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  2. What does extreme weather mean for us?

    Duration: 00:35:10
    Published Date: 2024/03/26
    The episode explores the topic of extreme weather and its impact on communities and asks: What does extreme weather mean for us? The speakers highlight the importance of connecting research to real-world impacts and the need for collective action. They discuss the devastating losses of climate disasters, the challenges of adaptation and the power of nature. They also emphasise the importance of
  3. Novel Thoughts #4: Simon Redfern on Chinghiz Aitmatov's Jamila

    Duration: 00:03:39
    Published Date: 2015/06/19
    As a mineral scientist, Professor Simon Redfern from Cambridge’s Department of Earth Sciences travels widely, and likes his visits to be about more than just the rocks. A recent trip to Kazakhstan was enlivened by reading Jamila by Chinghiz Aitmatov, a novella set in post-war Soviet Kyrgyzstan, on the borders of Kazakhstan. Here he talks about this favourite book as part of ‘Novel Thoughts’,
  4. Novel Thoughts #3: Karen Yu on George Lucas' Star Wars

    Duration: 00:03:21
    Published Date: 2015/06/15
    Karen Yu’s growing love of science as a young girl was galvanised by reading the novelisation of the Star Wars movies (Star Wars: From the Adventures of Luke Skywalker by George Lucas). Her desire to build her own fusion reactor eventually morphed into a PhD in industrial photonics, using lasers for nanoscale manufacturing (if not for lightsabers), at Cambridge’s Department of Engineering.
  5. Helping Newcastle A-level students make university decisions

    Duration: 00:03:59
    Published Date: 2018/04/25
    Cambridge is on the road looking for new undergraduates. Take a look at what A-Level students from Newcastle made of the events held at St James' Park.
  6. Novel Thoughts #2: Clare Bryant on AS Byatt’s Possession

    Duration: 00:02:33
    Published Date: 2015/06/12
    Professor Clare Bryant from Cambridge’s Department of Veterinary Medicine explains how reading AS Byatt’s Possession at a crucial point in her early career reminded her of the excitement of research and persuaded her not to turn her back on her life as a scientist. Here she talks about this favourite book as part of ‘Novel Thoughts’, a series exploring the literary reading habits of eight
  7. Cambridge Imagines: Mapping Anthrax Outbreaks

    Duration: 00:04:30
    Published Date: 2022/05/03
    Learn more about STEMing Africa here: https://stemingafricainitiative.wordpress.com Valentina Ndolo acquired new software skills during her PhD at Cambridge University that has allowed her to better map the spread of anthrax in East Africa.
  8. The Vice-Chancellor’s Annual Address to the University - 2021

    Duration: 00:42:23
    Published Date: 2021/10/02
    The Vice-Chancellor marks the start of the new academic year this morning with a live annual address to the University community.
  9. Socks & Jabs & Rock & Roll

    Duration: 00:05:02
    Published Date: 2021/01/06
    As a national vaccination programme begins in the UK’s fight against COVID-19, we look back to 1950s America when a group of teenagers (and Elvis) inspired a fresh look at pro-vaccine public health information. Vaccination programmes are considered to be one of the greatest public health achievements in history. Yet recent years have seen a rise in vaccine-preventable diseases like measles as a
  10. Rediscovering Greece & Rome

    Duration: 00:14:05
    Published Date: 2010/03/11
    Get an insider's view of the Fitzwilliam Museum's new-look Greek & Roman gallery with curator Lucilla Burn and classics professor Mary Beard, as they discuss what went on behind the scenes of the recent redisplay, and reveal some of the untold histories behind these incredible ancient objects.
  11. ERC short: Prof Ruth Cameron

    Duration: 00:02:31
    Published Date: 2017/03/14
    What has the ERC ever done for us? Prof Ruth Cameron (Materials Science and Metallurgy) explains how an ERC grant allowed her team to develop a new biomedical technology.
  12. The Brilliant Abyss: Helen Scales

