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  2. How dogs can sniff out diabetes

    Duration: 00:04:24
    Published Date: 2016/06/27
    A chemical found in our breath could provide a flag to warn of dangerously-low blood sugar levels in patients with type 1 diabetes, according to new research the University of Cambridge. The finding, published today in the journal Diabetes Care, could explain why some dogs can be trained to spot the warning signs in patients. The researchers found that levels of the chemical isoprene rose
  3. PARP-inhibitors: A New Generation of Cancer Drugs

    Duration: 00:03:12
    Published Date: 2014/12/24
    First of new generation of cancer drugs granted European approval A new drug for ovarian cancer, developed by researchers at the University of Cambridge and AstraZeneca, has become the first of new class of drugs, known as PARP-inhibitors, to be granted approval anywhere in the world. The drug, Lynparza, has been granted Marketing Authorisation from the European Commission.
  4. Professor Stephen J. Toope, Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, celebrates 2020 as a watershed moment in the history of rowing at the University as its three successful boat clubs become one. A new era for high performance rowing, for efficiency, for shared resources, and for supporting the University’s elite athletes. A new era for all who are inspired by performance sport – and
  5. The Story of Campath -1H

    Duration: 00:31:18
    Published Date: 2013/09/17
    A transformational new treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS) - the result of over three decades of research in Cambridge -- has now been approved by the EU agency responsible for regulating new drugs. In recognition of the highly effective new treatment, the University of Cambridge has produced this video which explores the history of the drug, showing the many challenges as well as successes
  6. How to Move a Mountain One bite at a time

    Duration: 00:18:25
    Published Date: 2021/09/10
    JOIN US ON SLIDO FOR A LIVE Q&A #284816 https://www.sli.do/ Welcome to our new Collections Research Centre, which is part of the Sedgwick Museum of Earth Sciences. In this tour we will introduce you to our new building, highlighting the storage capabilities of the new collections store, as well as the additional facilities and resources we now have. We will introduce you to the processes involved
  7. A new era for apprenticeships at Cambridge

    Duration: 00:03:24
    Published Date: 2018/03/09
    New standards and funding arrangements for apprenticeships offer opportunities to expand training provision for both new and existing staff at Cambridge University.
  8. The New Kettle's Yard

    Duration: 00:04:46
    Published Date: 2018/02/28
    See inside the new Kettle's Yard, which opened to the public on 10 February 2018. Explore the original House at Kettle's Yard, discover the new spaces and hear about what Kettle's Yard can now offer in this film.
  9. Metaspriggina Swimcycle

    Duration: 00:00:14
    Published Date: 2016/11/14
    © Phlesch Bubble A major fossil discovery in Canada sheds new light on the development of the earliest vertebrates, including the origin of jaws, the first time this feature has been seen so early in the fossil record http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/new-fossil-find-pinpoints-the-origin-of-jaws-in-vertebrates
  10. T-cell assassins captured on film hunting down cancer cells and…

    Duration: 00:00:30
    Published Date: 2021/10/15
    Cambridge researchers have captured on film the activity of T cells – an important component of our immune system – as they hunt down and kill cancer cells. For the first time, they have also shown how these cells reload their toxic weapons. Cytotoxic T cells are specialist white blood cells that are trained by our immune system to recognise and eliminate threats – including tumour cells
  11. Sir Peter Crane, Darwin and modern science, Thurs 9 July

    Duration: 00:09:55
    Published Date: 2009/10/14
    chicago, The importance of trees: recent progress with understanding the history of plant life Professor Sir Peter Crane (University of Chicago, Illinois, USA) Summary: Much was learnt about plant evolution in the first 100 years following On the Origin of Species, but progress in recent decades has been equally rapid, especially with new approaches to develop and test different kinds of
  12. The University Museum of Zoology, Cambridge is one of the largest and most important natural history collections in the UK, with an extraordinarily rich history dating back to 1814. On 23rd June 2018 the Museum reopens after a five-year, £4.1million redevelopment to reveal thousands of incredible specimens from across the animal kingdom.​ The refurbished galleries bring the Museum into the
  13. Meet Professor Debbie Prentice: the new Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge "It gives me great pleasure to introduce myself as the University of Cambridge’s new Vice-Chancellor. I am excited to be taking on this new role at a critical moment for all of us. I am a psychologist with an interest in social norms. I have spent most of my academic career at Princeton, including the last
  14. What would 'Brexit' mean for free movement?

