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Each Ideas Lab Predictor Podcast features a different academic expert scanning the ![]() horizon in their specialist field to give insider knowledge on new trends and key issues. It's a quick heads-up on what to watch out for over the next 18-24 months, given by those in the know. The series covers a wide range of topics, from energy and archaeology to animal intelligence and food engineering. |
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Predictor
Podcast (Ep56) - U.S. Election 2012: Obama's victory and
what happens next Professor Scott Lucas First broadcast: 12/11/2012 Andy speaks to Professor Scott Lucas, Professor of American Studies at the University of Birmingham and the founder and editor of EA Worldview, one of the leading sites on U.S. foreign policy and international affairs. Scott reflects on the recent U.S. Presidential Election and discusses what a second term for President Barack Obama means for America and the wider world. He talks about the challenges that lie ahead for the Obama administration in terms of U.S. foreign policy and the economy, and also discusses how the Republican Party should reorganise itself over the next four years to enable it to challenge for the Presidency in 2016. |
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Predictor
Podcast (Ep55) - What the evidence
tells us about the nature of Intimate Partner Violence Dr Louise Dixon First broadcast: 30/10/2012 Andy chats to Dr Louise Dixon, senior lecturer in Psychology at the University of Birmingham and a registered Forensic Psychologist, about Intimate Partner Violence. It's a subject that most of us are probably familiar with, but hopefully nothing too many of us will have personal experience of. Louise defines IPV as "any form of aggression and/or controlling behaviours used against a current or past intimate partner of any gender or relationship status", which clearly marks it as something that sadly affects many different people. Louise explains what causes someone to be violent to their partner, why it matters that we understand the causes of IPV and which gender is mostly victimised, and also talks about new directions currently underway to prevent such violence taking place. |
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Predictor Podflash - Clever crows rely on a unique
birds'-eye view Dr Jackie Chappell First broadcast: 22/10/2012 New Caledonian crows, a species native to an island in the South West Pacific Ocean, are well known for their use of tools for extractive foraging. With a remarkable degree of dexterity they build complex tools out of twigs and leaves and insert them into narrow holes in deadwood to extract beetle grubs. It has always been thought that the New Caledonian crow’s ability to craft and manipulate tools for foraging could be put down solely to their superior intelligence. However, new research shows that two other attributes are essential for such complex tool making and tool use: a wide field of binocular vision, and a straight bill. Andy chats to Dr Jackie Chappell, Lecturer in Animal Behaviour in the School of Biosciences at the University of Birmingham, to find out more. |
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Predictor Podflash - The Crisis in Syria Dr Benjamin Thomas White First broadcast: 03/10/2012 Whatever chance remained of an early or peaceful conclusion to the crisis in Syria disappeared with the July 18th bombing of the National Security building in Damascus. Since then, the armed struggle in the capital and Aleppo has intensified: an increasingly embattled regime faces an invigorated but disunited opposition, while foreign states both near and far are using all means short of open military intervention—so far—to influence the outcome of an ever less certain situation. Ahead of a Birmingham Round Table discussion about the Crisis in Syria, hosted by the Birmingham Centre for Modern and Contemporary History, Andy speaks to chair of the discussion Dr Benjamin Thomas White about the current situation in the war torn country and what the future may ultimately hold. The Crisis in Syria - a Birmingham Round Table is a free event (all welcome) and will be held in Lecture Room 3 (Arts Building, First Floor, University of Birmingham's Edgbaston campus) from 18:00 - 20:00 on October 3rd. The discussion will be followed by a drinks reception, where you will have the chance to meet the panellists and enjoy a drink with fellow guests. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep54) - Greening up our cities: tackling
air pollution with plants Professor Rob MacKenzie First broadcast: 06/08/2012 It’s impossible to wander through a bustling city or town these days without exposing your lungs to a grotty mixture of exhaust fumes and god knows what else. Unsurprisingly, inhaling these air pollutants isn’t very good for our health – but what can be done? Andy chats to Professor Rob MacKenzie, Professor of Atmospheric Science at the University of Birmingham’s School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences, about how ‘greening up’ our cities could be the answer. Rob explains how plants act as a natural filter to absorb street-level air containing the highest concentrations of pollutants. Alongside existing efforts to reduce emissions, green walls and green streets could lead to significant reductions in pollution (not to mention the potential for making our cities much more attractive places in which to live and work). It sounds like the perfect solution. But are we ready for this imaginative leap in city planning? |
