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Innhold levert av Sarah Lawton. Alt podcastinnhold, inkludert episoder, grafikk og podcastbeskrivelser, lastes opp og leveres direkte av Sarah Lawton eller deres podcastplattformpartner. Hvis du tror at noen bruker det opphavsrettsbeskyttede verket ditt uten din tillatelse, kan du følge prosessen skissert her https://no.player.fm/legal.
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Laboratory News
Merk alt (u)spilt...
Manage series 2738967
Innhold levert av Sarah Lawton. Alt podcastinnhold, inkludert episoder, grafikk og podcastbeskrivelser, lastes opp og leveres direkte av Sarah Lawton eller deres podcastplattformpartner. Hvis du tror at noen bruker det opphavsrettsbeskyttede verket ditt uten din tillatelse, kan du følge prosessen skissert her https://no.player.fm/legal.
Listen in to stay up to date with all things 'laboratory'. In a rapidly evolving world, Laboratory News podcasts offer laboratory managers, technicians and researchers an entertaining catch up on some of the most interesting science and technology stories. From innovative solutions for core business problems to interviews introducing novel science and disruptive technologies. Helping you drive your laboratory into the future by keeping you lab savvy. www.labnews.co.uk
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15 episoder
Merk alt (u)spilt...
Manage series 2738967
Innhold levert av Sarah Lawton. Alt podcastinnhold, inkludert episoder, grafikk og podcastbeskrivelser, lastes opp og leveres direkte av Sarah Lawton eller deres podcastplattformpartner. Hvis du tror at noen bruker det opphavsrettsbeskyttede verket ditt uten din tillatelse, kan du følge prosessen skissert her https://no.player.fm/legal.
Listen in to stay up to date with all things 'laboratory'. In a rapidly evolving world, Laboratory News podcasts offer laboratory managers, technicians and researchers an entertaining catch up on some of the most interesting science and technology stories. From innovative solutions for core business problems to interviews introducing novel science and disruptive technologies. Helping you drive your laboratory into the future by keeping you lab savvy. www.labnews.co.uk
…
continue reading
15 episoder
Alle episoder
×1 Continuing Professional Development for scientists 20:20
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20:20Returning to our expert, Jessica Evans, a Member Recruitment Executive at The Royal Society of Chemistry, we revisit the topic of continued professional development, or CPD. In particular, we consider in more detail the benefits to be gained by joining a professional body or member organisation offering structured CPD appropriate to specific scientific fields and at each stage throughout your career. If you are interested in what the RSC can offer then please do click here to explore further.…
1 Biophilic building for human resilience and pandemic prevention with Robert Hopkins 24:10
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24:10Derived in 1964 by the social psychologist Erich Fromm, ‘biophilia’ means to love life. Here, architect Robert Hopkins , expands on how the application of biophilic design and sensor-led monitoring systems can aid human resilience in an indoor work environment.
