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Eve Taylor

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Biology: The Whole Story

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Biology: The Whole Story
Biology is the science of the 21st Century and everyone should know the fundamentals. In this series, Professor Lindsay Turnbull from the Department of Biology will guide you through key concepts, building a big picture of what Biology is all about. Based on her recent book, this video series is perfect for GCSE or A-level students, especially those looking for a University perspective.

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E-cigarette marketing and the effects on young people and adults, with Eve Taylor

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Let's talk e-cigarettes
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Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Nicola Lindson discuss cigarette packaging, flavours and brand names with Eve Taylor, King's College London.
Associate Professor Jamie Hartmann-Boyce and Dr Nicola Lindson discuss the new evidence in e-cigarette research and interview Eve Taylor who is working on a PhD in the Nicotine Research Group at King's College London. Eve also works as a research assistant on projects including the International Tobacco Control Project and the Public Health England e-cigarette evidence reviews.

Jamie Hartmann-Boyce interviews Eve Taylor at the E-Cigarette Summit, 16th November at the Royal College of Physicians, London. Eve discusses packaging regulations and the role that cigarette packaging and e-cigarette packaging have on the appeal to young people and adults. She draws on findings from the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project and Action on Smoking and Health (ASH) survey data. The survey data from ASH shows that young people are less interested in trying e-cigarettes in standardised packaging and colours compared to branded packaging. However, changing the packaging does not affect adults, including adults that use combustible cigarettes. Eve discusses the role of flavour names and brand names. The interview highlights that the consequences of any changes in policy need to be thought through and any changes in regulations need to be clear and easily enforceable.

This podcast is a companion to the electronic cigarettes Cochrane living systematic review and shares the evidence from the monthly searches.

Our literature searches carried out November 1st 2023 identified: four new ongoing studies (ISRCTN82413824, NCT06063421, NCT06077240, NCT06088862); one linked paper by Prell et al (10.1136/bmjopen-2022-071099) and two reports to be classified. For further details see our webpage under 'Monthly search findings':
https://www.cebm.ox.ac.uk/research/electronic-cigarettes-for-smoking-cessation-cochrane-living-systematic-review-1

For more information on the full Cochrane review updated in November 2022 see: https://www.cochranelibrary.com/cdsr/doi/10.1002/14651858.CD010216.pub7/full

This podcast is supported by Cancer Research UK.
Creative Commons Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.0 UK (BY-NC-SA): England & Wales; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.0/uk/

Episode Information

Series
Let's talk e-cigarettes
People
Eve Taylor
Jamie Hartmann-Boyce
Nicola Lindson
Keywords
cigarettes
E-cigarettes
Department: Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine
Date Added: 29/11/2023
Duration: 00:15:44

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Alicia Stallings

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Yonadav Barry Ginat

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Bence Kocsis

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Cash Transfer Grants in South Africa during the Covid-19 Pandemic: Work Behind the ESRC Outstanding Public Policy Impact Award 2023

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CSAE Research Podcasts
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The CSAE's Kate Orkin has won the ESRC award for Outstanding Public Policy Impact 2023. Stefan Dercon talks to Kate about the work behind the cash grant programme in South Africa during the Covid-19 pandemic that reached an extra 26.2 million people.
Stefan Dercon is the CSAE Director and Professor of Economic Policy, University of Oxford, and Kate Orkin is the Associate Professor of Economics and Public Policy, University of Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
CSAE Research Podcasts
People
Stefan Dercon
Kate Orkin
Keywords
unemployment
cash grants
randomised control trials
welfare
meta-analysis
development
economics
south africa
Department: Department of Economics
Date Added: 28/11/2023
Duration: 00:24:16

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Possible sources for the gravitational wave background

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Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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Dr Yonadav Barry Ginat - Possible sources for the gravitational wave background
The detection of gravitational waves from the coalescence of black holes has opened a new window for astronomy. Besides individual mergers, one can study the stochastic gravitational-wave background, i.e. the sum of all gravitational waves arriving at Earth, which are not from resolved sources. In this talk I will give an overview of the current predictions for this background, over a range of frequencies -- from binary neutron stars at 100 Hz to the mergers of super-massive black holes at 10^(-8) Hz, and even further to primordial gravitational waves generated during inflation. Of these, none have so far been detected, save for a signal consistent with a background from super-massive black hole coalescences. I will touch on how background sources are modelled, and on how these can be used to extend our understanding of physics.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Yonadav Barry Ginat
Keywords
gravitational waves
black hole
astronomy
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 28/11/2023
Duration: 00:47:53

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Searching for the origin of black hole mergers in the Universe with gravitational waves

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Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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Prof Bence Kocsis - Searching for the origin of black hole mergers in the Universe with gravitational waves
The direct detection of gravitational waves by LIGO and VIRGO and pulsar timing arrays has recently opened a new window to observe the Universe. We can now detect objects which are completely invisible in traditional electromagnetic surveys including black holes and possibly dark matter. The observations show a very frequent rate of black hole mergers in the Universe with unexpected properties. In this talk I will review the astrophysical processes that may be responsible for the formation of the observed events. I will show that the standard astrophysical merger pathways are already in tension with LIGO/VIRGO observations. New ideas may be needed to explain the origin of the detected sources. I will discuss several exotic possibilities including the hypothesis that if dark matter is in part made up of black holes in galaxies they may contribute to the observed events or the possibility that stellar mass black holes may be teeming around supermassive black holes at the centres of galaxies, which may be a possible sight to produce gravitational wave events.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Bence Kocsis
Keywords
galaxies
black hole
pulsar
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 28/11/2023
Duration: 00:46:11

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Gravitational radiation: an overview

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Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
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Prof Steven Balbus - Gravitational radiation: an overview
General Relativity, Einstein’s relativistic theory of gravity, predicts that the effects of gravitational fields propagate across the Universe at the speed of light. This is very much in the spirit of Maxwell’s theory of electrodynamics, the first fully relativistic theory to enter physics. Einstein’s theory is more complicated, however, because waves of gravity are themselves a source of gravitational radiation! But when the waves are small in amplitude, as they are in contemporary observations, their effects may be understood in terms of concepts very familiar to us: they cause small tensorial distortions of space, carrying energy and angular momentum which can measurably change the orbits of binary stars. First studied by Einstein in 1916, gravitational waves were detected directly in 2015, after a century of technical advancement allowed these incredibly tiny (a fraction of a proton radius!) wave distortions to be measured. In the last eight years, gravitational wave detection has become a powerful tool used by astrophysicists to reveal previously unknown populations of black holes, and perhaps something about the earliest moments of the birth of the Universe.

Episode Information

Series
Theoretical Physics - From Outer Space to Plasma
People
Steven Balbus
Keywords
Physics
space
stars
Department: Department of Physics
Date Added: 28/11/2023
Duration: 01:08:43

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