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Joel Cox

Joel Cox is a sound designer for Guardian audio.

July 2024

  • Woman monitoring herself the levels of glucose in blood using smart phone technology.<br>Continuous Glucose Monitoring (CGM) system with sensor attached in arm controlling information and alerts with mobile phone app.

    Science Weekly
    ZOE and personalised nutrition: does the evidence on glucose tracking add up? – podcast

  • Marine Le Pen arrives at Rassemblement National (RN) party headquaters in Paris<br>epa11454634 French member of Parliament for far-right Rassemblement National (RN) party Marine Le Pen (L) arrives at the party headquarters in Paris, France, 03 July 2024. France's far right National Rally has made significant gains in the first round of parliamentary elections. The second round of the elections for a new Parliament is to be held on 07 July 2024.  EPA/YOAN VALAT

    Today in Focus
    Will France fall to the far right? – podcast

June 2024

  • A screenshot from Alan Wake 2

    Pop Culture with Chanté Joseph
    Are we experiencing Gamergate 2.0?

  • Julian Assange steps off his flight from London in Bangkok for a layover at Don Mueang airport in the Thai capital

    Today in Focus
    A win for Julian Assange and a loss for press freedom? – podcast

  • Close up of a lock on a toilet door featuring the word 'pain'

    Science Weekly
    The infection that affects half of women and its link to antibiotic resistance – podcast

  • A galaxy (Photograph: ESO/M. Kornmesser/PA Wire)

    Science Weekly
    A black hole awakens and why some people avoid Covid: the week in science – podcast

  • Today in Focus
    Germans are divided. Can Euro 2024 unite them? - podcast

  • Science Weekly
    What are the main UK parties promising on climate and is it enough? – podcast

  • Science Weekly
    Slaughter-free sausages: is lab-grown meat the future? – podcast

  • Science Weekly
    Botanist Robin Wall Kimmerer: ‘The clock is ticking but the world will teach us what we need to do’ – podcast

May 2024

  • Cement mortar

    Science Weekly
    Concrete without CO2: can our biggest building material go green? – podcast

  • Brood X periodical cicadas emerge in Washington, DC<br>epa09205845 Brood X periodical cicada nymphs crawl through the well of a tree prior to shedding their exoskeletons after spending 17 years underground in Washington, DC, USA, 16 May 2021. After molting, the cicada's body dries and darkens, then the 17-year-old bug looks for a mate. Trillions of Brood X cicadas are emerging in the Mid-Atlantic region of the US.  EPA/JIM LO SCALZO

    Science Weekly
    In their prime: how trillions of cicadas pop up right on time – podcast

  • Rishi Sunak speaking at an AI safety summit

    Science Weekly
    Backstabbing, bluffing and playing dead: has AI learned to deceive? – podcast

  • An abandoned mosque outside the seawall in Muara Baru, Jakarta. (Photograph by Kemal Jufri for The Guardian)

    Science Weekly
    Why are the world’s cities sinking?

April 2024

  • Young nurse in medical scrubs and gloves looking at labrador and holding him while veterinarian gives injection

    Science Weekly
    Hardwired to eat: what can our dogs teach us about obesity? – podcast

    Labradors are known for being greedy dogs, and now scientists have come up with a theory about the genetic factors that might be behind their behaviour. Science correspondent and labrador owner Nicola Davis visits Cambridge University to meet Dr Eleanor Raffan and Prof Giles Yeo to find out how understanding this pathway could help us treat the obesity crisis in humans
  • A marsh tit perched on a rock (Photgraph: Lisa Geoghegan/Alamy Stock Photo)

    Science Weekly
    Soundscape ecology: a window into a disappearing world – podcast

    Guardian biodiversity reporter Phoebe Weston tells Madeleine Finlay about her visit to Monks Wood in Cambridgeshire, where ecologist Richard Broughton has witnessed the decline of the marsh tit population over 22 years, and has heard the impact on the wood’s soundscape
  • Simone Biles of Team United States competes on Balance Beam

    Science Weekly
    Hypermobility: a blessing or a curse?

    Being more flexible than the average person can have its advantages, from being great at games such as Limbo to feeling smug in yoga class. But researchers are coming to understand that being hypermobile can also be linked to pain in later life, anxiety, and even long Covid. Madeleine Finlay hears from the science correspondent Linda Geddes about her experience of hypermobility, and finds out what might be behind its link to mental and physical health

March 2024

  • The Northern Lights, or Aurora Borealis, over Derwentwater, near Keswick in the Lake District.

    Science Weekly
    What could a severe solar storm do to Earth, and are we prepared? – podcast

    The sun is currently ramping up to hit the peak of its 11-year activity cycle. In the past few days, powerful solar eruptions have sent a stream of particles towards Earth which are set to produce spectacular auroras in both hemispheres. But these kinds of geomagnetic storms can also have less appealing consequences. Madeleine Finlay speaks to Dr Lisa Upton, a solar scientist at the Southwest Research Institute, about how the mysterious inner workings of the sun create space weather, how solar events can significantly disrupt Earth’s infrastructure, and whether we are prepared for the worst-case scenario
  • Fog moving through cloud forest trees in the Tandayapa Valley on the western slope of the Andes mountains, Ecuador.

    Science Weekly
    Should forests have rights? – podcast

    A growing movement of ecologists, lawyers and artists is arguing that nature should have legal rights. By recognising the rights of ecosystems and other species, advocates hope that they can gain better protection. Madeleine Finlay speaks to the Guardian’s global environment editor, Jonathan Watts, about where this movement has come from and why the UK government has dismissed the concept, and hears from Cesar Rodriguez-Garavito of NYU School of Law about how he is finding creative ways to give rights to nature
  • The head of a balding man.

    Science Weekly
    Why do we lose our hair as we age, and what can we do about it? – podcast

    Madeleine Finlay speaks to one man about how it affected him and to hair specialist Dr Sharon Wong about what is going on when our hair thins and what treatments are available to help
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