    Duration: 00:15:20
    Published Date: 2015/07/24
    In an interview with the BBC yesterday (23 July 2015), US President Barack Obama argued that having "the United Kingdom in the European Union gives us much greater confidence about the strength of the transatlantic union and is part of the cornerstone of institutions built after World War II that has made the world safer and more prosperous." He continued: "And we want to make sure that United
  15. COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine: everything you need to know

    Duration: 00:06:18
    Published Date: 2020/03/24
    The Cambridge scientists developing a COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine Professor Jonathan Heeney explains why we need a vaccine against the new COVID-19 coronavirus and how his team is using new technology developed for influenza and Ebola viruses to target the new infection. Thumbnail Credit - Fusion Animation
  16. Treating MS: The long road to drug development

    Duration: 00:14:35
    Published Date: 2014/05/27
    A transformational new treatment for multiple sclerosis (MS) - the result of over three decades of research in Cambridge -- has secured approval by the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (NICE) for in the UK, following approvalin 2013 by the EU agency responsible for regulating new drugs. In recognition of the highly effective new treatment, the University of Cambridge has produced
  17. FortyTwo – Your evolution resource

    Duration: 00:01:40
    Published Date: 2015/11/18
    Evolution is true, Darwin got it right. Why then a new website on evolution? A fair question, but only if it was like any other website devoted to evolution. This one is different, but in what way? You’ll need to visit http://www.42evolution.org to really find out, and when you do you will immediately encounter a remarkable scope of enquiry, a thrilling range of themes, levels of accessibility
  18. 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
  19. The Vaccine for Fake News

    Duration: 00:07:01
    Published Date: 2021/11/25
    Sander van der Linden has a nickname: Cambridge’s professor of “defence against the dark arts”. His team works with governments and organisations such as Google to find ways to fight against misinformation, disinformation and conspiracy theories. Watch Sander explain his radical idea: that people can be “inoculated” against falling for fake news. Want to be involved in the research?
  20. Podcast: What did the future look like in the past?

    Duration: 01:08:09
    Published Date: 2021/04/02
    We all have theories about what the future might look like. But what did the future look like in the past? And how have the advent of new technologies altered how people viewed the future? We talked with curator of modern sciences and historian of Victorian science Dr Johnua Nall, professor of Digital Humanities and director of Cambridge Digital Humanities Professor Caroline Bassett, and Junior
  21. Partha Dasgupta: Nature, our most precious asset

    Duration: 00:05:46
    Published Date: 2021/10/13
    The last few decades of human prosperity have taken a devastating ecological toll. This is in part because nature is absent from the accounting systems that dictate national economies. In February 2021, the Cambridge economist Prof Sir Partha Dasgupta published a ground-breaking report on the economics of biodiversity. Watch Sir Partha outline the radical thinking required to reshape global
  22. The new Cambridge University Boathouse

    Duration: 00:02:07
    Published Date: 2016/12/05
    Cambridge rowing has a new home – this £5million boathouse opened on Saturday and will house three of the University’s best known boat clubs, including those due to face Oxford in the Boat Race next April. The squads will undergo months of training here throughout the winter in preparation for those Races, which will be watched by more than 6m people around the world. With state of the art
  23. Can we begin to move our politics and public conversations from strident, polarised debate to peaceful dialogue - acknowledging the reality of our dependence on each other? Go to www.slido.com and enter code G489 to chat about the event. In this session, our three speakers look at how the cycles of polarisation and extremism sweeping the world might be broken. How do we shift the dialogue? At its
  24. CUSU Garden Party 2018

    Duration: 00:02:20
    Published Date: 2018/07/18
    The new CUSU committee have now taken up their new posts ahead of the 2018/19 term. Before the hand over they enjoyed mixing with their predecessors at the CUSU Garden Party at Sidney Sussex College.
  25. Meet Zoe

    Duration: 00:00:59
    Published Date: 2016/11/14
    Meet Zoe: a digital talking head which can express human emotions on demand with “unprecedented realism” and could herald a new era of human-computer interaction. http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/face-of-the-future-rears-its-head
  26. A new beginnings Message from the Hebrew Bible

    Duration: 00:00:55
    Published Date: 2020/12/31
    A message for new beginnings from Ecclesiastes 7:8-12 in the Hebrew Bible. Read by Srecko Koralija of the Faculty of Divinity, University of Cambridge Cambridge. See a digitised copy of this 500-year-old manuscript in Cambridge University Library: http://bit.ly/HebrewBibleBeginningsMessage
  27. The Pattern Seekers A new theory of human invention

    Duration: 00:38:19
    Published Date: 2021/03/30
    Why can humans alone invent? In this talk, based on his new book, psychologist and world renowned autism expert Simon Baron-Cohen will put forward a bold new theory: because we can identify patterns, specifically if-and-then patterns. And he argues that the genes for this unique ability overlap with the genes for autism. Go to www.slido.com and enter code 43439 to chat about the event. From the
  28. Vlogbridge winner: Zeb's Cambridge review 88 lectures later