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Predictor
Podcast (Ep53) - Can London 2012 deliver a youth sport participation legacy? Professor Kathleen Armour First broadcast: 23/07/2012 With only a few days to go before the spectacular opening ceremony of the London 2012 Olympics Games, Andy chats to Professor Kathleen Armour, Professor of Education and Sport and Head of the School of Sport and Exercise Sciences at the University of Birmingham, about whether the Games can deliver a youth sport participation legacy. Can the jaw-dropping sporting feats of the world's elite athletes really inspire young people to take up sport? Or will the legacy materialise only as a fleeting spike of interest? Kathleen talks about the importance of having the right coaches and methods in place to help develop children's skills from an early age, discusses what those basic skills should be, and explains how gaining an understanding of where we lose people from physical activity is absolutely key. Because instead of trying to play catch-up and find those people again later in life, it's better not to lose them in the first place. |
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Predictor
Podcast (Ep52) - Leveraging Legacies from the London 2012
Olympics Dr Jonathan Grix First broadcast: 09/07/2012 Andy talks to Dr Jonathan Grix, Senior Lecturer in Sport Politics and Policy at the University of Birmingham, about the likelihood of the London 2012 Games leaving Britain with an Olympic legacy long after the Olympic Flame is extinguished. The last time London hosted the Olympics was the 1948 Austerity Games, which echoes the economic turmoil that Britain and the wider world is currently experiencing. However, with the Olympic budget heading for around £11 billion, the modern Games will be on an entirely different scale to the event of 64 years ago. In light of this, Jonathan identifies five areas of Olympic legacy, determines their chances of success, and discusses the long term benefits for the country in general. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep51) -
Urban ponds and biodiversity Ian Thornhill First broadcast: 25/06/2012 Andy talks to Ian Thornhill, a doctoral researcher in the field of Urban Ecology at the University of Birmingham's School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences. Ian talks about urban ponds and biodiversity, how the dwindling numbers of ponds in both rural and urban areas threatens the ecological communities within them, and suggests how the loss of wildlife within urban areas could even affect our own health and well-being. With over 50% of the world’s population now living in urban areas, it’s crucially important we consider the impacts this can have on wildlife. The good news, however, is that we can all get involved to help reverse this trend of pond loss. In fact, we can start close to home - in our very own gardens! |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep50) -
Nudges towards and away from obesity Dr Frank Eves First broadcast: 11/06/2012 Andy talks to Dr Frank Eves, Reader in Lifestyle Physical Activity at the University of Birmingham's School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, about how psychology can be applied to issues of public health. With the ever increasing problem of obesity in the western world, Frank explains how current approaches to tackling the problem often come in the form of 'nudges' which gently push people towards healthier and more active lifestyles. Whether by redesigning public environments, such as ensuring that train passengers reach the stairs before the elevators, or something as blissfully simple as listing lower calorie options at the beginning and end of a menu (which are twice as likely to be chosen as items in the middle), these are passive environmental nudges which have the potential to improve our lives. Frank also talks about active nudges that can be implemented - such as providing clear calorie information on food packaging - and discusses the many challenges that public health initiatives often face. But as Frank says: "Tackling obesity and increasing physical activity is not simply a question for health professionals, it requires everybody to be involved." |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep49) -
The language of text messaging and social networks Dr Caroline Tagg First broadcast: 28/05/2012 If, like me, you're surgically attached to your phone and computer and largely communicate with friends and family through text messages and social media, then this podcast is for you! Andy speaks with Dr Caroline Tagg, lecturer in Applied Linguistics at the Centre for English Language Studies at the University of Birmingham, about her research into the way we use language in text messages and on social media sites, such as Facebook. If you thought text messaging was simply about conveying your point quickly with a line of baffling acronyms, you'd be wrong. To the contrary, Caroline has discovered that people can actually be quite creative with their texts, often making them longer and more elaborate rather than shortening them. Caroline also covers how we use emoticons to moderate and temper the content of our messages, answers the age-old question of whether 'text speak' is diluting the English language and is potentially damaging to children growing up in an age of mobile phones and social networks, and also explains how we use linguistic strategies to communicate with our audience of friends and acquintances on Facebook. Caroline's book - 'Discourse of Text Messaging' - will be published on May 24th by Continuum. |
