Episodes
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Professor E.J. Milner-Gulland on the mysterious death of about half the world’s population of saiga antelopes in two weeks. (Extract 3 of 4 from the Imperial College Podcast 24 June 2015)
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The Institute of Chemical Biology’s Dragon’s Den-style competition gave doctoral students a chance to win £20,000 by pitching their projects to a team of experts. (Extract 3 of 4 from the Imperial College Podcast 21 January 2015)
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Professor Michael Levitt winner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry talks about the impact of computing power on the progress of modern biology
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In this audio interview PhD student Sam Lloyd explains what makes a species invasive and tells us how Silwood Park’s crayfish have come to dominate the pond.
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In this audio interview Gail Wilson asks Dr Baum how this new molecular map of the malaria parasite's ribosome may open up a pipeline for new drug discovery.
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Gareth Mitchell looks down the microsope at the 2014 Imperial Festival to find what enables bacteria to swim. (Podcast 21 May, extract 4/4)
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Professor Julie McCann takes her inspiration from nature for writing algorithms that allow distributed wireless networks to become self-organising, adaptive and intelligent.
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Professor E J Milner-Gulland discusses her research on the impact of human activity and political change on the saiga antelope population
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The winners of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine helped us understand how materials are packaged and transported in cells, as Dr Anita Hall (Life Sciences) explains. (Extract 3 of 3 from the Imperial Podcast 30 October 2013)
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Video taken at the Tsaobis Baboon Project in Namibia. New research from ZSL and Imperial scientists shows baboons choose who to eat with depending on their position in the pecking order. (This video has no commentary)
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Dr Dan Reuman explains how a discrepancy between extinction rates and reality is disguising a catastrophic decline in biodiversity in the Amazon rainforest in Brazil
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The in vivo imaging facility in Imperial's new MRC Centre for Molecular Bacteriology and Infection tracks a mouse bacterial infection over 11 days, showing how the disease spreads throughout the body and how the animal successfully fights off infection.
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Scientists from Imperial College London have devised a way of producing music from noises without a composer. Dr Bob MacCallum explains the evolution of musical loops created by http://darwintunes.org
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An experiment by Imperial scientists has shown that music can evolve by means akin to Darwinian natural selection. (Extract 1 of 5 from the Imperial College Podcast 20 June 2012)
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Imperial's Professor Gerard Bishop and University of Nottingham's Graham Seymour talk about the publication of the tomato genome and what this means for the future of this important fruit crop.
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Sir Ernst Chain Distinguished Lecture given by Prof Jim Barber
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Gareth Mitchell interviews Dr Angela Cassidy about how cultural depiction of badgers can change ideas about culling the animals when they spread diseases like Bovine TB. (Extract 3 of 4 from the Imperial College Podcast 9 May 2012)
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Professor Nadia Rosenthal discusses human tissue regeneration in her inaugural lecture.
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