    Duration: 00:02:24
    Published Date: 2018/04/12
    In his first year Computer Science undergrad Zeb Goriely has made it to 88 lectures, taken lots of photographs and learnt how to cook. But most importantly he's made new friends in a new home. Check out Zeb's own YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuv8dDEiIkHlMZ0kQg62a7Q/featured
  29. Affordable Housing

    Duration: 00:07:19
    Published Date: 2015/02/04
    This short film examines some possible policy responses to the shortage of affordable housing supply in the UK. It argues that a large increase in house building is needed, much of which should be new dwellings that are affordable to rent by households on low incomes. It explains the use in other countries of policies that link initiatives to increase housing production, ensure that housing is of
  30. The Truth About Diets with Dr Giles Yeo

    Duration: 01:01:26
    Published Date: 2021/01/27
    Each New Year brings new diets and health fads; carnivore, keto, paleo, plant-based. But what actually works? Dr Giles Yeo explores how to break the cycle of pseudo-science and misinformation surrounding the world of dieting as he discusses his ‘anti-diet’ diet book.
  31. New Horizons: helping people get back into work

    Duration: 00:01:57
    Published Date: 2019/04/02
    Some of the most deprived areas in England are located in the eastern region. The New Horizons project run by housing association CHS Group, with the help of Cambridge University researchers, has been helping those furthest away from the job market to get back into work.
  32. Lines of Thought: Communicating Faith

    Duration: 00:05:14
    Published Date: 2016/05/27
    Cambridge University Library is celebrating its 600th anniversary with an exhibition of priceless treasures communicating 4,000 years of human thought. To celebrate, we have made six films on the six distinct themes featured in Lines of Thought. The third film in the series looks at the translation of some of the Library’s most important religious texts. Translation has always been central to
  33. Making Room for Conscience

    Duration: 00:48:50
    Published Date: 2009/09/29
    This item is part of the Alumni Weekend 2007 collection of the Alumni Office. To view more media from the Alumni Office, please visit the Alumni Office video page. The Abolition of the Slave Trade in America and Britain. Internationally-renowned historian Professor Simon Schama was an undergraduate, and later Fellow, at Christ's College, Cambridge before becoming Fellow and Tutor in Modern
  34. Cambridge Zero: the University's ambitious new climate initiative

    Duration: 00:03:45
    Published Date: 2019/11/26
    Cambridge Zero, the University's ambitious new climate initiative, will generate ideas and innovations to help shape a sustainable future - and equip future generations of leaders with the skills to navigate the global challenges of the coming decades. With thanks to our narrator Dr Emma Liu. Image credit NASA
  35. New Hope For Multiple Sclerosis Sufferers

    Duration: 00:09:10
    Published Date: 2009/09/29
    A drug which was developed in Cambridge and initially designed to treat a form of leukaemia has also proven effective against combating the debilitating neurological disease multiple sclerosis (MS). The study, led by researchers from the University of Cambridge, has found that alemtuzumab not only stops MS from advancing in patients with early stage active relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis
  36. They are 40cm tall, made of white plastic, and don’t look like your average students, but robot avatars have taken their place in the classroom at Cambridge University – to help two mothers with new-born babies continue their Masters degrees in Genomic Medicine. http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/meet-the-robot-avatars-helping-cambridge-students-combine-education-and-motherhood
  37. The Judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in the Pistorius case

    Duration: 00:13:45
    Published Date: 2015/12/17
    The conviction of Oscar Pistorius for committing culpable homicide in relation to the shooting of his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp made worldwide news. In this video Professor Christopher Forsyth reflects on his previous comments (see https://www.law.cam.ac.uk/press/news/2015/01/law-focus-mental-element-murder-reflections-pistorius-case-christopher-forsyth) about the original conviction, and
  38. Face of the future rears its head

    Duration: 00:04:30
    Published Date: 2013/03/19
    Meet Zoe: a digital talking head which can express human emotions on demand with "unprecedented realism" and could herald a new era of human-computer interaction. The system, called "Zoe", is the result of a collaboration between researchers at Toshiba's Cambridge Research Lab and the University of Cambridge's Department of Engineering.
  39. The Variant Hunters

    Duration: 00:07:38
    Published Date: 2021/10/04
    The variant hunters are helping us to understand how and why the COVID-19 virus is spreading, allowing us to fight back against the COVID-19 pandemic. Hear from some of the scientists behind the UK’s nationwide sequencing effort to track SARS-CoV-2. Sir Patrick Vallance (the government’s Chief Scientific Adviser) also describes how the expertise that came together during the pandemic is now
  40. Dear World...Thank you

