claire Concannon hears about the tragedies and the triumphs, and the plans for what comes next.
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Wading into mangrove research
08/09/2021 Duration: 27minNative mangroves in Aotearoa are expanding, putting them in conflict with some local communities & councils. A wade into the research about the value of mangroves & how they are managed.
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Caring for the forest
01/09/2021 Duration: 29minKaty Gosset finds out how researchers investigate the plant penetration powers of myrtle rust. Claire Concannon speaks with the caretaker of a tropical forest and hundreds of butterflies.
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Surveying the skies
25/08/2021 Duration: 31minTwo stories of looking to the skies. Claire Concannon joins a hunt for planets outside of our solar system. Katy Gosset reveals the results of the annual New Zealand Garden Birds Survey.
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A new way to make vaccines
18/08/2021 Duration: 26minThis week, how information flows in the cell from DNA to proteins, and how scientists have tapped into this to enable a new way to make vaccines using messenger RNA.
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Forty feathered needles in a forest haystack
11/08/2021 Duration: 30minHow do you find a tiny robin in a whole lot of forest? Researchers have been tracking the movements of forty North Island robins, or toutouwai, that have been reintroduced to a large reserve area near Palmerston North. Claire Concannon finds out how these Massey University researchers monitor them, and what they are learning.
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Mind Games
04/08/2021 Duration: 29minHow do you get in the zone to achieve your very best in an activity? And does a cheering crowd help? This week, two stories about the psychology of performance - the advantages of being at home, and how to find your flow.
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Running low on energy
28/07/2021 Duration: 26minResearchers from the University of Waikato talk about Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (RED-S) - a condition in which athletes don't take in the right amount of calories to do the exercise they are doing. Katie Schofield & Holly Thorpe explain why the problem is much more complex than just calorie intake, and why it is important to research this condition in a multidisciplinary way.
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The spectrum of research
21/07/2021 Duration: 30minScientific research can be thought as on a spectrum from blue sky to applied - this week, two stories that span this. Claire Concannon learns about a blue-sky research project on bacterial evolution while Katy Gosset watches testing of a new system of base isolation designed to help homes during earthquakes.
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Breaking down bird song
14/07/2021 Duration: 30minOn this week's Our Changing World - how songbirds learn their song, and how researchers in the Southern Hemisphere are trying to correct a long-standing male bias in the songbird world.