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1 - 20 of 37 search results for Cambridge Animal Alphabet where 2 match all words and 35 match some words.
  1. Fully-matching results

  2. The Cambridge Animal Alphabet series

    Duration: 00:00:15
    Published Date: 2016/02/09
    From Albatross to Zebrafish, the Cambridge Animal Alphabet series celebrates Cambridge’s connections with animals through literature, art, science and society. The articles are now being made available as a series of podcasts, and in our new publication on Medium. https://medium.com/cambridge-animal-alphabet
  3. J is for Jay

    Duration: 00:04:24
    Published Date: 2015/08/06
    The Cambridge Animal Alphabet series celebrates Cambridge's connections with animals through literature, art, science and society. Here, J is for Jay – a surprisingly clever corvid with the ability to mimic human voices and much more. Jays are corvids – members of the crow family. The jays we see in Britain are Eurasian jays. With their pinkish plumage, and characteristic flash of blue, they
  4. Results that match 2 of 3 words

  5. Animal research aims to improve the prospects for future organ…

    Duration: 00:05:03
    Published Date: 2023/07/13
    Content warning: this film contains images of blood and surgery For people with organ failure, transplantation is the only option. A lack of suitable organs for transplantation means patients die every day. Researchers in the University’s Department of Surgery are using large animal models to understand why donated organs become damaged and unsuitable for transplantation, and to test promising
  6. Three-dimensional reconstruction of a rangeomorph

    Duration: 00:00:08
    Published Date: 2016/11/14
    New three-dimensional reconstructions show how some of the earliest animals on Earth developed, and provide some answers as to why they went extinct. http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/how-some-of-the-first-animals-lived-and-died A bizarre group of uniquely-shaped organisms known as rangeomorphs may have been some of the earliest animals to appear on Earth, uniquely suited to ocean conditions 575
  7. How do we reduce the risk of animal viruses jumping to humans?

    Duration: 00:04:55
    Published Date: 2020/11/09
    COVID-19 is caused by a virus that jumped from animals to humans - and then spread rapidly. The risk of this happening again, causing another pandemic, is very real. Cambridge researchers have looked at all the major ways this might happen, to work out what might be done to reduce the risk. Read more here:
  8. Fighting cancer: Animal research at Cambridge

    Duration: 00:11:40
    Published Date: 2015/04/24
    Animal research plays an essential role in our understanding of health and disease and in the development of modern medicine and surgical techniques. As part of our commitment to openness, this film examines how mice are helping the fight against cancer. It takes a in-depth look at the facilities in which they are housed, exploring issues of animal welfare and the search for replacements. We
  9. Understanding the OCD Brain part 2: Animal research at Cambridge

    Duration: 00:15:11
    Published Date: 2017/03/28
    Science writer David Adam has obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). In the second of a series of films, he meets researchers at the University of Cambridge to find out what animals – rats and marmosets – can teach us about the condition and how this can help in the development of new treatments.
  10. Just Add Water

    Duration: 00:05:45
    Published Date: 2010/03/25
    Rotifers are tiny animals that survive against all the odds. They are also known for not having had sex for 80 million years. We follow Dr Alan Tunnacliffe, award-winning Cambridge researcher at the Institute of Biotechnology, as he tests their super-powers by draining 90% of the water in their microscopic bodies, heats them to boiling point and freezes them in liquid nitrogen. Still they thrive!
  11. Cambridge Ideas - Just Add Water

    Duration: 00:05:45
    Published Date: 2010/04/06
    Rotifers are tiny animals that survive against all the odds. They are also known for not having had sex for 80 million years. We follow Dr Alan Tunnacliffe, award-winning Cambridge researcher at the Institute of Biotechnology, as he tests their super-powers by draining 90% of the water in their microscopic bodies, heats them to boiling point and freezes them in liquid nitrogen. Still they thrive!
  12. Stealth swimmers: the fish that hide behind others to hunt

