PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Bluey’s dad offered professorial chair in archaeology at Griffith University

2025-12-17
(Press-News.org) Griffith University is delighted to announce renowned archaeologist and 2019 Father of the Year Dr Bandit Heeler has been offered a professorial chair.

Dr Bandit Heeler, a Brisbane-based blue heeler of international repute, is celebrated for his fieldwork in the remote jungles of Indonesia, his landmark publications on the ritual significance of dance-mode freezing in pre-literate societies, and his seminal studies on the development of a language capacity in the Cockapoo.

Griffith University’s Vice Chancellor and President Professor Carolyn Evans said the appointment was a natural fit.

“Dr Heeler’s ability to unravel the mystery of the origin of canines while simultaneously being an active and engaged parent, makes him a wonderful example of our commitment to academic excellence and living our values,” Professor Evans said.

“We are particularly impressed by his work on the evolution of the first dogs to walk upright.”

The announcement coincided with another major milestone this week when Griffith University was awarded an Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Transforming Human Origins Research, the first federally funded research centre in Australia to focus on the evolutionary history of humanity and one of very few globally.

The $85-million-dollar centre will explore critical questions about our species’ origins, adaptation and cultural development as we spread out of Africa to eventually inhabit all corners of the globe.

Professor Adam Brumm, a Griffith professor of archaeology and chief investigator in the Centre of Excellence, said the ARC funding aas a game-changer for human origins research in Australia.

“It will put Australia at the forefront of research into our evolutionary history. It will transform this field from a colonial-era model in which ‘once in a generation’ discoveries were made by lone figures working in isolation to a more concerted endeavour drawing on dedicated facilities and the knowledge and expertise of Indigenous communities and Global South researchers from across Asia and Africa,” Professor Brumm said.

To further add to the philosophical complexity, Professor Brumm’s career was said to be the inspiration for the character Bandit’s profession.

In a related development, Griffith can confirm Joe Brumm – the multi-BAFTA winning creator of Bluey, proud graduate of Griffith Film School, Professor Brumm’s brother, and the actual human being responsible for bringing Bluey and her family to the world – has been awarded an Honorary Doctorate from the University in recognition of his extraordinary contribution to children’s storytelling and animation.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Beyond small data limitations: Transfer learning-enabled framework for predicting mechanical properties of aluminum matrix composites

2025-12-17
A research team led by Chang Keke from the Ningbo Institute of Materials Technology and Engineering (NIMTE), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), has developed an innovative machine learning framework (PAMCs-MP) for predicting the mechanical properties of particle-reinforced aluminum matrix composites (PAMCs). Despite limited existing datasets, the approach uses extensive pre-training on larger aluminium alloy datasets to guide multi-objective optimization tasks effectively. The model achieves high predictive accuracy, R² values of over 92% for ultimate tensile strength and over 90% for elongation, demonstrating ...

Unveiling non-thermal catalytic origin of direct current-promoted catalysis for energy-efficient transformation of greenhouse gases to valuable chemicals

2025-12-17
Catalytic dry reforming of methane (DRM) is a key reaction for the sustainable utilization of major greenhouse gases, CO2 and CH4. However, conventional DRM often suffers from severe catalyst deactivation due to high temperature requirements. Applying direct current (DC) to catalyst materials has emerged as a promising strategy to overcome these limitations, yet the underlying DC-enhanced catalytic mechanism remains elusive. Here, we unveil the non-thermal catalytic origin of DC-applied DRM over Pd/CeO2 through multimodal operando analyses, providing a microscopic physicochemical framework ...

Chronic breathlessness emerging as a hidden strain on hospitals

2025-12-17
Chronic breathlessness, a symptom often overlooked by healthcare systems, is associated with longer lengths of hospital stay on already overstretched healthcare resources, says new Flinders University research. A new study, published in the Australian Health Review, highlights an urgent need for clinicians and policymakers to recognise chronic breathlessness as a major driver of hospital admissions and healthcare costs. Historically, health systems have focused on sudden, short-term episodes of breathlessness (acute breathlessness), ...

Paleontologists find first fossil bee nests made inside fossil bones

2025-12-17
Key points Paleontologists working in a cave on the Caribbean island of Hispaniola have discovered the first-known instance of ancient bees nesting inside pre-existing fossil cavities. Burrowing bees generally prefer to make their nests out in the open. There is only one other documented case of burrowing bees making their nests inside caves. In this case, the likely cause for this aberrant behavior is a lack of topsoil outside the cave and an abundance of accumulated silt within. Many of the fossils were likely transported to the cave by giant barn owls. Evidence, ...

These fossils were the perfect home for ancient baby bees

2025-12-17
About 20,000 years ago, a family of owls lived in a cave. Sometimes, they would cough up owl pellets containing the bones of their prey, which landed on the cave floor. And, researchers have just discovered, ancient bees would use the bones’ empty tooth sockets as nests. A new study published in the journal Royal Society Open Science documents this discovery, which represents the first time bees have ever been known to use bones as places to lay their eggs. The Caribbean island of Hispaniola, which contains Haiti and the Dominican Republic, is full of limestone caves. “In some areas, you’ll find a different sinkhole every 100 meters,” says ...