    Duration: 00:49:05
    Published Date: 2021/03/28
    From the collections at the Zoology Museum in Cambridge, marine biologist Dr Helen Scales and author of the new book The Brilliant Abyss, illuminates the majesty and marvels of the deep sea. The deep is the single biggest habitable space on the planet and home to fantastic creatures that have evolved unique ways to survive in extreme conditions of super-high pressure, little food or company, and
  13. Dr James Moultrie - Department of Engineering

    Duration: 00:06:30
    Published Date: 2017/07/17
    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. The films feature Lecturer in German Thought, Martin Ruehl; Physics Lecturer Lisa Jardine-Wright; Sociologist Mónica
  14. Cambridge 3D CS Controller

    Duration: 00:04:41
    Published Date: 2010/11/02
    A new controller device that greatly improves the ease of use of 3D medical imaging workstations has been developed at the University of Cambridge and Addenbrooke's Hospital.
  15. The Vice-Chancellor marked the start of the new academic year this morning by giving his annual address to the University in the Senate House.
  16. AI: Life in the age of intelligent machines

    Duration: 00:12:52
    Published Date: 2019/02/22
    In a new film, leading Cambridge University researchers discuss the far-reaching advances offered by artificial intelligence – and consider the consequences of developing systems that think far beyond human abilities.
  17. Former Oxfam CEO, Dame Barbara Stocking (Murray Edwards, New Hall 1969), talks Dome Life with current student, Bethany Evans. Watch the sneak preview here.
  18. The Evidence Effect: How a conservation revolution is protecting…

    Duration: 00:07:10
    Published Date: 2022/06/29
    Sir David Attenborough and BBC presenter Iolo Williams introduce ‘The Evidence Effect’, a film about a conservation revolution that’s helping to protect biodiversity across our planet. We face both the ‘sixth mass extinction’ of biodiversity and an ‘evidence emergency’ stopping us from conserving it in the way we need for the future of the planet. But change is afoot. A new approach
  19. The Longitude Problem

    Duration: 00:09:31
    Published Date: 2010/05/10
    The discovery of a way to measure longitude revolutionised long-distance sea travel forever, but the institution which made it happen has all but disappeared from memory. Now researchers led by Professor Simon Schaffer are launching a new project to remember the Board of Longitude and tell its remarkable story in full for the first time.
  20. Successful honey-hunters know how to communicate with wild birds

    Duration: 00:01:24
    Published Date: 2023/12/07
    A new Cambridge University study has found that wild honeyguide birds prefer to cooperate with people who have learned local cultural traditions, to find and access honey-filled bees’ nests.
  21. 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.
  22. Vlogbridge winner: Saffia on enjoying freshers' week without…

    Duration: 00:02:39
    Published Date: 2018/04/12
    Newnham College student Saffia Mahmoud uses vlogging to 'big up' the Islamic Society of Cambridge for helping her settle into her new life on campus.
  23. Elephants demonstrate awareness of own bodies

    Duration: 00:00:15
    Published Date: 2017/04/12
    Asian elephants are able to recognise their bodies as obstacles to success in problem-solving, further strengthening evidence of their intelligence and self-awareness, according to a new study from the University of Cambridge.
  24. The Vice-Chancellor marked the start of the new academic year this morning by giving his annual address to the University in the Senate House. www.cam.ac.uk/consultation
  25. 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.
  26. Pitcher plant uses rain drops to capture prey

    Duration: 00:00:53
    Published Date: 2012/06/11
    Researchers discover novel trapping mechanism for Nepenthes gracilis pitchers. During heavy rain, the lid of Nepenthes gracilis pitchers acts like a springboard, catapulting insects that seek shelter on its underside directly into the fluid-filled pitcher, new research has found. The findings were published today, Wednesday 13 June, in the journal PLoS ONE.
  27. House of Lords Reform

    Duration: 00:10:20
    Published Date: 2012/07/24
    The House of Lords Reform Bill, which is currently before Parliament, is the latest of many attempts to reform the upper chamber of the UK Parliament. It is over a hundred years since the enactment of the Parliament Act 1911, which changed the balance of power between the Lords and the Commons, but which was intended only as a stopgap measure pending the transformation of the Lords into an
  28. A Good Death? and Menagerie Theatre present: An Everyday Family…

