Thought provoking lectures from the world’s sharpest minds. Science talks from the Royal Institution every month.
The podcast Ri Science Podcast is created by Ri Science Podcast. The podcast and the artwork on this page are embedded on this page using the public podcast feed (RSS).
2024 has been a remarkable year for science, so we're taking a look back over the past year at our most memorable moments here on the Ri Science Podcast. From eggs to AI, sustainable plastics to protein folding, we've discussed a fascinating range of topics with even more fascinating guests including Jess Wade and Charan Ranganath.
We can't wait to see what's in store in science for 2025, and thank you for listening and learning with us in 2024.
With the exception of this episode, Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month.
Presenter: Katie Mortimer
Producer: Lia Hale
Music: Joseph Sandy
Browse our upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
Watch previous talks: https://www.youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Follow us on social media @Ri_Science
2025 is the International Year of Quantum Science and Technology, as marked by the UN, to celebrate 100 years since the birth of quantum mechanics. But quantum science is one of the least diverse areas of science in terms of gender and other protected characteristics.
Jess Wade, a physicist and lecturer in functional materials at Imperial College London, has been fighting the inequality in quantum physics and beyond by creating thousands of Wikipedia pages for women scientists. Jess joins us this month to discuss the past, present, and future of quantum science along with what can be done to increase diversity within the field.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
X: https://twitter.com/Ri_Science
Producer: Lia Hale
Assistant producers: Katie Mortimer, Isla Nakano
Interviewer: Lia Hale
Music: Joseph Sandy
Halloween means lots of sweets, which in turn means lots of packaging. We’re starting to see more of the packaging on our shelves labelled as sustainable in some way, but are they really? Mike Shaver is a Professor of Polymer Science and Director of the Sustainable Materials Innovation Hub at the University of Manchester, and joins us this month to unpick the current landscape of sustainable materials, and discuss whether or not a fully recyclable plastic is possible.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution X: https://twitter.com/Ri_Science
Producer: Lia Hale
Music: Joseph Sandy
What makes a planet habitable? What are we looking for to find Earth 2.0? And how do you get a chunk of an asteroid through airport security? This month, astrophysicist Elizabeth Tasker discusses the latest missions at the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) and explores how our knowledge has progressed since she last spoke at the Ri back in 2018.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
Producer: Lia Hale
Music: Joseph Sandy
Today marks the beginning of the Paralympic Games, and nearly 3 weeks since the end of the Olympic Games in Paris. But what actually happens to your brain when you exercise? What’s the science behind ‘runner’s high’? And why isn’t there enough research on women in sport? This month, we’re joined by exercise neuroscientist Flaminia Ronca, from UCL and the Institute of Sport Exercise and Health. She shares with us which chemical and physiological systems are involved when we exercise, and how regular exercise can decrease our chances of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
Producer: Lia Hale
Assistant producer: Isla Nakano
Interviewer: Lia Hale
Music: Joseph Sandy
Why is there less medical research on women? How did humanity reach 8 billion despite the dangers of childbirth? In this episode, Cat Bohannon explores these questions and reveals insights from her book, Eve: How Women Drove 200 Million Years of Evolution, to highlight women’s pivotal role in our species’ history. This talk was recorded at the Royal Institution on 8 June 2024.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
Producer: Eloise Ross
Executive producer: Lia Hale
Music: Joseph Sandy
To celebrate National Cheese Day earlier this month, we sat down with biochemist and cheese expert Bronwen Percival to look under the barrel at the science of one of the nation’s favourite foods. From the basics of cheese production to the biochemistry underlying its notorious smell, and even some cheese tastings, this episode guarantees to open your eyes to the captivating world of cheese.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
Producer: Freddie Rodgers
Interviewer: Isla Nakano
Music: Joseph Sandy
What came first, the chicken, the egg, or...the jellyfish? Zoologist and author Jules Howard joins us this month to explore evolution through a new lens - the egg. Eggs play a fundamental role in the reproduction and development of most species, yet they have been relatively overlooked in the narrative of evolution and the progression of life on Earth.
Jules takes us on a journey back through the history of eggs, their surprisingly fundamental role in everything from the extinction of dinosaurs to the evolution of the human brain.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Producer: Lia Hale
Interviewer: Lia Hale
Music: Joseph Sandy
Why is it that we can vividly remember a particular smell from years ago, but can’t remember where we put our keys a mere few hours prior? This month, we’re joined by renowned neuroscientist and author Dr Charan Ranganath to discuss how and why we remember.
