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Episode 2 - Finding your people

Series
How to Find Your People
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Looking for friends and breaking the ice
In the second podcast, we’ll consider how you might go about meeting people – both in terms of where you might look for potential friends and what you might say to them when you find them. We’ll then go on to reflect on how to make closer personal connections with people with whom you might already be on friendly terms.

Episode Information

Series
How to Find Your People
People
Elizabeth Edginton
Keywords
students
socialising
Department: University Counselling Service
Date Added: 13/10/2025
Duration: 00:16:31

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Episode 1 - Friends

Series
How to Find Your People
Embed
What do we mean by ‘friends’ and what might impact the size and composition of our friendship group?
In the first podcast, we’ll think about what we might mean by a friend, the different kinds of social circles to which you might belong, and some of the factors which might impact how many friends you have and of what kind.

Episode Information

Series
How to Find Your People
People
Elizabeth Edginton
Keywords
students
socialising
friends
Department: University Counselling Service
Date Added: 13/10/2025
Duration: 00:24:31

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How to Find Your People

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How to Find Your People
These three podcasts aim to help you find friends and build relationships, overcome worries about networking, reflect on loneliness and how to address it, and ponder some of the benefits of contemplative solitude.

This podcast series is for anyone who has worries about friendships while studying at the University of Oxford, whether as a newly arrived undergraduate or post-graduate, or as a more established student who has been studying here for some time.
Common worries about friendships might include how to make friends and whether we have enough of them, why we might at times feel lonely, even when we’re with people, and what to do about this if we do, how to deepen our existing friendships, and why, even though we usually get on with our friendship group, we might occasionally find ourselves falling out with them.
Sometimes, it can also just be really hard to know if someone is a friend, more of an acquaintance, or someone with whom we just want to network. Or indeed, we might be curious as to whether someone might be more than a friend – and perhaps a potential romantic or sexual partner.
Overall, then, it’s more than likely that, like most people, you will have different kinds of worries about your friendships and social life at different times in your university career.
Importantly, these podcasts are not intended to be used as a replacement for counselling, therapy, or medical intervention for those who might need it. Rather, the series aims to provide a stimulus to reflection and source of potential support, and the hope is that it will give you some ideas which might be part of a process of understanding more about yourself and, ultimately, feeling better.

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How people are using generative AI, and what this means for news

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
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We discuss how people are responding to the growing role of AI in news and wider society
In this episode of Future of Journalism we discuss one of the hottest topics in journalism right now which is how people are responding to the growing role of AI in news and wider society. We’ll look at how generative AI tools are being used, how people engage with AI-generated answers in online searches, and AI’s role in newsrooms and wider society.

Speakers:
Dr Felix M. Simon is a (political) communication researcher and Research Fellow in AI and Digital News at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism. Before joining us, he was a doctoral student at the Oxford Internet Institute (OII), where he is a Research Associate.
Host Mitali Mukherjee is the Director of the Reuters Institute and is a political economy journalist with more than two decades of experience in TV, print and digital journalism.
You can find a full transcript of the podcast on our website: https://reutersinstitute.politics.ox.ac.uk/news/our-podcast-how-people-are-using-generative-ai-and-what-means-news

Episode Information

Series
Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism
People
Felix M. Simon
Mitali Mukherjee
Keywords
journalism
generative ai
ai
Department: Department of Politics and International Relations (DPIR)
Date Added: 13/10/2025
Duration: 00:34:02

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Eda Yacizi

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Ivan Pekar

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Pedal Power: Open City and The Bike Project