1 A sting in the tail... how venom is helping drug discovery in surprising ways with Steve Trim 28:39
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28:39Drug discovery is a tough endeavour - but could nature offer a helping hand? I spoke to Steve Trim, Chief Scientific Officer and Founder of Venomtech to find out why some of the world's deadliest creatures hold the key to pharmaceutical success. Taking in poisonous snails, spiders, snakes and arthropods - this episode isn't for the squeamish... but it is an absolute cracker. And if you wanted to have a look at some of the things we speak about, please do watch this video we made a few years back at Steve's lab. I mean, who wouldn't want to see how you anaesthetise a scorpion?…
1 T'is the season - get festive with the Royal Institution Christmas lecturers 31:56
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31:56In this year’s Christmas Lectures from the Royal Institution, three scientists from different fields will present a unique ‘user’s guide’ to Planet Earth. They will unravel astonishing global systems and remarkable natural wonders that combine to keep life on Earth alive. I spoke to each them about their work, the lectures and many other things besides. So come and meet geologist Chris Jackson, physicist and oceanographer Helen Czerski and environmental scientist Tara Shine. The Lectures will be broadcast on BBC Four, at 8pm on Monday 28, Tues 29 & Wed 30 December. After that you can catch them at your leisure here .…
1 Enabling your best self - Professional development in science 25:49
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25:49If you work in science then you are already highly skilled – very highly skilled. That doesn't necessarily mean there is no room to develop yourself though. It could be that you want to prepare for the next career move, brush-up on the latest technique or even concentrate on 'soft' skills. Whatever it might be, there will always be a demand for highly skilled individuals - and the good news is that if you want to develop yourself, you are not alone. But where to start - well, there is no better place than professional bodies and learned societies. So, to get to the bottom of what is on offer and how to go about all this I spoke to Jessica Evans and Katie Dryden-Holt from the Royal Society of Chemistry. We touch on why you should be thinking of continuing your professional development, how to get help and why technicians especially should be afforded every opportunity to take advantage of CPD. If you are interested in what the RSC can offer then please do click here to explore further.…
1 Medicinal rollercoasters and life-saving bras - It's the Ig Nobel Prizes with Marc Abrahams 19:27
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19:27I spoke to Marc Abrahams , founder of the barmy-but-brilliant Ig Nobel Prizes – which every year honour discoveries which make people laugh and then think. But don't confuse this with simply poking fun at science - it's clear that Marc ultimately cares deeply about tweaking the publics interest in science, medicine and technology. He just thinks that using humour is the best way to do this... and who could disagree? With former prize winners including the inventor of a bra that turns into a face mask, the team behind work on why wombats do square poo, the medic who figured out which rollercoasters are best for dislodging kidney stones and many, many more – he is clearly on to something. We spoke, among other things, about the prize itself, why it is important, why science is taught wrongly and why surprise is key to all this.…
1 Biology in space with NASA Astronaut Kate Rubins 20:36
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20:36Its not everyday you get to chat to an Astronaut - especially one who is about to head up on a six-month mission to the ISS. Kate Rubins is a molecular biologist who was selected by NASA back in 2009 - then during her first mission to the space station she became the first person to sequence DNA in space. I managed to interrupt her busy training schedule – she is due to launch for NASA expedition 64 in a few weeks – to talk space microbiomes, growing cells in microgravity and, well, lots of other fan-boy space questions!…
1 Socially distanced lobsters... Covid-19 and the landscape of disgust 21:05
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21:05Social distancing is still the main way we have of fending off Covid-19. It has been hard and very costly to the economy, but amazingly we are not the only creatures to do this. I spoke to Disease Ecologist Dr Julia Buck , Assistant Professor at the University of North Carolina Wilmington, about the idea that however unnatural social distancing may feel to people, it is very much a part of the natural world. But the way in which animals do this is really fascinating. We also spoke about the instincts within us that lead to social aversions... instincts we would mainly feel as disgust. Julia has published her work on this in Science here . We also touched on the controversial topic of the link between biodiversity and disease risk.…