Charan is a Professor of Neuroscience and Psychology, and Director of the Dynamic Memory Lab at UC Davis, and has recently released his first book ‘Why We Remember’. Charan takes us on a journey through our own minds, and a forward look at the future of memory research.
Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on
Producer: Lia Hale
Assistant producer: Freddie Rodgers
Interviewer: Lisa Derry
Music: Joseph Sandy
In the second episode of this miniseries, we’re exploring how AI is impacting different areas of scientific research, and in this episode we discuss the applications of AI in healthcare. Lisa Derry is joined by Dr James Kinross, a colorectal surgeon and medical researcher at Imperial College London, to discuss everything from the impact of AI on medical publishing to robotic surgery.Ri Science Podcast episodes are released on the last Wednesday of every month. Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts to be notified as soon as the next episode is released!Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help other people discover the podcast.
Lead producer: Lia Hale
Assistant producer: Freddie Rodgers
Interviewer: Lisa Derry
Music: Joseph Sandy
Following on from his Discourse, Yang-Hui He is joined by LIMS science writer Madeleine Hall to discuss the past, present and future of Geometry. From Euclid’s postulates to how flower petals are arranged, explore how our modern understanding of geometry has come to be. LIMS is based here at the Ri, and you can find out more about their research by following the link below.
New Ri Science Podcast episodes will be released on the last Wednesday of every month, so make sure to tune in for the next episode at the end of March!
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Producer: Jeremy Monblat
Assistant producer: Lia Hale, Freddie Rodgers
Editor: Freddie Rodgers
Interviewer: Jeremy Monblat
Music: Joseph Sandy
We’re exploring how AI is impacting different areas of scientific research, and in this episode we discuss AlphaFold, the machine learning programme from DeepMind that can determine a protein structure from its amino acids alone. Lisa Derry is joined by Dame Janet Thornton, an oracle of bioinformatics and former Director of the European Bioinformatics Institute, to discuss how AlphaFold has revolutionised its field, and what it could do in the future.
Thank you to our Christmas Lectures supporters and our title partner, CGI.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think of the new video format, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Producer: Lia Hale
Production assistants: Sarah Dick and James Kavanagh
Interviewer: Lisa Derry
Music: Joseph Sandy
How can we improve the use of renewable energy in the power grid? In the final episode of the series 'Tales from my PhD', Charlotte Collingwood talks to Karan Mukhi about his work in computer science, creating algorithms to improve the efficiency of the national grid.
Follow Charlotte on Twitter: @NeuroCharlotte
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think.
Produced by: Charlotte Collingwood
Music by: Joseph Sandy
How do you fight a fungus? In this episode of ‘Tales from my PhD’, Charlotte Collingwood talks to Camilla Molinari about her work in plant pathology, studying the mechanisms and genetics of the rice blast fungus in order to limit its impact on food crops.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think.
Produced by: Charlotte Collingwood Music by: Joseph Sandy
How can maths and computational models help us treat anxiety and depression? In this episode of 'Tales from my PhD', Charlotte Collingwood talks to Sophie Shang about her research in the field of computational psychiatry. A hallmark symptom of anxiety and depression is an intolerance of uncertainty. Sophie's work involves designing studies to test people's response to changes in their environment, analysing the data mathematically and then coding computational models in order to reveal patterns in human behaviour and mental health that are otherwise invisible.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think.
Produced by: Charlotte Collingwood
Music by: Joseph Sandy
There are an estimated 5 trillion plastic particles in the oceans, spelling trouble for marine ecosystems. Manta rays are one group of species at risk – how can we protect these animals? In this episode of 'Tales from my PhD', Charlotte Collingwood talks to Jessica Savage about her work analysing the species distribution of manta rays and global plastic pollution maps to aid marine science and conservation.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think.
Produced by: Charlotte Collingwood
Music by: Joseph Sandy
How can we detect massive objects in space when we can't see them by light?
On 14 September 2015, scientists opened a new window to observing the Universe when, for the first time, they directly detected gravitational waves, rippled out through spacetime from the merger of two black holes.
In this episode, astronomer Tessa Baker explores how Einstein’s theory of gravity predicted the existence of gravitational waves, how delicate experiments eventually confirmed their existence, and how we can translate this experimental data into sounds, allowing us to hear the Universe.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 19 May 2023.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think.