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Predictor
Podcast (Ep48) - 48 frames per second:
challenging our emotional attachment to film Dr James Walters First broadcast: 14/05/2012 With Peter Jackson's 'The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey' due to be released in December 2012, Andy chats to Dr James Walters, senior lecturer in Film and Television Studies at the University of Birmingham, about the director's controversial decision to shoot the fantasy epic at 48 frames per second instead of the standard 24fps. After Warner Bros. screened 10-minutes of footage from the forthcoming movie at CinemaCon 2012 last month it got mixed reviews, with some audience members claiming that the higher frame rate made the footage look like a soap opera, which gave the experience an unpleasant, artificial feel. James gives his own fascinating take on the Hobbit debate that's currently raging and also talks about plans to establish a Centre for Film Studies at the university, which will enable academics to share ideas and discuss the kinds of issues that films and filmmaking often bring to the fore. As we appear to be on the cusp of a significant development in film technology, it's an exciting time to be a film lecturer! |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep47) - Everything you ever wanted to
know about the word 'chav' Dr Joe Bennett First broadcast: 30/04/2012 Andy chats to Dr Joe Bennett, lecturer in Applied Linguistics in the Centre for English Language Studies at the University of Birmingham, about the word 'chav'. Ahead of an event at the Birmingham New Street branch of Waterstones on May 9th, which will see Joe hosting a Q&A session with Owen Jones, author of 'Chavs: The Demonisation of the Working Class', he explains where 'chav' originates from, talks about the various false etymologies behind the word, and explains how television has helped to propagate so-called 'Chav Culture' over the last ten years. Joe also dips into his current area of research, which looks at how language has developed in response to last year's England riots and in response to the financial crisis, and how politicians are devising new ways of talking about the social class. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep46) - Energy security: the importance of energy research in the UK Dr Stefan Bouzarovski First broadcast: 16/04/2012 Andy chats to Dr Stefan Bouzarovski, senior lecturer in Human Geography and co-ordinator of the Energy, Society and Place Unit at the University of Birmingham, about energy security. Stefan explains what the term 'energy security' means (it's more complex than it sounds!), talks about the "difficult decisions" we'll have to make over the coming decades in terms of our energy future, and discusses whether energy-rich states can (and do) use energy as a strategic weapon by cutting off or withholding supplies to their consumers. Along with many other prominent academics and thinkers working in the area of energy, Stefan has been invited to a 'Perspectives on Energy' dinner in Westminster on May 8th, 2012, by the Rt Hon David Willetts MP, the Minister for Universities and Science. Given the energy challenges we're facing in the coming years, Stefan sees the dinner as an opportunity to emphasise the importance of energy research in the UK and also the need for it to grow and develop further. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep45) - Asteroseismology: using the natural music
of the stars Professor Bill Chaplin First broadcast: 02/04/2012 If you think that the 'sound of the stars' is probably just a bunch of Hollywood A-listers blathering on about their latest mediocre offering at the box-office, you'd be wrong. This podcast is much more interesting than that! Andy chats to Professor Bill Chaplin, Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Birmingham's School of Physics and Astronomy, about the science of asteroseismology. Bill explains that asteroseismology is a tool that he and his colleagues in the astrophysics community can use to study stars, using what he calls "the natural music of the stars". Utilising data from the NASA Kepler mission, a telescope launched in 2009 to locate exoplanets outside of our solar system, the mission has revolutionised work in the area of stellar astrophysics. And if you don't think this is relevant to your everyday life, think again! One of the many outcomes of Bill's fascinating research is a greater understanding of our own star - the Sun - which has a direct impact on us, here on earth. |
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Predictor Podflash
