Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Series
  • People
  • Depts & Colleges
  • Open Education

Lecture 10: Advances in Biomedical Engineering

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Embed
Professor Lionel Tarassenko on "Advances in Biomedical Engineering".
Biomedical Engineering is a relatively new subject but advances in body scanners (from CT to MRI) in the last 2 decades have had a major impact on the practice of medicine. Oxford engineers have made significant contributions to the development of medical imaging and in other areas of biomedical engineering also, for example in artificial knees and needle-free injection of drugs and vaccines. The lecture reviewed Oxford's contribution to advances in biomedical engineering over the last 25 years and highlighted how the Department's new Institute of Biomedical Engineering plans to develop technology for the hospital of the future and for personalised healthcare.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
People
Lionel Tarassenko
Keywords
engineering
centenary
Department: Department of Engineering Science
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 01:00:42

Subscribe

Download

Lecture 8: An Early Structural Engineering Problem: the Oxford Connection

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Embed
Professor Guy Houlsby on "An Early Structural Engineering Problem: the Oxford Connection".
The lecture followed the history of a structure often known as a "Serlio Frame" from its earliest mention (around 1270) to modern times. The structure is an intriguing "reciprocal frame" that is able to span a space with beams that are all shorter than the span required. The rare examples of construction of the frame were discussed (including one in Oxford).

Episode Information

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
People
Guy Houlsby
Keywords
engineering
centenary
Department: Department of Engineering Science
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 00:53:39

Subscribe

Download

Lecture 7: Engineers at War

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Embed
Lieutenant Colonel (Retd) Christopher Pugsley on "Engineers at War".
Many of the most prominent man-made historical features in the landscape are the work of military engineers. Hadrian's Wall, Windsor Castle, the coastal fortifications, even the Albert Hall, all testify to the skills of the military engineer. Military engineers throughout history have always had to marry theory and genius to the practical skills of making the concept work in crisis on the ground; no small accomplishment.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
People
Christopher Pugsley
Keywords
engineering
centenary
Department: Department of Engineering Science
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 00:58:27

Subscribe

Download

Lecture 6: Hydraulic Engineering - How We Use Hydraulics to Solve Real Life Engineering Problems

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Embed
Dr Jane Smallman on "Hydraulic Engineering - How We Use Hydraulics to Solve Real Life Engineering Problems".
Hydraulics is used extensively to provide solutions to engineering problems. In this presentation the focus was on civil and environmental engineering projects in the maritime sector. A number of illustrations were given of the way in which research is developed into tools that are used to solve practical problems.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
People
Jane Smallman
Keywords
engineering
centenary
Department: Department of Engineering Science
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 00:49:58

Subscribe

Download

Lecture 4: "The Greatest Mechanick of this Present Age": Dr Robert Hooke and the Origins of Engineering Science in Oxford

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Embed
Dr Allan Chapman on '"The Greatest Mechanick of this Present Age": Dr Robert Hooke and the Origins of Engineering Science in Oxford'.
"When his Oxford friend, John Aubrey, described Hooke as the "Greatest Mechanick" of the Age, he acknowledged Hooke's genius as an Experimentalist. For Hooke the whole of nature was a great machine or engine in motion, the deepest truths of which could be uncovered by means of ingeniously-contrived instruments. For in the 1650s, Oxford's "Ingeniosi" of the future Royal Society were beginning to revolutionise our sense of "natural knowledge" and coming to envisage ways of applying it to "the Relief of Man's Estate."

Episode Information

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
People
Allan Chapman
Keywords
engineering
centenary
mechanic
Department: Department of Engineering Science
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 01:03:04

Subscribe

Download

Lecture 3: Keep it cool! 38 years of gas-turbine research

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Embed
Professor Martin Oldfield on 'Keep it cool! 38 years of gas-turbine research'.
Unusual short-duration wind-tunnels have been used to research, in a split second, results that normally need expensive hours. The work of one of the most successful thermo-fluid laboratories over the years was illustrated in Professor Oldfield's lecture.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
People
Martin Oldfield
Keywords
engineering
centenary
Department: Department of Engineering Science
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 00:58:36

Subscribe

Download

Lecture 1: Introduction to the Jenkin Lecture

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Embed
Patron of the Centenary, Lord Jenkin of Roding's inaugural Centenary lecture.
Lord Jenkin of Roding, the grandson of the first Professor of Engineering Science at Oxford University, Frewen Jenkin, formally launched Oxford's Centenary of Engineering Science on 15th September 2007. In his introduction to The Jenkin Lecture Lord Roding, Patron of the Centenary, shared his recollections of his grandfather Frewen Jenkin - who was elected Oxford's first Professor of Engineering Science in 1908.