Series
The Migration Oxford Podcast
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Community, refugees, and urban life: what’s cycling got to do with it? We explore refugee women’s experiences in London through the ESRC Open City initiative and a participatory film with The Bike Project.
In this episode of The Migration Oxford Podcast, we explore how mobility, belonging, and everyday urban life intersect in London, and how newcomers reshape the city through movement. Our focus is a participatory, arts-based collaboration with The Bike Project, an NGO that provides refugees with free bicycles. At its core, the initiative asks how movement - both physical and social - can create pathways to belonging, access, and agency for those newly arrived.
The Bike Project’s work is simple yet transformative: bicycles enable refugees to travel independently, connect with services, and build confidence navigating London. But beyond practical utility, cycling becomes an embodied way of claiming space, of becoming visible in the city, and of weaving new rhythms into urban life. Our discussion explores this duality - bikes as both tools of mobility and symbols of presence in urban spaces that are at once open and exclusionary.
We welcome Dr Eda Yazici, Senior Researcher at the University of Bristol, and Professor Michael Keith, Director of the Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS) and the PEAK Urban project. Together, they reflect on how collaborative, arts-based approaches can reveal the lived realities of migration and the permeability of the city itself.
The project invited refugee women connected with The Bike Project to co-produce short and long-form films documenting their experiences of arrival and adaptation. These films move beyond representation to highlight how everyday mobilities shape inclusion, resilience, and visibility in the city. Our conversation situates these narratives within wider debates about mobility at multiple scales. From the global journeys of displacement to the intimate routes traced through neighbourhoods and cycle lanes, mobility both enables and constrains urban life. Arts-based collaborations, as this project demonstrates, can shed new light on how these scales intersect and how cities might be reimagined as more open and welcoming.
Listeners can view the films co-created through this initiative online at Cycling Visibilities. Together with the discussion, they offer a powerful insight into the experiences of refugee women cycling through London - making themselves visible, claiming urban space, and reshaping the city in the process.

Episode Information

Series
The Migration Oxford Podcast
People
Michael Keith
Eda Yazici
Delphine Boagey
Jacqui Broadhead
Keywords
refugees
esrc
mobility
cycling initiative
urban spaces
Department: Centre on Migration, Policy and Society (COMPAS)
Date Added: 09/10/2025
Duration: 00:39:30

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Season 3 Episode 1 | Through the Looking Glass: How Your Eyes Decode the Light Show

Series
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast
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How does the human eye transform waves of light into the vivid, detailed experience we call vision?
In this episode of CortexCast, we follow photons on their journey from the moment they strike the retina to the point where visual signals begin to take shape. We explore the cascade of biochemical reactions triggered by molecules such as retinal and rhodopsin, the roles of rod and cone cells in night and colour vision, and the vulnerability of the central retina in age-related macular degeneration. We then turn to the networks of bipolar and horizontal cells, where visual information is funnelled, filtered, and sharpened into receptive fields — the brain’s earliest building blocks of images. Along the way, we uncover how a patch of neural tissue at the back of the eye becomes the gateway to our entire visual world.

Episode Information

Series
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast
People
Ivan Pekar
Keywords
vision
retina
macular degeneration
Department: Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics (DPAG)
Date Added: 09/10/2025
Duration: 00:12:19

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Wantoe T. Wantoe

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Wantoe T. Wantoe
Wantoe T. Wantoe is the President for Postgraduates at Oxford University Students’ Union, representing more than 13,900 research and taught postgraduate students. He represents students on the University Council, the Planning and Resource Allocation Committee (PRAC), the Education Committee, the Taught Degrees and Awards Panel, the Research Degrees Panel, the Joint AI Working Group, the General Purposes Committee, and many others. In these roles, he helps shape decisions on education, access, student welfare, and Oxford’s digital transformation. Previously, he was the convener of the 2025 Oxford Africa Conference, one of the University’s largest student-led gatherings. He graduated with a Master of Public Policy and an MSc in Comparative and International Education from the University of Oxford. Wantoe has spoken at the United Nations General Assembly, the World Humanitarian Summit, and other major global forums on education and leadership. His work has been recognised with awards including the Princess Diana Award, the Global Young Voices SDGs Champion Award, and the Vincent De-Paul Award. In 2022, he was named one of eight Young Pacesetters for African Development by the African Renaissance and Diaspora Network at the United Nations. In 2023, he became the youngest National Flag Day Orator in Liberia’s history and was named among Pembroke College Oxford’s 400 most impactful people in its 400-year history.
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Natasha Kelly

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