- Nuclear Power: What is the future? - six months on Birmingham Policy Commissions Professor Martin Freer First broadcast: 23/03/2012 Ahead of the second Birmingham Policy Commission debate about the future of nuclear power in the UK (held at the Institution of Civil Engineers in Westminster, London) Andy grabbed a few quick words with Professor Martin Freer, head of the Nuclear Physics Group at the University of Birmingham and Director of The Birmingham Centre for Nuclear Education and Research. Martin talks about how the nuclear debate has progressed in the six months since the commission was launched, hints at the kind of report they're looking to produce in the summer, and with the need for a greater public debate on the future of nuclear power, tackles the question of whether the current climate of austerity and high unemployment makes it more difficult to engage the public on the nuclear issue, when it already has so much on its collective plate. The second Birmingham Policy Commission debate about the future of nuclear power was covered by 'One Planet' for the BBC World Service, which you can listen to on the iPlayer. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep44)
Children's Lives: from the 18th century to the present day Professor Ian Grosvenor First broadcast: 19/03/2012 Ahead of the forthcoming 'Children's Lives' exhibition at Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery, Andy chats to Professor Ian Grosvenor, Deputy Pro-Vice Chancellor for Cultural Engagement and Professor of Urban Educational History at the University of Birmingham. As one of the curators of the exhibition, Ian talks about some of the fascinating exhibits that will be on display, discusses the problems of trying to curate an exhibition that comprehensively tells the story of childhood and children’s experiences from across all classes, and explains what the connections are between childhood past and present. With a section of the exhibition set aside for childhood in the 21st Century, Ian also talks about how young people from two local schools have set about documenting and recording their own childhoods today. The ‘Children’s Lives’ exhibition will run from March 24th to June 10th in Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery’s Gas Hall and is also part of Birmingham’s contribution to the Cultural Olympiad programme in 2012. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep43)
Social Exclusion and Urban Youth Spiritualities Dr Chris Shannahan First broadcast: 05/03/2012 After a week of art and music-related activities involving a small group of unemployed young men from the multiply deprived Bromford estate in east Birmingham, Andy caught up with Dr Chris Shannahan, research fellow in Urban Theology at the University of Birmingham, to find out how the event had gone. Entitled 'Bromford Dreams', the community art project saw the young men spend a week working alongside urban spiritual artist Mohammed Ali to spray-paint their dreams for their community onto a huge cube, which demonstrated their determination to reject social exclusion and enabled them to articulate what Chris terms "spirituality of resistance". With future initiatives in the pipeline and the cube due to be displayed at the University of Birmingham's Edgbaston campus in the next few weeks, the journey that these young men have embarked upon is only just beginning. You can also watch a video and slideshow about the 'Bromford Dreams' project. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep42)
- Public engagement in science:
stimulating a two-way dialogue Professor Alice Roberts First broadcast: 20/02/2012 Following her recent appointment as Professor of Public Engagement in Science at the University of Birmingham, Andy headed to the Lapworth Museum to meet with anatomist, author and broadcaster Professor Alice Roberts. With typical enthusiasm about the challenge ahead, Alice talks about her new role at the university, which involves making science accessible to as wide an audience as possible, making it easier for academics to talk about their research with the public, and encouraging young people to think about science as a career. She also explains how public engagement isn't just about academics educating the public, but about engaging them in a conversation. Alice also has encouraging words for any academics who are reticent or worried about engaging with broadcast media (but you'll have to listen to the podcast to learn more!). |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep41)
- Human Rights: noble concept or a shield for terrorists? Dr Bharat Malkani First broadcast: 06/02/2012 In his recent speech in Strasbourg, Prime Minister David Cameron claimed that "for too many people, the very concept of rights is in danger of slipping from something noble to something discredited, [which] has a corrosive effect on people's support for human rights." Andy speaks with Dr Bharat Malkani, lecturer at Birmingham Law School at the University of Birmingham, who lectures and researches in the fields of human rights and criminal justice, to find out if that's an accurate assessment of the current state of human rights law. Bharat also responds to a recent article in The Wall Street Journal, which argues that human rights are being used as a weapon against democracy and as a shield for terrorists. He also talks about human rights issues in relation to the harsh deterrent sentences meted out by the courts following the UK riots, and looks at the balance between human rights law and the need to have an effective criminal justice system that the public has confidence in. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep40)
