Malaria


'Star Wars' Scientists Create Laser Gun to Kill Mosquitoes -- Anouk Lorie  -- CNN  -- March 19, 2009
Directed Energy Weapons

Astrophysicists in the U.S. are repurposing technology used to detect and destroy ballistic missiles to combat mosquitoes. The technology works by detecting detects the audio frequency created by the beating of mosquito wings and then zapping it with a laser beam.

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Coming down to Earth: Africa@home -- Staff  -- Economist  -- July 13, 2006
Metacomputing

Africa@home is a new distributed computing project with the goal to "develop a long-term model of malaria epidemiology, which it can use to test different ways of combating the disease."

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Human PacMan hits real city streets -- Will Knight  -- New Scientist  -- November 18, 2004
Virtual Reality

The classic arcade game PacMan has resurfaced on the streets of Singapore using ?augmented reality? technology developed by military-backed scientists at the University of Singapore.

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In malaria fight, the foe becomes a friend -- Peter N. Spotts  -- Christian Science Monitor  -- March 26, 2004
Genetic Engineering

Researchers are experimenting with mosquito genetics to see if the creature's genes can be changed or controlled in ways that destroy the malaria parasites it carries before it can pass them on to people.

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Scientists Want to Create a New Kind of Mosquito -- Leslie Pray  -- The Scientist  -- November 25, 2002
Genetic Engineering

Researchers are working on bioengineering a new breed of mosquito that is incapable of carrying the Malaria virus.

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Malaria Parasite's Genes Mapped -- Paul Recer  -- Associated Press  -- October 2, 2002
Genetic Engineering

Researchers have sequenced the genes both for the parasite that causes malaria and for the mosquito that spreads it to humans. The double triumph gives medical science new weapons in the war on a disease that kills almost 3 million people a year.

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Gene-Altered Mosquito May Aid Malaria Fight -- Rick Weiss  -- Washington Post  -- May 22, 2002
Genetic Engineering

Scientists in Cleveland for the first time have created genetically engineered mosquitoes that have a reduced capacity to transmit malaria. But that prospect has alarmed some scientists and others who fear that such a program could trigger ecological disruption and ultimately increase, rather than decrease, the global burden of disease.

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Mosquitoes Losing Malarial Bite in Genetics Laboratory -- Robert Lee Holtz  -- Los Angeles Times  -- May 23, 2002
Genetic Engineering

As insecticides fail and vaccine efforts falter, scientists combating malaria have created genetically engineered mosquitoes that do not transmit the lethal disease, a feat hailed as a milestone in the effort to conquer a pestilence that infects 300 million people every year.

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Africa gets malaria early warning system -- Staff  -- BBC News  -- May 5, 2002
Chemical / Biological Warfare

Experts from the UK are helping African countries to develop the world's first early warning system to prevent malaria epidemics.

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GM mosquito resistant to malaria parasites -- Nicola Jones  -- New Scientist  -- May 22, 2002
Genetic Engineering

The first step has been taken towards altering mosquitoes so they cannot pass on malaria. But it is not clear whether genetically modified mosquitoes could displace natural populations, or if we should even try to make this happen.

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