    Duration: 00:47:48
    Published Date: 2021/03/27
    Join us for the premiere of An Everyday Family Practice, written by Patrick Morris, Co-Artistic Director of Menagerie Theatre Company. This touching, darkly humorous and at times challenging drama explores the impact on a family of a diagnosis of terminal illness. An Everyday Family Practice is an original short play, devised, filmed and premiered at the 2021 Cambridge Festival. Go to
  29. The making of a smart tunnel

    Duration: 00:05:23
    Published Date: 2014/06/09
    Ground-breaking new sensing technologies in the world's first 'smart tunnel' are providing engineers with an inexpensive and efficient method of monitoring, maintaining and protecting the UK's infrastructure, now and well into the future.
  30. Driverless vehicles trialled on West Cambridge site

    Duration: 00:00:50
    Published Date: 2021/06/03
    The suitably sci-fi autonomous vehicle is a 12-seater shuttle, developed by engineering firm Aurrigo and Smart Cambridge, a workstream of the Greater Cambridge Partnership (GCP). Read more here: https://www.cam.ac.uk/news/universitys-expertise-advises-on-west-cambridge-site-trial-of-self-driving-shuttle
  31. 'Mighty Mouse' pulsar

    Duration: 00:00:24
    Published Date: 2016/11/14
    An international team of astronomers has found a pulsating, dead star beaming with the energy of about 10 million suns. This is the brightest pulsar – a dense stellar remnant left over from a supernova explosion – ever recorded. http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/astronomers-discover-the-mighty-mouse-of-stellar-remnants
  32. Killer T Cell: The Cancer Assassin

    Duration: 00:01:55
    Published Date: 2015/05/19
    How does a Killer T Cell Kill its target? Our new film captures the behaviour of cytotoxic T cells – the body’s ‘serial killers’ – as they hunt down and eliminate cancer cells before moving on to their next target.
  33. Naked Mole Ravolt

    Duration: 00:02:20
    Published Date: 2021/05/04
    The naked mole rat's weird biology can help us develop ways to combat painful human conditions like osteoarthritis. In Episode 2 of Naked Mole Ravolt, see what happens when a new queen arises and what a fight for supremacy reveals!
  34. Cricket walking and responding to sound

    Duration: 00:00:19
    Published Date: 2015/09/14
    A female cricket mounted on a trackball walks towards the sound made by a male cricket. More information at: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/neural-circuit-in-the-cricket-brain-detects-the-rhythm-of-the-right-mating-call
  35. Evelyn Fox Keller, Society and Health, Tue 7 July

    Duration: 00:07:12
    Published Date: 2009/10/06
    The neo-Darwinian synthesis brought great simplicity to Darwins ideas, but at a cost. Today, new scientific developments require a re-conceptualization of Darwinism that may be of particular importance to the social sciences: evolution is not just about DNA; it also depends crucially on heritable changes that occur without a change in DNA sequence, behavioural and symbolic inheritance.
  36. The Cycle of Terms

    Duration: 00:00:45
    Published Date: 2014/10/10
    There’s a long tradition of Cambridge University students cycling to their studies. With the new term in full swing we celebrate the morning pedal to lectures.
  37. Why has it taken so long to take climate change seriously

    Duration: 00:58:08
    Published Date: 2021/03/28
    What or who has prevented urgent action on climate change? Why have policymakers lagged behind the science and technology? How much do individuals make a difference or has it needed people to work out how to make money out of climate change for politicians to take action? Is there a human tipping point - allied to the scientific tipping point - where more radical action becomes inevitable? And
  38. An iconic building in the centre of Cambridge is, today, being named the David Attenborough Building, in honour of Sir David’s pioneering work in bringing the wonders of our natural world to our screens.
  39. The Vice-Chancellor’s Annual Address to the University - 2020

    Duration: 00:35:50
    Published Date: 2020/10/01
    The Vice-Chancellor marks the start of the new academic year this morning with a live annual address to the University community
  40. Illuminating the hidden kingdom of the truffle