- Treblinka: searching for the Holocaust's hidden graves Caroline Sturdy Colls First broadcast: 23/01/2012 In the first Ideas Lab Predictor Podcast of 2012, Andy speaks with forensic archaeologist Caroline Sturdy Colls about her archaeological fieldwork at the site of the Treblinka extermination camp in north-east Poland. With around 800,000 people killed there during the Holocaust, the camp is second only to Auschwitz in terms of the number of deaths, yet there had been no coordinated scientific search for their remains until Caroline and her team from the University of Birmingham began the hunt for new evidence. With a lack of physical evidence remaining at the site - after the Nazis tried to destroy all traces of their industrial-scale killing during their abandonment of the camp in August 1943 - and with Jewish burial law forbidding the disturbance of Jewish burial sites, Caroline talks about the non-invasive techniques that she and her team employed in order to carry out a thorough investigation of the site. A BBC Radio 4 documentary about Caroline's work at Treblinka - 'The Hidden Graves of the Holocaust' - was broadcast on Monday, 23rd January, 2012. Caroline has now left the University of Birmingham and is currently Lecturer in Forensic Investigation at Staffordshire University |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep39)
- Dermatological conditions: helping
GPs make the right diagnosis Julia Hyland and Dr June Jones First broadcast: 12/12/2011 In the last Ideas Lab podcast of 2011, Lucy joins Julia Hyland, Wellcome Trust funded medical effects make-up artist and Outreach Officer for the History of Medicine Unit at the University of Birmingham, as she applies prosthetic dermatological conditions to medical students with different skin colours. Making up the students with conditions such as psoriasis, Kaposi's Sarcoma and ringworm, Julia demonstrates how the same diseases and conditions present very differently on different coloured skin, which can often lead to GPs misdiagnosing and under-diagnosing conditions. Lucy then chats to Dr June Jones, Senior Lecturer in Biomedical Ethics at the University of Birmingham, who explains more about their project to train GPs to help them diagnose dermatological conditions among patients of diverse ethnicities. We also hear from the medical students involved in the workshop, who give their thoughts on what the temporary skin conditions look like on their skin. The accompanying photos for this podcast can be found on Ideas Lab's Flickr. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep38)
- Creating pain in the lab: research into chronic functional
pain Dr Stuart Derbyshire First broadcast: 28/11/2011 Andy talks to Dr Stuart Derbyshire, Director of Pain Imaging at the University of Birmingham and a Reader in Psychology, about his research into functional pain. Anywhere between 5% and 20% of the population has a chronic functional pain - disorders where there’s no obvious underlying cause for the person’s pain - which can be extremely devastating to quality of life and a cause of constant discomfort. As a pressing clinical problem, Stuart talks about the fascinating research he undertakes in his lab to try and model the core features of functional pain, which involves taking people who don’t have pain and then seeing if he can make them experience pain without a traditional noxious stimulus. Adhering to the motto 'touching is cheating', Stuart attempts to create pain using a variety of weird and wonderful techniques, including hypnosis, photos of people with injuries, and even a rubber arm illusion, where he gives people a fake limb and then stabs it! (Oh, and if Stuart looks familiar, he was also the man behind the ice bath test in the assassin episode of 'Derren Brown: The Experiments'.) |
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Predictor Podflash
- Discoveries provide evidence of a celestial procession at
Stonehenge Professor Vince Gaffney First broadcast: 26/11/2011 Lucy talks to Professor Vince Gaffney, Director of the Visual and Spatial Technology Centre at the University of Birmingham, about recently discovered evidence of two huge pits positioned on celestial alignment at Stonehenge. Shedding new light on the significant association of the monument with the sun, these pits may have contained tall stones, wooden posts or even fires to mark its rising and setting and could have defined a processional route used by agriculturalists to celebrate the passage of the sun across the sky at the summer solstice. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep37)
- The changing face of Christianity in the UK Dr Andrew Davies First broadcast: 14/11/2011 Lucy talks to Dr Andrew Davies, lecturer in Intercultural Theology and Pentecostal Studies in the Department of Theology and Religion at the University of Birmingham, about the changing face of Christianity in the UK. Andrew discusses the dramatic growth of Pentecostal black majority churches in Britain and the subsequent rise of the 'megachurch'. In a far cry from the traditional village parish church, with a smattering of locals sauntering in for the weekly service, these formidable developments can accommodate thousands of parishioners. Andrew also talks about the 'new atheism' and looks at Christianity further afield, with an upsurge in Christian conversion in China (around 10,000 people a day), but a surprising rise in the persecution of Christians around the world. Whatever your religious views, this is interesting stuff. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep36)
- The exhibition of living foreign peoples in 19th Century