Produced by: Sarah Dick
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Astrophysicists grapple with the Universe's big questions, but what does their day-to-day research actually entail? In the first of our new mini-series, 'Tales from my PhD', Charlotte Collingwood sits down with Rohan Varadaraj to discuss his work discovering new galaxies billions of light years away.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think.
Produced by: Charlotte Collingwood
Music by: Joseph Sandy
How did societies develop across the globe and how did gender become so enmeshed in them? In this episode we join award-winning science journalist, Angela Saini, in conversation with former Australian prime-minister, Julia Gillard, as they go in search of the roots of gendered oppression. By looking at cultures throughout human history and in the modern day, they overturn simplistic universal theories to show that what patriarchy is and how far back it goes really depends on where you live.
Get Angela Saini's book: The Patriarchs: How Men Came to Rule
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 2 March 2023.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Produced by: Sarah Dick
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Did you know that there is no widely agreed upon definition of what emotions actually are? After losing his dad to Covid-19 in the early days of the pandemic lockdown, neuroscientist Dean Burnett found himself wondering what life would be like without emotions. In today’s episode, Dean combines his personal story with expert analysis, humour and powerful insights into the grieving process, to uncover how emotions make us who we are.
Get Dean's book: 'Emotional Ignorance: Lost and Found in the Science of Emotion'
Subscribe to Dean's podcast: 'Why does this thing exist?'
Follow Dean on Twitter: twitter.com/garwboy
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 30 January 2023.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Produced by: Sarah Dick
Music by: Joseph Sandy
How could we use shower wastewater to clean our clothes? To celebrate Earth Day and its specific focus on investing in the planet, we wanted to introduce you to ‘Undaunted’ - our partnership with Imperial College London that supports climate-positive startups tackling the climate crisis head on. We hear from Alyssa Gilbert, Director of Undaunted, and Katherine Mathieson, Director of the Ri, about the exciting work Undaunted is doing, alongside a sneak peek into some of the innovations.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Contact Katherine: [email protected]
Contact Alyssa: [email protected]
Learn more about Undaunted: imperial.ac.uk/climate-change-innovation/about-us/
Learn more about Greenhouse startup accelerator: climateinnovators.uk/startup-accelerator/
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: rigb.org/whats-on
YouTube: youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
Produced by: Lia Hale
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Are particles conscious? Can information be destroyed? Do we live in a computer simulation? Are we part of a multiverse? In this episode, theoretical physicist Sabine Hossenfelder draws on research in quantum mechanics, black holes and particle physics to explore what modern physics can tell us about life's big, existential questions.
Watch the video version of this episode: youtu.be/fl9oDJzfg58
Sabine's book "Existential Physics: A Scientists Guide to Life's Biggest Questions", is available to purchase now: https://geni.us/oBMXZv
Subscribe to Sabine's YouTube channel: youtube.com/SabineHossenfelder
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 19 August 2022. Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: rigb.org/whats-on
YouTube: youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
Patreon: patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Produced by: Charlotte Collingwood
Music by: Joseph Sandy
You might have heard that vending machines are more likely to kill you than a shark, but they aren’t the only deadly object out there. You’re also more likely to be killed by falling coconuts, lightning strikes, bathtubs and your own bed. Swimming in shark-infested waters might actually be safer than hiding in your own house.
In this episode, statistician Jennifer Rogers delves into the numbers to show you how statistics can help you to make better decisions about risky activities.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 11 March 2019.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Produced by: Charlotte Collingwood
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Thumbnail image credit: Javaistan via Pixabay
On 4 July 2012, one of the longest-running mysteries in physics was finally clarified. The ATLAS and CMS collaborations at CERN’s Large Hadron Collider announced that they had produced and observed the elusive Higgs boson. This unstable elementary particle was theorised back in 1964 by 6 scientists – one of them was the particle’s namesake, Peter Higgs.
In this episode, physicist and former Ri Christmas Lecturer, Frank Close, explores the life of Peter Higgs, a Nobel prize-winning scientist and the only person in history to have an existing single particle named after them.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 7 July 2022.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Produced by: Sarah Dick
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Thumbnail image credit: Garik Barseghyan via Pixabay
Do Diet Coke and salt cause heart disease? How do you transport a heart to be transplanted? How can you learn to live with angina? In this month's talk, we hear from world-renowned cardiac surgeon Samer Nashef. Samer discusses his book, ‘The Angina Monologues: Stories of Surgery for Broken Hearts’, with journalist Sathnam Sanghera.