    Duration: 00:04:58
    Published Date: 2018/02/11
    Truffles are one of the world’s most expensive ingredients, and also one of the most mysterious. Now, with the help of a 170-year-old ‘living laboratory’, and a dog called Lucy, researchers hope to unearth new understanding of the secret life of these underground delicacies.
  41. Playful naked mole-rats

    Duration: 00:00:41
    Published Date: 2015/09/02
    Playful naked mole-rats contribute to research into devastating medical conditions by Dr Ewan St. John Smith, Department of Pharmacology, who has been studying them for the past ten years. Find out more: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/n-is-for-naked-mole-rat
  42. Nanomaterials Up Close: Gum Arabic

    Duration: 00:00:52
    Published Date: 2014/06/30
    This alien glob is a piece of gum arabic from the hardened sap of the Acacia tree, most likely collected from a tree in Sudan. Rox Middleton, from the University of Cambridge, explains how the electron microscope has changed the way we are able to interact with objects at the nanoscale, allowing us just to enjoy a glimpse of the exquisite abstract forms around us. 'Nanomaterials Up Close' is a
  43. 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
  44. Microscopic rowers - without a cox

    Duration: 00:01:20
    Published Date: 2014/07/29
    New research shows that the whip-like appendages on many types of cells are able to synchronise their movements solely through interactions with the fluid that surrounds them. The paper, published in the journal eLife, is available at: http://elifesciences.org/lookup/doi/10.7554/elife.02750
  45. Arriving in Cambridge

    Duration: 00:02:57
    Published Date: 2022/09/20
    Current students Amal, David and Cathryn-Olivia welcome you to the new term at the University of Cambridge. #GoingToCambridge Find about more about applying to Cambridge at www.cam.ac.uk/ugstudy
  46. #MyCambridgeSoc : Women's History Soc

    Duration: 00:00:32
    Published Date: 2023/03/23
    History student Millie talks about the new society she helped make in Cambridge #Cambridge #Feminism #Feminist #Uni #MyCambridgeSoc #StudentLife #History
  47. Engineering photo competition 2015

    Duration: 00:02:47
    Published Date: 2015/11/10
    The winning photos from this year's Department of Engineering photo competition, sponsored by ZEISS. See many more at: http://www.cam.ac.uk/research/news/bullet-holes-and-graphene-caves-picturing-engineering Image credits: Rachel Garsed, Andrew Payne, Dilek Ozgit and Andrea De Luca, Kenichi Nakanishi, Alex Kendall.
  48. Behind the scenes of the 2010 Sculpture Promenade

    Duration: 00:16:28
    Published Date: 2011/02/17
    Discover how the grounds of the Fitz were transformed for the second year running by this new display of contemporary sculpture. See behind-the-scenes photos and time-lapse footage showing how the Promenade was installed, and hear interviews with Museum Director Timothy Potts and the sculptor Helaine Blumenfeld, as well as featured sculptors Rob Ward, Angela Conner, Nick Turvey, Ann Christopher
  49. 'Wow, I'm in Cambridge!' moment

    Duration: 00:03:38
    Published Date: 2021/09/12
    Want to find out more? Sign up for an Open Day this month: https://bit.ly/Cambridge2021OpenDay Students will enjoy many new experiences in their first few days and weeks of University. Cambridge has some of its own unique ways of helping students feel at home here.
  50. Legal Aid Reform

    Duration: 00:07:37
    Published Date: 2012/06/01
    The Effect of the Legal Aid, Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 on Legal Aid for Family Cases. The legal aid system was created in 1949 as part of the development of the post-war Welfare State, alongside the National Health Service. It provides funding both for legal advice and out-of-court representation by lawyers, for example in negotiating the settlement of disputes, and --
  51. Could cancer drugs help save the Tasmanian devil?

    Duration: 00:01:53
    Published Date: 2018/04/09
    Transmissible cancers are incredibly rare in nature, yet have arisen in Tasmanian devils on at least two separate occasions. New research from the University of Cambridge identifies key anti-cancer drugs which could be trialled as a treatment for these diseases, which are threatening Tasmanian devils with extinction.

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