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Women and children first: gender, flood and victimhood in Dutch eighteenth-century maps of dike-breaks

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
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Anne-Rieke van Schaik, University of Amsterdam, gives the third in the first session of the seminar.

Episode Information

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
People
Anne-Rieke van Schaik
Keywords
maps
cartography
women
library
bodleian
Department: Bodleian Library
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:13:49

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The rise, persistence and surprising end of female personifications of the continents on maps

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
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Chet Van Duzer, University of Rochester, NY, USA, gives the second presentation in the first session of the seminar.

Episode Information

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
People
Chet Van Duzer
Keywords
maps
cartography
women
bodleian
Department: Bodleian Library
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:20:56

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Where are the women on sixteenth-century French World maps?

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
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Camille Serchuk, Southern Connecticut State University, USA, gives the first talk in the first session of the seminar.

Episode Information

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
People
Camille Serchuk
Keywords
library
maps
cartography
bodleian
women
Department: Bodleian Library
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:21:58

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Welcome and Introduction

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
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Catríona Cannon, Deputy Librarian, Bodleian Libraries, introduces the seminar.

Episode Information

Series
The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
People
Catriona Cannon
Keywords
library
bodleian
maps
cartography
women
Department: Bodleian Library
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:06:48

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Strachey Lecture: Getting AI Agents to Interact and Collaborate with Us on Our Terms

Series
Strachey Lectures
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As AI technologies enter our everyday lives at an ever increasing pace, there is a greater need for AI systems to work synergistically with humans.
As AI technologies enter our everyday lives at an ever increasing pace, there is a greater need for AI systems to work synergistically with humans. This requires AI systems to exhibit behavior that is explainable to humans. Synthesizing such behavior requires AI systems to reason not only with their own models of the task at hand, but also about the mental models of the human collaborators. At a minimum, AI agents need approximations of human’s task and goal models, as well as the human’s model of the AI agent’s task and goal models. The former will guide the agent to anticipate and manage the needs, desires and attention of the humans in the loop, and the latter allow it to act in ways that are interpretable to humans (by conforming to their mental models of it), and be ready to provide customized explanations when needed. Using several case-studies from our ongoing research, I will discuss how such multi-model reasoning forms the basis for explainable behavior in human-aware AI systems.

Episode Information

Series
Strachey Lectures
People
Subbarao Kambhampati
Keywords
ai
technology
research
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 01:14:54

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The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps

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The Oxford Seminars in Cartography: Women and Maps
An online conference focusing on mapping and closely linked professions such as surveying, exploration, navigation, hydrography, and printing, which have conventionally been associated with men: as makers, patrons, users, and interpreters. The conference explores the place of women and the feminine in maps and mapping, with no chronological or geographical bounds, and a broad understanding of 'maps'.

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Strachey Lecture: How Innovation Works - Serendipity, Energy and the Saving of Time

Series
Strachey Lectures
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Innovation is the main event of the modern age, the reason we experience both dramatic improvements in our living standards and unsettling changes in our society.
Innovation is the main event of the modern age, the reason we experience both dramatic improvements in our living standards and unsettling changes in our society. Forget short-term symptoms like Donald Trump and Brexit, it is innovation itself that explains them and that will itself shape the 21st century for good and ill. Yet innovation remains a mysterious process, poorly understood by policy makers and businessmen, hard to summon into existence to order, yet inevitable and inexorable when it does happen.

Episode Information

Series
Strachey Lectures
People
Matt Ridley
Keywords
innovation
policy
business
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:55:02

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Virūpa is Virūpākṣa: Towards an Indo-Tibetan Siddha Corpus

Series
Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar
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Westin Harris opens the dialogue between Tibetan, Nāth and Yoga studies centred around the figure of Virūpa
As the supposed originator of haṭhayoga’s Buddhist “source text,” the legendary siddha called Virūpa has arisen as a key figure of interest in Yoga and Nāth Studies. Nonetheless, such discourses continue to underappreciate the value of Tibetan and Buddhist sources.
In this lecture, I will examine a number of overlooked and understudied Virūpa narratives to demonstrate how Tibetan Virūpa hagiographies and South Asian Virūpākṣa(nāth) stories constitute a single, cross-sectarian narrative tradition stretching from South India to Tibet. While much of the recent scholarship on South Asian siddha narratives has focused on what should or should not be counted as “Nāth literature,” I present the model of an Indo-Tibetan “Siddha corpus” as a more useful alternative that can better accommodate the shared, dialogic nature of such stories.

Episode Information

Series
Tibetan Graduate Studies Seminar
People
Westin Lee Harris
Keywords
Indo-Tibetan Buddhism
hagiography
interdisciplinary research
Department: Faculty of Oriental Studies
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:37:46

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Understanding and Managing Eating Disorders

Series
Our Mental Wellness
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This webinar provides useful information about eating disorders and breaks down common myths. Evidence-based treatments will be provided and as well as guidance on what you can do if you, or someone you know, is struggling with eating problems.
Speakers: Rebecca Murphy (main presentation), with Robin Murphy and Deborah Waller GP on the Q and A panel (chaired by Cathy Creswell)

Episode Information

Series
Our Mental Wellness
People
Rebecca Murphy
Robin Murphy
Deborah Waller
Cathy Creswell
Keywords
eating
psychology
eating disorders
Department: Department of Experimental Psychology
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:45:33

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Coping with Trauma

Series
Our Mental Wellness
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Most of us will experience a traumatic event at some point in our lives. Our sense of self and the world may change and we may experience unwanted distressing memories and feel a wide range of negative emotions.
This talk will discuss research findings on helpful and unhelpful ways of coping with trauma.

Speakers: Anke Ehlers (main presentation), plus Mina Fazel and Morten Kringelbach on the panel (chaired by Cathy Creswell)

Episode Information

Series
Our Mental Wellness
People
Anke Ehlers
Mina Fazel
Morten Kringelbach
Cathy Creswell)
Keywords
psychology
trauma
mind
coping with trauma
traumatic
Department: Department of Experimental Psychology
Date Added: 12/05/2021
Duration: 00:45:23

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