Not everyone reads the room the same. A new study examines why.

2025-12-17
Are you a social savant who easily reads people’s emotions? Or are you someone who leaves an interaction with an unclear understanding of another person’s emotional state? New UC Berkeley research suggests those differences stem from a fundamental way our brains compute facial and contextual details, potentially explaining why some people are better at reading the room than others — sometimes, much better. Human brains use information from faces and background context, such as the location or expressions ...

New research identifies linked energy, immune and vascular changes in ME/CFS

2025-12-17
New Australian research has identified simultaneous abnormalities across multiple biological systems in people with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome (ME/CFS). Key findings of a multimodal study published today in the journal Cell Reports Medicine include changes in markers of cellular energy metabolism, in the proportions and maturity of circulating immune cells, and in plasma proteins associated with blood vessel dysfunction in people with ME/CFS. Led by researchers from Macquarie University, the study compared whole blood samples from 61 people meeting ...

Concurrent frailty + depression likely boost dementia risk in older people

2025-12-17
Concurrent physical frailty and depression likely boost the risk of dementia in older people, with the interaction of these 2 factors alone contributing around 17% of the overall risk, suggest the findings of a large international study, published in the open access journal General Psychiatry.   Globally, some 57 million people are living with dementia—a figure that is expected to triple by 2050, note the researchers.    Previously published research has primarily focused on the individual associations between physical frailty or depression and dementia risk, despite the fact ...

Living in substandard housing linked to kids’ missed schooling and poor grades

2025-12-17
Children living in substandard housing in England miss 15 more school days and achieve worse test scores in English and maths than their peers living in better quality housing, suggests research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.   Improving their living conditions—specifically reducing overcrowding and damp, and upgrading heating systems—may not only benefit their health, but also their grades,conclude the researchers.   One in 7 families in England live in homes that fail to meet the official decent homes standard, point out the researchers. Housing is a key determinant of child health, yet relatively little is ...

Little awareness of medical + psychological complexities of steroid cream withdrawal

2025-12-17
There is little awareness, particularly among clinicians, of the medical and psychological complexities of ‘topical steroid withdrawal’—the body’s adverse response to the prolonged use of these powerful creams to treat inflammatory skin conditions when they are either tapered or suddenly stopped—warn doctors in the journal BMJ Case Reports.   The condition, also known as ‘TSW syndrome,’ ‘steroid addiction,’ and ‘red burning skin syndrome,’ is poorly ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Bluey’s dad offered professorial chair in archaeology at Griffith University

Beyond small data limitations: Transfer learning-enabled framework for predicting mechanical properties of aluminum matrix composites

Unveiling non-thermal catalytic origin of direct current-promoted catalysis for energy-efficient transformation of greenhouse gases to valuable chemicals

Chronic breathlessness emerging as a hidden strain on hospitals

Paleontologists find first fossil bee nests made inside fossil bones

These fossils were the perfect home for ancient baby bees

Not everyone reads the room the same. A new study examines why.

New research identifies linked energy, immune and vascular changes in ME/CFS

Concurrent frailty + depression likely boost dementia risk in older people

Living in substandard housing linked to kids’ missed schooling and poor grades

Little awareness of medical + psychological complexities of steroid cream withdrawal

Eight in 10 trusts caring for emergency department patients in corridors, finds BMJ investigation

NASA’s Webb telescope finds bizarre atmosphere on a lemon-shaped exoplanet

The gut bacteria that put the brakes on weight gain in mice

Exploring how patients feel about AI transcription

Category ‘6’ tropical cyclone hot spots are growing

Video: Drivers struggle to multitask when using dashboard touch screens, study finds

SLU research shows surge in alcohol-related liver disease driving ‘deaths of despair’

Rising heat reshapes how microbes break down microplastics, new review finds

Roots reveal a hidden carbon pathway in maize plants

Membrane magic: FAMU-FSU researchers repurpose fuel cells membranes for new applications

UN Member States pledge to increase access to diagnosis and inhaled medicines for the 480 million people living with COPD

Combination therapy shows potential to treat pediatric brain cancer ATRT

Study links seabird nesting to shark turf wars in Hawai‘i

Legal sports betting linked to sharp increases in violent crime, study finds

Breakthrough AI from NYUAD speeds up discovery of life-supporting microbes

New Eva Mayr-Stihl Foundation funding initiative boosts research at University of Freiburg on adaptation of forests to global change

The perfect plastic? Plant-based, fully saltwater degradable, zero microplastics

Bias in data may be blocking AI’s potential to combat antibiotic resistance

Article-level metrics would provide more recognition to most researchers than journal-level metrics

[Press-News.org] Bluey’s dad offered professorial chair in archaeology at Griffith University