    Duration: 00:01:29
    Published Date: 2023/08/07
    An experiment on coral reefs provides the first evidence of a fish that uses other animals for motion camouflage to approach prey without detection. Coral reefs around the world are being degraded due to the warming climate, pollution and overfishing. The researchers say the strategy of hiding behind other moving fish may help animals adapt to the impacts of environmental change. Researchers: Dr
  13. Give and Take

    Duration: 00:12:20
    Published Date: 2019/11/14
    Give and Take explores the complex nature of gift giving for humans and their close animal relatives. The film brings biology, psychology, political studies, philosophy and theology into dialogue. Interviewees include Cambridge’s Professor Claire Hughes (Psychology), Professor Nicky Clayton (Psychology) and Dr Andrew Davison (Theology and Natural Sciences). Giving figures prominently in many
  14. #CambVet : Snow grit and animal paws

    Duration: 00:00:24
    Published Date: 2023/03/07
    Walking you dog in the snow? Cambridge University vet Charlotte has some advice if you are about to go out or if they have just come back in.
  15. Entomics Biosystems, a company set up by a group of Cambridge students, is developing a sustainable feed of the future – based on maggots and food waste.
  16. City birds learn not to fear litter

    Duration: 00:00:37
    Published Date: 2016/11/14
    New research led by Gates Cambridge Scholar Alison Greggor, shows urban birds are less afraid of litter than their country cousins. It suggests they may learn that it is not dangerous and shows how some animals can learn to adapt to human-dominated environments.
  17. Sir John Sulston, Society and health, Tue 7 July

    Duration: 00:08:37
    Published Date: 2009/10/13
    Professor Sir John Sulston (University of Manchester, UK) Abstract: Darwin liberated us from dogma by making biology comprehensible, so allowing us to move forward. But whilst natural selection provides an explanation for our existence, it does not tell us how to behave. We must ourselves face up to our future as a thinking and powerful animal.
  18. Chris Ponting, Darwin and modern science, Thu 9 July

    Duration: 00:12:24
    Published Date: 2009/10/12
    Genomes: the books of life Professor Chris Ponting (University of Oxford, UK) Summary: DNA from across the tree of life presents a fascinating record of the impact of natural selection on animal evolution. Differences in anatomy and behaviour between species are reflected by changes both within genes and within DNA dark matter whose biology remains largely unknown.
  19. Photoreceptor Contraction

    Duration: 00:00:18
    Published Date: 2012/10/10
    In this video, you can see a group of isolated photoreceptors -- specialised light-detecting cells from the fly's eye - rapidly contract in response to light. This rapid contraction is believed to generate the electrical signal in the fly photoreceptor, which is the fastest visual response in the animal kingdom. Moving images courtesy of SCIENCE
  20. Liver disease drug could prevent COVID-19

    Duration: 00:01:50
    Published Date: 2022/12/05
    Scientists in the Sampaziotis Lab have identified an off-patent drug that can be repurposed to prevent COVID-19 – and may be capable of protecting against future variants of the virus – in research involving a unique mix of ‘mini-organs’, donor organs, animal studies and patients. Find out more here: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05594-0
  21. Volvox embryo turning itself inside out

    Duration: 00:01:19
    Published Date: 2015/04/27
    Researchers have captured the first 3D video of a living algal embryo turning itself inside out, from a sphere to a mushroom shape and back again. The results could help unravel the mechanical processes at work during a similar process in animals, which has been called the “most important time in your life.” Read more at: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/upside-down-and-inside-out
  22. To boldly go -- how personality predicts social learning in baboons

    Duration: 00:01:44
    Published Date: 2014/03/11
    Like other social animals, baboons learn from each other about which foods are best to eat. Now, researchers at Cambridge have found that how well they learn from others depends on their personality, bold or anxious baboons learning more than those who are shy or laid back. - See more at:

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