Britain Dr Sadiah Qureshi First broadcast: 31/10/2011 Andy talks to Dr Sadiah Qureshi, lecturer in Modern History at the University of Birmingham, about her fascinating new book Peoples on Parade: Exhibitions, Empire, and Anthropology in Nineteenth-Century Britain, which looks at the commercial exhibition of living foreign peoples in the 19th Century. Although horrifying for modern audiences to contemplate, throughout the 19th Century up until the mid-20th Century, foreign peoples were imported to this country to perform songs, ceremonies and dances in various shows and exhibitions, which were attended by the paying Victorian public in their thousands. At the height of their popularity, exhibitions of this kind could be seen at local theatres, museums, world fairs (such as the 1851 Great Exhibition in the vast Crystal Palace in London's Hyde Park) and even zoos. Thankfully, these shows have now been consigned to history. But as Sadiah explains, they're perhaps not quite as distant a memory as we would like them to be. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep35)
- Catching it early: the critical first weeks of rheumatoid
arthritis Dr Rebecca Stack First broadcast: 17/10/2011 Lucy talks to Dr Rebecca Stack, a Research Fellow in Health Research within the School of Immunity and Infection at the University of Birmingham, about patient decision-making and people's use of health services. With particular focus on rheumatoid arthritis, Rebecca looks at why people don't decide to seek help sooner after the emergence of new symptoms, such as joint pain, stiffness and swelling. As the first three months of symptom onset in rheumatoid arthritis are a crucial window of opportunity, with immediate treatment effectively turning off the inflammation process, it's vital that people seek help early. However, research shows that people spend that three-month window deliberating over whether their symptoms are serious enough to warrant a visit to their GP. But as rheumatoid arthritis can affect any age group - and affects 1% of the population - any symptoms in the hands and feet should be taken seriously. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep34)
- The future of local public services Birmingham Policy Commissions Professor Tony Bovaird First broadcast: 30/09/2011 In the last of three special podcasts covering the Birmingham Policy Commissions, Lucy chats with Professor Tony Bovaird, Professor of Public Management and Policy at the University of Birmingham, about the future of public services in the UK. As one of the commissioners behind a recent policy commission report entitled When Tomorrow Comes – The Future of Public Services, Tony talks about the need for a radical shake-up in the way government works at the national and local level in order to make public services more effective and cost-effective in this era of austerity. Tony will be one of the speakers at a fringe event at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester on October 3rd (8am to 9:30am) to discuss the commission's findings, and specifically to discuss the report’s recommendation that the 21st century requires the development of a new generation of public servants. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep33) - Life and Death in the 21st Century Birmingham Policy Commissions Professor Jean McHale First broadcast: 26/09/2011 In the second of three special podcasts covering the Birmingham Policy Commissions, Lucy chats with Professor Jean McHale, Professor of Health Care Law at the University of Birmingham, about the policy and political implications of healthy ageing in the UK. It's an issue that affects us all, as we're all living longer, but who should pick up the tab for our healthcare? Jean will be playing a key role at a Birmingham Policy Commissions event called ‘Life and Death in the 21st Century’, which will be held at the Labour Party conference on Monday September 26th (12:30pm to 2:00pm, Exhibition Meeting Room 2, The ACC, Liverpool). The event is being chaired by Professor Adam Tickell, a Pro-Vice-Chancellor at the University of Birmingham, and will include representatives from various organisations, such as Mervyn Kohler from Age UK, and Finbarr Martin from the British Geriatrics Society. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep32) - Nuclear Power: What is the
future? Birmingham Policy Commissions Professor Martin Freer First broadcast: 19/09/2011 In the first of three special podcasts covering the Birmingham Policy Commissions, Lucy chats with Professor Martin Freer, Head of the Nuclear Physics Group at the University of Birmingham and Director of the Birmingham Centre for Nuclear Education and Research, about the future of nuclear power. Does the future lie with building more of the same kinds of nuclear power station? Or do we need to invest in new technology entirely? With the country facing an unprecedented energy crisis – which Martin feels the public is yet to truly grasp – he discusses the various options for taking nuclear power forward in Britain. Martin will be playing a key role at a Birmingham Policy Commissions event called ‘Nuclear Power: what is the future?’, which will be held at the Liberal Democrats autumn conference on Tuesday September 20th (6.15pm to 7.30pm, Hall7b, The ICC). The event is being chaired by the Vice Chancellor of the University of Birmingham, Professor David Eastwood, and the panel will include the chair of the commission Lord Hunt of Kings Heath, Lib Dem MP John Hemming, and Director of Greenwatt Technology, Dr Susan Juned. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep31)
