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What do water striders have in common with Game of Thrones?

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
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On this episode of the Oxford Sparks Big Question’s podcast we visited Dr Jennifer Perry, evolutionary biologist and entomologist to ask: What do water striders have in common with Game of Thrones? Listen here to find out….
Game of Thrones, the world created by author George RR Martin, has gone from beloved book series to much watch box set. Murder, sex, dragons, incest and a battle for the throne! What more could you want from a TV series? Science of course!
There just happens to be one tiny bug that embodies all of these complex relationships we are seeing played out in the show – it’s called a Water Strider.
On this episode of the Oxford Sparks Big Question’s podcast we visited Dr Jennifer Perry, evolutionary biologist and entomologist to ask: What do water striders have in common with Game of Thrones? Listen here to find out….
*you don’t have to have watched Game of Thrones to understand this episode!

Episode Information

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
People
Jennifer Perry
Keywords
water striders
game of thrones
insects
animals
animal behaviour
mating
zoology
Department: Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences (MPLS)
Date Added: 17/04/2018
Duration: 00:13:41

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Oesophageal Cancer: Past, Present and the Future

Series
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures
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Professor Tim Underwood takes us through the history of oesophageal cancer, where we are now, and some of the science that is done to ask questions about where we might go with the treatment of oesophageal cancer.
Professor Tim Underwood is professor of Gastrointestinal Surgery at the University of Southampton.
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
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures
People
Tim Underwood
Keywords
surgery
surgeons
research
science
cancer
oesophageal
upper gi
Department: Nuffield Department of Surgical Sciences
Date Added: 16/04/2018
Duration: 00:40:39

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Strachey Lecture: Privacy-preserving analytics in, or out of, the cloud

Series
Strachey Lectures
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This talk is about the experience of providing privacy when running analytics on users’ personal data.
The two-sided market of Cloud Analytics emerged almost accidentally, initially from click-through associated with user's response to search results, and then adopted by many other services, whether web mail or social media. The business model seen by the user is of a free service (storage and tools for photos, video, social media etc). The value to the provider is untrammeled access to the user's data over space and time, allowing upfront income from the ability to run recommenders and targeted adverts, to background market research about who is interested in what information, goods and services, when and where. The value to the user is increased personalisation. This all comes at a cost, both of privacy (and the risk of loss of reputation or even money) for the user, and at the price of running highly expensive data centers for the providers, and increased cost in bandwidth and energy consumption (mobile network costs & device battery life). The attack surface of our lives expands to cover just about everything. This talk will examine several alternative directions that this will evolve in the future. Firstly, we look at a toolchain for traditional cloud processing which offers privacy through careful control of the lifecycle of access to data, processing, and production of results by combining several relatively new techniques. Secondly, we present a fully decentralized approach, on low cost home devices, which can potentially lead to large reduction in risks of loss of confidentiality.
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
Strachey Lectures
People
Jon Crowcroft
Keywords
cloud
strachey
cloud analytics
social media
Data Protection
privacy
Department: Department of Computer Science
Date Added: 16/04/2018
Duration: 01:00:30

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The Replication Crisis in Biomedicine. What (kind of) crisis?

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Professor Alexander Bird, Professor of Philosophy and Medicine, King's College London, gives a talk for the Centre for Evidenced Based Medicine.

The replication (replicability, reproducibility) crisis in clinical medicine and in other fields arises from the fact that many apparently well-confirmed experimental results are subsequently overturned by studies that aim to replicate the original study. The culprit is widely held to be poor science: questionable research practices, failure to publish negative results, bad incentives, and even fraud. In this paper I argue that the high rate of failed replications is consistent with high quality science. We would expect this outcome if the field of science in question produces a high proportion of false hypotheses prior to testing. If most of the hypotheses under test are false, then there will be many false hypotheses that are apparently supported by the outcomes of well conducted experiments and null-hypothesis significance tests with a type-I error rate (alpha) of 5\%. Failure to recognize this is to commit the fallacy of ignoring the base rate. I argue that this is a plausible diagnosis of the replication crisis and examine what lessons we thereby learn for the future conduct of medical science.

Episode Information

Series
Evidence-Based Health Care
People
Alexander Bird
Keywords
Medicine
biomedicine
Health
Department: Medical Sciences Division
Date Added: 11/04/2018
Duration:

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Teaching the Codex 5: Teaching Music Palaeography 2

Series
Teaching the Codex
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Margaret Bent (Oxford) speaks at the 2017 Teaching the Codex Colloquium about music palaeography in the classroom.

Episode Information

Series
Teaching the Codex
People
Margaret Bent
Keywords
music
literature
books
history
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 10/04/2018
Duration: 00:23:39

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Teaching the Codex 4: Teaching Music Palaeography 1

Series
Teaching the Codex
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Eleanor Giraud (Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, University of Limerick) speaks about music palaeography in the classroom.

Episode Information

Series
Teaching the Codex
People
Eleanor Giraud
Keywords
literature
books. music
Department: Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages
Date Added: 10/04/2018
Duration: 00:15:39

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OSEF 2018: Spotting Investment Opportunities in an Uncertain World - A Panel Discussion

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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Spotting Investment Opportunities in an Uncertain World - A Panel Discussion at Oxford Saïd Entrepreneurship Forum 2018.
With Spencer Crawley (firstminute.capital), Stephan Morais (Indico Capital Partners), Jenny Tooth (UK Business Angels Association) and Joe White (Entrepreenur First)

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Spencer Crawley
Stephan Morais
Jenny Tooth
Joe White
Keywords
business
entrepreneurship
Investment
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 09/04/2018
Duration: 00:57:12

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OSEF 2018: What Lays Ahead for Government Technology? - A Panel Discussion

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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What Lays Ahead for Government Technology? - A Panel Discussion at Oxford Saïd Entrepreneurship Forum 2018 - Daniel Korski (Public), Robyn Scott (Apolitical), Pere Valles (Scytl) and Peteris Zilgalvis (DG Connect European Commission)

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Daniel Korski
Robyn Scott
Pere Valles
Peteris Zilgalvis
Keywords
business
entrepreneurship
technology
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 09/04/2018
Duration: 00:54:04

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OSEF 2018: Feeding 9 Billion - A Panel Discussion

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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A Panel Discussion at Oxford Saïd Entrepreneurship Forum 2018 - Robert Opp (Innovation Division World Forum Programme (UN)), Tim Röhrich (European Founders Society), Willem Sodderland (Seamore) and Ilana Taub (Snact)

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Robert Opp
Tim Röhrich
Willem Sodderland
Ilana Taub
Keywords
entrepreneurship
business
development
population health
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 09/04/2018
Duration: 00:46:35

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OSEF 2018: Moving Money: The Story of TransferWise

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
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Kristo Käärmann (Executive Founder of TransferWise) gives the afternoon keynote at Oxford Saïd Entrepreneurship Forum 2018.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Said Entrepreneurship Forum
People
Kristo Käärmann
Keywords
entrepreneurship
business
money
Department: Saïd Business School
Date Added: 09/04/2018
Duration: 00:46:41

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