    Duration: 00:03:33
    Published Date: 2022/10/31
    The campaign for the University and Colleges of Cambridge, the largest in Cambridge’s history, has raised over £2.2 billion. From bursaries, scholarships, and new academic posts to new initiatives, buildings and facilities, philanthropy is ensuring that Collegiate Cambridge continues to serve society through academic excellence. None of this is possible without the vision and generosity of our
  41. Exoplanet Hunter: In search of new Earths and life in the Universe

    Duration: 00:06:20
    Published Date: 2016/02/15
    Professor Didier Queloz hunts for extreme worlds and Earth twins in Cambridge’s Battcock Centre for Experimental Astrophysics. Here, he tells of the moment in 1995 when he became the first to discover a planet that orbits a star other than our Sun. Astronomers had speculated as to the existence of these distant worlds – called exoplanets – but, until the discovery of 51 Pegasi b by Queloz
  42. The new COVID-19 variant: what we need to know about XBB1.5?

    Duration: 00:05:08
    Published Date: 2023/01/13
    This winter has seen the emergence of a new sub-variant of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. This sub-variant – XBB1.5, or ‘Kraken’ – is the daughter of the globally-dominant Omicron. Professor Ravi Gupta from the Cambridge Institute of Therapeutic Immunology and Infectious Disease tells us everything we need know about the sub-variant – and why it has surprised the scientific
  43. “Best wishes for the Michaelmas term!” As the new academic year springs to life, Cambridge Vice-Chancellor Professor Debbie Prentice welcomes staff and students back to the city. #UniversityOfCambridge #CambridgeUniversity #Cambridge #University #GoingToCambridge
  44. Open Eddington 2018

    Duration: 00:00:43
    Published Date: 2018/08/23
    The first phase of the development is focussed on creating the foundations for a long-lasting and sustainable community, with some 700 homes and facilities to support new residents, neighbours and the wider Cambridge community. Join us for a day of talks and tours by the architects and professionals who have created the scheme and find out more about our ambitions for this new neighbourhood.
  45. Vlogbridge competition - Michaelmas 2017

    Duration: 00:01:20
    Published Date: 2017/10/03
    Cambridge student and YouTube star Ibz Mo tells new first-years why they should enter our new vlogging competition. Find out more at www.cam.ac.uk/vlogbridge See more of Ibz Mo on his channel at https://www.youtube.com/user/ibstarsns
  46. Householders Who Use Violence on Burglars

    Duration: 00:08:00
    Published Date: 2012/10/26
    At the 2012 Conservative Party conference, new Justice Secretary Chris Grayling announced plans to amend the criminal law to ensure that even householders who react in a way that may seem disproportionate in the cold light of day will be protected from prosecution. This reopened a long-running discussion about the balance of legal rights between the home owner and those trespassing onto the
  47. Uncovering the first European church in the tropics

    Duration: 00:15:04
    Published Date: 2015/11/06
    A church has been uncovered on Cabo Verde’s Santiago Island, off the West African coast, which dates back to late 15th century, when Portugal colonised the islands that were later to play a highly strategic role in the global trade in African slaves. Archaeological excavations are helping Cabo Verdeans gain new insight into their remarkable and long-obscured history. Find out more here:
  48. Finding Malaria's Weak Spot

    Duration: 00:00:54
    Published Date: 2013/02/06
    A ground-breaking imaging system to track malarial infection of blood cells in real time has been created by researchers at the University of Cambridge. Malaria is caused by Plasmodium falciparum parasites transmitted to humans through the bites of infected mosquitoes. The researchers have focused on a mysterious step in the life cycle of the parasite occurring inside the infected human's
  49. Electron 'spin' key to solar cell breakthrough

    Duration: 00:01:17
    Published Date: 2013/08/08
    In a new paper published in Nature, researchers at the Cavendish Lab used the quantum technique of electron 'spin' to enhance the power of organic solar cells, a much cheaper and more flexible alternative to the current commercial silicon-based solar cells. Find out more here: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/electron-spin-key-to-solar-cell-breakthrough-0 To do it, they used lasers - and lots
  50. Thomas Robert Malthus, who was born 250 years ago, became notorious for his ‘principle of population’. He argued that, because poverty was inevitable, some people would not find a seat at ‘nature’s table’ and would perish. In a new book, historians at Cambridge and Harvard set the life and work of this contentious thinker within a wider context – and look in particular at his
  51. Six new species of tiny frog discovered

    Duration: 00:00:47
    Published Date: 2022/04/27
    Scientists have discovered six new species of frog the size of a thumbnail in the forests of Mexico, with one earning the distinction of Mexico’s smallest frog. All six species are smaller than a British 1p coin - around 15mm long - when fully grown. Adult males of the tiniest of these species, named Craugastor candelariensis, grow to only 13mm. Learn more: https://bit.ly/3xX5N14

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