Together they explore a collection of Samer’s stories that are sure to get your heart racing – from driving a donor heart up the motorway to Samer's personal experience with angina.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 8 May 2019.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Produced by: Lia Hale
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Thumbnail image credit: Fran Malley via Scribe Publications
In this Christmas-special we go behind-the-scenes of our 2022 CHRISTMAS LECTURES, presented by Professor Dame Sue Black. Katherine Mathieson, Director of the Ri, managed to steal Sue away from rehearsals for a quick chat about her CHRISTMAS LECTURES memories, science communication and what we can expect to learn about forensic science.
The CHRISTMAS LECTURES will be broadcast on BBC Four on 26, 27 and 28 December 2022.
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Produced by: Sarah Dick
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Thumbnail image credit: Paul Wilkinson Photography
An advanced form of radiotherapy, proton beam therapy enables tumours to be targeted with greater precision, reducing the collateral damage to surrounding healthy tissue. Physicist Simon Jolly sheds light on this leading-edge technique and the technology needed to deliver it.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 12 October 2018. Watch the video version on YouTube: https://youtu.be/8YnQkUWTS64
Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Music by: Joseph Sandy
Thumbnail image credit: Howard Vindin via Wikimedia Commons | https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Depth_Coded_Phalloidin_Stained_Actin_Filaments_Cancer_Cell.png
Did you know that zoologists have only found 5 species of mammals that go through the menopause? That's 4 species of toothed whale, plus us humans. The animal kingdom reveals a lot about female evolution and this month, Lucy Cooke explores evolutionary biology through an array of animal examples and research stemming from Darwin's time.
Get Lucy Cooke's book 'Bitch: A Revolutionary Guide to Sex, Evolution and the Female Animal': www.penguin.co.uk/books/111/111196…80857524133.html
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 8 March 2022. Please leave this episode a rating and a review to let us know what you think, and to help more people discover the podcast.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: www.rigb.org/whats-on
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
YouTube: youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Patreon: patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Thumbnail image credit: Sebastian Pena Lambarri via Unsplash | unsplash.com/photos/poly_hmhwJs
If you're a fan of multiverse movies, this episode is for you. The many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics says that an infinite number of universes exist in parallel to eachother, each having branched off in a moment of divergence before following its own unique timeline.
Theoretical physicist Sean M Carroll guides us through the strange and sometimes daunting topic of quantum mechanics – from Einstein and Bohr to Schrödinger's cat and the many-worlds interpretation.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 22 January 2020.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: www.rigb.org/whats-on
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
YouTube: youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Patreon: patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Thumbnail image credit: Israel Piña via Unsplash | unsplash.com/photos/3DzrAXPTp2c
Our exploration of the Earth’s fluctuating environment is an extraordinary story of human perception and scientific endeavour, which began much earlier than you might think.
This month we hear from Alice Bell as she explores climate change science’s earliest steps in the 18th and 19th centuries, through the point when concern started to rise in the 1950s, right up to the modern day. You can learn more in Alice’s latest book 'Our Biggest Experiment: A History of the Climate Crisis’.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 22 July 2021.
Get tickets for upcoming talks and livestreams: www.rigb.org/whats-on
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
YouTube: youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Patreon: patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Thumbnail image credit: Andrey Metelev via Unsplash | unsplash.com/photos/qpAOxji4dAo
Do you consider yourself a ‘thrill-seeker’? If so, you may have a variation in the DRD4 dopamine receptor gene which makes you less able to process dopamine, a neurotransmitter that's responsible for how we feel pleasure.
This month we hear from thrill-engineer Brendan Walker as he explains how he designs rollercoasters to induce thrill, priming our bodies’ innate responses through sounds, visual cues, virtual reality and much more.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 28 February, 2020. Watch the video version on YouTube: https://youtu.be/edT9bUbKId4
Get tickets for upcoming talks: www.rigb.org
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
YouTube: youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Patreon: patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Thumbnail image credit: Jonny Gios via Unsplash | unsplash.com/photos/ljN0zTXf7tQ
The Hubble Telescope has revolutionised our understanding of the Universe. It has, among many other achievements, revealed thousands of galaxies in what seemed to be empty patches of sky and measured precisely how fast the universe is expanding.
