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  2. Foundation Year offers new way into Cambridge

    Duration: 00:03:08
    Published Date: 2021/01/13
    To learn more, and find out if you're eligible, click here: http://bit.ly/CambridgeFoundationYear The Cambridge Foundation Year is free to students, who will come from a range of backgrounds, including: care-leavers, those estranged from their families, and those who have missed significant periods of learning because of health issues. Others will be people who have been unable to access suitable
  3. Matthew Mason - Department of Physiology, Development &…

    Duration: 00:03:00
    Published Date: 2018/06/26
    Cambridge University has produced a series of films about five of this year’s Pilkington Prize winners. These films go behind the scenes to show Cambridge teaching in action as well as inviting winners to explain their passion for teaching and reveal some of their trade secrets. Dr Matthew Mason:University Physiologist. Matthew’s citation describes him as persistently striving to refine his
  4. Human Embryo Research: Opening the “Black Box”

    Duration: 00:03:17
    Published Date: 2016/12/22
    Cambridge research that will enable scientists to grow and study embryos in the lab for almost two weeks has been named as the People’s Choice for Science magazine’s ‘Breakthrough of the Year 2016’. Professor Magdalena Zernicka-Goetz at the Department of Physiology, Development and Neuroscience has developed a new technique that allows embryos to develop in vitro, in the absence of
  5. Jono, History - 60 Second Impressions

    Duration: 00:01:02
    Published Date: 2012/12/19
    The '60 Second Impressions' are a series of one-minute films featuring current Cambridge undergraduate students . These students talk about what it's really like to study at Cambridge, live in a College, and take part in a wide range of extra-curricular activities. Jono is in his final year at Cambridge studying History. In his 60 Second Impression, he talks about the academic support he has
  6. Trials of a new needle-free coronavirus vaccine have begun in Cambridge, the city where it was developed by Professor Jonathan Heeney. The DIOS-CoVax vaccine is administered through a blast of air. It’s the first step towards a 'variant proof' coronavirus vaccine, which aims to protect against the virus that causes COVID-19 and future coronaviruses that threaten pandemics. Volunteers are being
  7. Biomedicine and the law

    Duration: 00:01:53
    Published Date: 2017/07/14
    Dr Kathy Liddell, who leads the Cambridge Centre for Law, Medicine and Life Sciences, explains why it’s important to understand how the law can help advance – and help control – new biomedical technologies. One area of interest to the Centre is gene editing – the use of ‘molecular scissors’ that snip out and replace faulty DNA. Read more about how Cambridge researchers are working
  8. Dr Iris Möller - Department of Geography - University of Cambridge

    Duration: 00:01:59
    Published Date: 2017/03/10
    Dr Iris Möller of the Cambridge Coastal Research Unit at the Department of Geography of the University of Cambridge explains how an understanding of natural processes and landforms can help us develop win-win solutions for reducing flood risk. Her international collaborative research team has been able to prove that coastal salt marsh protects sea defences during storm. When submerged in up to 2
  9. Philip Kitcher, Human Nature and Belief, Wed 8 July

    Duration: 00:12:54
    Published Date: 2009/10/09
    Evolutionary Psychology and the Legacy of Sociobiology Professor Philip Kitcher (Columbia University, New York City, USA) Summary: The human sociobiology of the 1970s and 1980s was, I have argued, characterised by overly speculative hypotheses about human nature and the evolution of human tendencies to behaviour. Evolutionary psychology is often alleged to represent a significantly different, and
  10. Airflow across a wing

    Duration: 00:01:14
    Published Date: 2012/01/20
    "It is often said that the lift on a wing is generated because the flow moving over the top surface has a longer distance to travel and therefore needs to go faster. This common explanation is actually wrong." Here, aerodynamics expert Professor Holger Babinsky from the University of Cambridge's Department of Engineering debunks a popular, yet misleading, explanation of how wings lift. For more
  11. James, Computer Science -- 60 Second Impressions