Its only a bloomin' party episode! And what makes a party really tick? Why music and alcohol of course... Good thing then that in this episode I am joined by a cognitive neuroscientist come musician who thinks he has found the capacity to detect rhythm in non-human mammals AND a scientific equipment supplier who claim their kit can make gin so good, it'll knock your socks off... Dr Alexandre Celma-Miralles is a researcher at Aarhus University in Denmark deeply interested in how the human brain integrates many different types of stimuli to recognise and react to rhythm. In an effort to find out how deep in our evolution rhythm can be tracked, he decided to find out if rats recognise auditory input using melody or rhythm. And he did it using a rather familiar tune... His paper on this is here: https://link.springer.com/article/10.3758/s13423-020-01739-2 Duncan Rowe is the product manager for the Milestone range of equipment for the lab supply company Analytix . He tells us how the company found itself using equipment designed largely for sample-preparation to make gin. But is it any good? There is only one way to find out, so have a listen to find out exactly how drunk I get by the end of the podcast...…
1 Physics at home and making medicine from hibernating animals 23:01
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23:01Something of a double-header for you in this episode. I spoke to a physicist who managed to create an incredibly rare and exotic state of matter from her living room during lockdown, AND a geneticist who thinks she can strike medical gold using hibernating animals. Dr Amruta Gadge is a research fellow at the University of Sussex based at the Quantum Systems and Devices Laboratory. She decided not to let lockdown stand in the way of groundbreaking physics as she managed to create a Bose-Einstein Condensate (BEC) - considered to be the fifth state of matter. We spoke about how this was even possible, what a BEC is, if we can make any use of it and we got briefly lost in quantum weirdness... Dr Katie Grabek is a medical geneticist and computational biologist and is one of the 3 female founders of Fauna Bio. She is an expert in hibernation - which, I was surprised to learn is an incredibly hazardous thing for animals to go through. They have evolved protective mechanisms to stave off heart attacks, metabolic problems and many other issues. So, wonders Katie, can we learn how they do that and use that knowledge to make human medicines?…
1 Life on the back of a turtle with Dr Jeroen Ingels 19:27
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19:27"I didn't realise that it is basically impossible to stop a turtle physically... it just rolls you over" Not, it's true to say, what I expected to hear from an ecologist who has spent the last few years finding a surprising amount of interesting life living on the shells of turtles. But, it turns out, there are a lot of unexpected turns in the life of a meiofauna ecologist - from working in paradise to back-breaking hard work and from nematode paradoxes to biological calling cards...…
1 Galactic collisions with Christopher Conselice - BONUS podcast 13:04
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13:04Not content with bending my mind with his work on intelligent alien civilisations - Astrophysicist Professor Christopher Conselice went on to talk about his main work on galactic formation and galactic mergers...
1 Intelligent alien civilisations with astrophysicist Christopher Conselice 22:19
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22:19Just how many intelligent civilisations, if you were pressed, would you say exist - or indeed existed – in our galaxy? It may be more than you think. Professor Christopher Conselice thinks he knows how many there should be, and has even put a number in it. This was a genuinely fascinating conversation which left me in awe and also slightly disappointed at the chances we might have of extra-terrestrial communication. Christopher's paper is here: https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.3847/1538-4357/ab8225…
1 Coronavirus and Covid-19 with virologist Dr Sarah Pitt 28:30
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28:30There is, of course, so much coverage of Covid-19 at the moment I wasn't sure if it was worth yet another conversation... boy, was I wrong. The brilliant Dr Sarah Pitt - Virologist at the University of Brighton and Chief Virology Examiner at the Institute of Biomedical Science – has so much to say on our response to this. The testing, the vaccine, the immune response and the biology of the virus itself - this was one of the more eye-opening conversations I have had in 15 years of science journalism. Have we got track and trace all wrong? Will the virus evolve to be more benign over time? Has the PCR testing been reliable? Will there ever be a vaccine? I'd definitely suggest listening to the whole thing, but if you want to skip to a point of interest quickly there is a time stamp of the topics we cover below. Time stamp: Dr Sarah Pitt interview starts - 5.30 Our immune response - 8.30 Setting up testing superlabs - 10.50 Is regional difference in diagnosis down to different PCR tests? - 13.00 Has this damaged sciences' reputation? - 16.00 Track and trace, have we got it wrong? - 19.00 Vaccines - how long will it take? - 20.25 Is coronavirus now endemic in humans? - 23.20 Will it evolve to be less deadly? - 25.00 Links: Do you know what happens to your sample IBMS videos Dr Sarah Pitt's article about SARS-Cov2 and influenza virus…
How do you record one of the most notoriously shy animals on the planet? Accidentally... Geophysicist Evgeny Podolskiy was busying himself recording the sounds of glaciers in Greenland when he suddenly realised that he had stumbled on the summering grounds of a population of narwhals. So began an odyssey in sound featuring social calls, echolocation and hunting clicks - and, amazingly, a local Inuit hunting expedition.…
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