In this talk, the first American woman to walk in space, Kathryn D Sullivan, recounts how the team of astronauts, engineers and flight controllers helped launch, rescue and maintain Hubble, the most productive observatory ever built. Her book, 'Handprints on Hubble: An Astronaut's Story of Invention' is available now.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on the 6th of March, 2020.
Website: www.rigb.org
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
YouTube: www.youtube.com/user/TheRoyalInstitution
Patreon: www.patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Thumbnail image credit: NASA
What makes up a cannabis medicinal product? How do the active ingredients work in our bodies? What conditions can it treat, and how can doctors prescribe it? We’re joined by neurologist and medical cannabis expert Mike Barnes, and ‘End our Pain’ campaigners, Peter Carroll and Hannah Deacon. Hannah fought to obtain cannabis oil to treat her son Alfie’s epileptic seizures, and the campaign succeeded in changing UK law – as of November 2018, NHS doctors can legally prescribe cannabis. So why is it still hard for doctors to do so? Mike, Peter and Hannah discuss these issues with journalist, Susie Mesure.
This talk was recorded from our theatre at the Royal Institution on 21 January 2019
Website: www.rigb.org
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
YouTube: www.youtube.com/user/TheRoyalInstitution
Patreon: www.patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
This month a panel of psychologists and sociologists discuss why conspiracy theories arise, how they can affect people’s political beliefs, and how we might better communicate with the people who believe in conspiracies. Conspiracy theories have been around for a long time, but in recent years they appear more frequently in public discourse. From increasing attention to anti-vaccine misinformation, to growing communities of conspiracy theorists, like the ‘flat earth’ community, who held their first large scale UK convention in 2018.
Join Miriam Frankel, science editor at The Conversation, alongside Türkay Salim Nefes, Aleksandra Cichocka and Harry T Dyer.
We held this event at the Ri on 24 October 2018, in partnership with independent news website, The Conversation: https://www.rigb.org/whats-on/events-2018/october/public-the-conversation-conspiracy-theories
Website: www.rigb.org
Twitter: twitter.com/Ri_Science
YouTube: www.youtube.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Patreon: www.patreon.com/TheRoyalInstitution
Australian author and presenter Dr Karl Kruszelnicki gives a whirlwind tour of incredible science facts and questions. Like who put a nuclear reactor in africa 2 billion years ago? And is there life on a moon of Saturn? Dr Karl Kruszelnicki is an Australian science populariser with degrees in Physics and Maths, Biomedical Engineering, Medicine and Surgery. He has held a wide range of jobs, from doctor to film-maker, radio personality to labourer, car mechanic to physicist.
Our sense of reward motivates us and is essential for survival, so when the system malfunctions, it can lead to big problems. This month, Ray Dolan, Wolfram Schultz and Peter Dayan, winners of the 2017 Lundbeck Foundation Brain Prize, discuss their ground-breaking work on how the brain recognises and processes reward with Claudia Hammond.
Professor Anne Ferguson-Smith explains what epigenetics is and how our environment interacts with our genome and if these changes can be passed on to the next generation. What is epigenetic inheritance and why is it important? And why would it matter which parent you inherited a particular gene from? Epigeneticist Anne Ferguson-Smith outlines the implications of parental origin for development, metabolism and the brain. Professor Anne Ferguson-Smith is Head of the Department of Genetics at the University of Cambridge. She is a Wellcome Trust Senior Investigator and her lab focuses on the developmental role of imprinted genes and the epigenetic mechanisms controlling the specific expression of genes depending on their parental origins. Thumbnail image credit: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd, CC BY 4.0
Professor of Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience Anil Seth looks at the neuroscience of consciousness and how our biology gives rise to the unique experience of being you. Anil provides an insight into the state-of-the-art research in the new science of consciousness. Distinguishing between conscious level, conscious content and conscious self, he describes how new experiments are shedding light on the underlying neural mechanisms in normal life as well as in neurological and psychiatric conditions. Anil Seth is Professor of Cognitive and Computational Neuroscience at the University of Sussex, where he is also Co-Director of the Sackler Centre for Consciousness Science. He is Editor-in-Chief of Neuroscience of Consciousness and is on the steering group and advisory board of the Human Mind Project. He has written popular science books, including 30 Second Brain, and contributes to a variety of media including the New Scientist, The Guardian, and the BBC.
En liten tjänst av I'm With Friends. Finns även på engelska.