    Duration: 00:01:07
    Published Date: 2012/06/14
    The '60 Second Impressions' are a series of one-minute films featuring current Cambridge undergraduate students . These students talk about what it's really like to study at Cambridge, live in a College, and take part in a wide range of extra-curricular activities. James is from North Yorkshire, and is studying Computer Science. In his 60 Second Impression, he talks about the unpretentious
  12. Alison's Experience

    Duration: 00:02:07
    Published Date: 2012/12/21
    Alison is studying Natural Sciences. In this film, she talks about the things she loves about studying at Cambridge, her diagnosis of Asperger Syndrome, the support she has received, and choosing her College. This film was produced as part of the Disability Resource Centre's Asperger Syndrome Student Project, http://www.admin.cam.ac.uk/univ/disability/asperger/. For more students talking about
  13. Katharine, Philosophy -- 60 Second Impressions

    Duration: 00:01:07
    Published Date: 2012/06/15
    The '60 Second Impressions' are a series of one-minute films featuring current Cambridge undergraduate students. These students talk about what it's really like to study at Cambridge, live in a College, and take part in a wide range of extra-curricular activities. Katharine is from Cumbria, and is studying Philosophy. In her 60 Second Impression, she talks about taking part in drama productions,
  14. Strings that surprise: how a theory progressed

    Duration: 00:12:44
    Published Date: 2014/03/04
    In August 1984 two physicists arrived at a formula that transformed our understanding of string theory, an achievement now recognised by a major award. Professor Michael Green of the Department of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics explains how string theory has taken unexpected directions. In December 2013 Professor Michael Green of Cambridge University and Professor John Schwarz of
  15. ‘Super jelly’ can survive being run over by a car

    Duration: 00:01:15
    Published Date: 2021/11/26
    Researchers have developed a jelly-like material that can withstand the equivalent of an elephant standing on it, and completely recover to its original shape, even though it’s 80% water. The soft-yet-strong material, developed by a team at the University of Cambridge, looks and feels like a squishy jelly, but acts like an ultra-hard, shatterproof glass when compressed, despite its high water
  16. Fossilised dinosaur brains

    Duration: 00:02:12
    Published Date: 2016/10/27
    An unassuming brown pebble, found more than a decade ago by a fossil hunter in Sussex, has been confirmed as the first example of fossilised brain tissue from a dinosaur. The fossil, most likely from a species closely related to Iguanodon, displays distinct similarities to the brains of modern-day crocodiles and birds. Learn more here:
  17. Richard, Education -- 60 Second Impressions

    Duration: 00:01:04
    Published Date: 2012/06/15
    The '60 Second Impressions' are a series of one-minute films featuring current Cambridge undergraduate students . These students talk about what it's really like to study at Cambridge, live in a College, and take part in a wide range of extra-curricular activities. Richard is from Birmingham, and is studying Education. In his 60 Second Impression, he talks about the advantages of being at a
  18. Hannah, Law -- 60 Second Impressions

    Duration: 00:01:08
    Published Date: 2012/06/14
    The '60 Second Impressions' are a series of one-minute films featuring current Cambridge undergraduate students. These students talk about what it's really like to study at Cambridge, live in a College, and take part in a wide range of extra-curricular activities. Hannah is from Leeds, and is studying Law. In her 60 Second Impression, she talks about how she chose her College, the different
  19. Infrastructure revolution

    Duration: 00:08:36
    Published Date: 2012/06/01
    Technology has advanced to the point where the condition of bridges, tunnels and buildings can be monitored in unprecedented detail. Now a new Centre at Cambridge has been formed to kick-start the smart infrastructure revolution. London Bridge, so far as we know, is not falling down. Whether we would be able to tell if it was about to, however, is a different question. And, if it was, we would
  20. Cambridge students tell us how they're feeling about voting in the General Election, and whether they would consider a career in politics in the future. ️ What is at stake for the UK General Election? In this new video series, students and academics from the University of Cambridge share their insights on some of the biggest themes facing our country at this crucial moment, from AI to racial
  21. 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:

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