Episode Information

Series
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
People
Patrick Jenkin
Keywords
engineering
centenary
Department: Department of Engineering Science
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 00:17:55

Subscribe

Download

Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures

Image
Department of Engineering Science Centenary Lectures
Podcasts of the Centenary of Engineering Science: 1908 - 2008. A series of Centenary Lectures in video.

Subscribe

What is Science for?

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
Embed
What is science for, what good does it do and should it do good?
In this lecture, Sulston and Harris will attempt to identify some of the most urgent ethical and regulatory problems raised by contemporary science, and suggest some possible solutions. They will discuss some key cutting edge scientific problems, and debate how we can assess their impact. Where do the significant ethical and regulatory dilemmas for science lie? Are we worrying about the right things? They will also address the crucial issue of international or "global" co-ordination at the level of regulation. What happens when research is illegal - criminalised in some jurisdictions and permitted in others or when products or services are freely available in some countries and denied to the citizens of others? Is harmonization necessary or can we live with a plurality of regulatory environments? Finally, they will raise the question of who owns science. They will suggest that scientific co-operation - the freedom of science to operate across frontiers, regulatory boundaries and share information freely between scientists and institutions - carries with it certain responsibilities. They will argue that equity and morality require open access and benefit sharing. And they will suggest what such benefit sharing might amount to. Professor Sir John Sulston is a Nobel Prize winner and Chair of the University of Manchester's Institute of Science, Ethics and Innovation, a new research institute focusing on the ethical questions raised by science and technology in the 21st century. Professor John Harris is the Lord David Alliance Professor of Bioethics, and research director at the University of Manchester's Institute of Science, Ethics and Innovation. Professor Richard Dawkins is Simonyi Professor for the Public Understanding of Science at the University of Oxford.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
John Sulston
John Harris
Richard Dawkins
Keywords
nobel prize
scientific
Dawkins
science
oxfordmartin
religion
harris
god
sulston
public lectures
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 00:57:38

Subscribe

Download

Stiglitz on Credit Crunch - Global Financial Debacle: Meeting the Challenges of Global Governance in the 21st Century

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
Embed
The global financial crisis reflects a failure of global economic governance. The failure of America's regulatory system has not only ramifications for the American economy, but for the global economy.
It is clear that the banks' risk management systems could not even protect their own shareholders, let alone the well-being of the global economy. What went wrong? Where did the global financial regulators fail? What can we do to minimize the downturn? And what, if anything, can we do to prevent a recurrence? What are the lessons for global governance in the 21st Century? Joseph E. Stiglitz is University Professor at Columbia University in New York and Chair of Columbia University's Committee on Global Thought. He is also the co-founder and Executive Director of the Initiative for Policy Dialogue at Columbia. In 2001, he was awarded the Nobel Prize in economics for his analyses of markets with asymmetric information. Stiglitz helped create a new branch of economics, "The Economics of Information," exploring the consequences of information asymmetries and pioneering such pivotal concepts as adverse selection and moral hazard, which have now become standard tools not only of theorists, but of policy analysts. His work has helped explain the circumstances in which markets do not work well, and how selective government intervention can improve their performance. Recognized around the world as a leading economic educator, he has written textbooks that have been translated into more than a dozen languages. He founded one of the leading economics journals, The Journal of Economic Perspectives. His book, Globalization and Its Discontents, (W.W. Norton June 2001) has been translated into 35 languages and has sold more than one million copies worldwide. Most recently, he has written The Three Trillion Dollar War: The True Cost of the Iraq Conflict with Linda J. Bilmes, published by WW Norton in March 2008.

Episode Information

Series
Oxford Martin School: Public Lectures and Seminars
People
Joseph Stiglitz
Keywords
oxfordmartin
finance
economics
Governance
risk management
regulatory
public lectures
crisis
economy
Department: Oxford Martin School
Date Added: 10/06/2008
Duration: 00:45:00

Subscribe

Download

Pagination

  • First page
  • Previous page
  • …
  • Page 2769
  • Page 2770
  • Page 2771
  • Page 2772
  • Page 2773
  • Page 2774
  • Page 2775
  • Page 2776
  • Page 2777
  • …
  • Next page
  • Last page

Footer

  • About
  • Accessibility
  • Contribute
  • Copyright
  • Contact
  • Privacy
  • Login
'Oxford Podcasts' X Account @oxfordpodcasts | Upcoming Talks in Oxford | © 2011-2025 The University of Oxford