Skip to Navigation
Home
  • about Plus
  • support Plus
  • Plus sponsors
  • subscribe to Plus
  • terms of use

Author: Keith Ball

Pools of blood
A biologist has developed a blood test for detecting a certain minor abnormality in infants. Obviously if you have blood samples from 100 children, you could find out which children are affected by running 100 separate tests. But mathematicians are never satisfied by the obvious answer. Keith Ball uses information theory to explain how to cut down the number of tests significantly, by pooling samples of blood.
Read more...
  • Home
  • Articles
  • Careers
  • Blog
  • News
  • Packages
  • Podcasts
  • Posters
  • Puzzles
  • Reviews
Science fiction, science fact: reports from the frontiers of physics
What is time? What is space? What's the role of chance in the universe? Join Plus and FQXi on a journey...
view
Does it pay to be nice? – the maths of altruism part i
Does it pay to be nice? Yes, it does. And we're not just talking about that warm fuzzy feeling inside, it...
view
Outer space: Canoeing and Kayaking
A simple question to ask about kayak races is whether having lots of paddlers helps or slows the boat down?...
view
Support Plus
Make a difference to mathematics
view
Does it pay to be clever?
Why are we so clever? In evolutionary terms this isn't obvious: evolution tends to favour cheap solutions and...
view

Login to comment or download PDFs

  • Create new account
  • Request new password
Syndicate content

Cambridge University logo