- 9/11 ten years on - where are we now? Dr Chris Allen First broadcast: 05/09/2011 With the tenth anniversary of 9/11 approaching, Lucy chats to Dr Chris Allen, lecturer in Social Policy in the Institute of Applied Social Studies at the University of Birmingham, about what's been achieved over the last ten years to document Islamophobia, and the work that still needs to be done. He also talks about the recent massacre in Norway, which was initially attributed to al-Qaeda and Islamic terrorism, even though the perpetrator was Norwegian right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik. And with this latest terrorist atrocity in mind, Chris discusses how the threat from far right extremists has, to some extent, been ignored, while Islamic terrorism has remained in sharp focus as a key threat. Finally, Chris looks at the Birmingham Muslim community's dignified response to the deaths of three young men during the recent UK riots, which diffused a potentially dangerous situation and aimed to unite Birmingham's diverse multicultural population. (You can also listen to our October 2010 podcast with Chris and read his blog.) |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep30)
- Starting out at university Dr Vikki Burns First broadcast: 22/08/2011 Over a third of British universities are set to charge £9000 in tuition fees next year, and all of those institutions have had to set out their targets to widen participation among students from non-traditional backgrounds and will be judged on whether they meet them. The stakes are higher than ever, both for students and for universities. In a departure from the usual academic focus of the Ideas Lab podcast, Lucy joins Dr Vikki Burns, Senior Lecturer in the School of Sport and Exercise Sciences and also the School’s Head of Quality Assurance and Enhancement, to discuss the problems students commonly encounter when they begin university life, and how universities can support them. Plus what to do if you’re a student and you’re finding it hard to cope, and top tips for success if you’re heading to university for the first time this year. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep29) - Robots - the reality Dr Nick Hawes First broadcast: 08/08/2011 Using Hollywood as a reference point, the robots of the future could either be polite, servile humanoids, ruthless Terminator-style overlords, or adorable home-help ‘bots’ that look a bit like Henry Hoover (and beep reassuringly when they bring you your slippers). But what’s the reality? Lucy chats to Dr Nick Hawes, lecturer in Intelligent Robotics at the University of Birmingham, about the robots currently in operation today, and about the special purpose 'service robots' we may well be relying on in the not too distant future. Nick also introduces Lucy to 'Dora the Explorer', a robot he’s using in his research to explore the potential for developing robots that could arrive on your doorstep from Amazon or Argos, be removed from their packaging, then instantly start performing useful tasks around the home. He also looks ahead to the 'Festival of Robots' at The British Science Museum (Nov 28th - Dec 4th) which he'll be attending with Dora. (You can view images of Nick's robots on Flickr.) |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep28)
- First World War centenary - beyond Blackadder Dr Pierre Purseigle First broadcast: 25/07/2011 Lucy chats to Dr Pierre Purseigle, senior lecturer in Modern History at the University of Birmingham, and President of the International Society for First World War Studies. With the centenary of the First World War on the horizon in 2014, Pierre talks about the ways in which Britain and the other nations involved in WWI are planning to mark the occasion. The British public is still interested in the 'Great War', but our conception of the conflict has been shaped by its depiction in popular culture, such as Blackadder Goes Forth, which has highlighted some elements and obscured others. Pierre says that historians will be using the centenary to educate the public further, to enhance our understanding of a war that changed not just the political map of Europe, but of the entire world. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep27) - Life (500 million years ago) Dr Imran Rahman First broadcast: 11/07/2011 Lucy chats to Dr Imran Rahman, NERC Research Fellow in the School of Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences at the University of Birmingham, about his work with 500 million year old fossil echinoderms. To bring his work to life, Imran shows Lucy some computer reconstructions of three fascinating fossils - Ctenocystis Utahensis, Protocinctus and Placocystites - which he's been able to capture using a small CT scanner from the university's School of Dentistry! Resembling objects like tennis rackets and shaving razors (which sounds like the fossilised remains of Roger Federer's kit bag), Imran uses this scan technology to explore, investigate and virtually dissect these intricate Cambrian Period fossils in order to learn more about what was once inside them. It's truly fascinating stuff. (The images related to this podcast can be found on Twitvid.) |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep26) - Mapping the
Underworld Dr Nicole Metje First broadcast: 27/06/2011 If someone told you that, one day, we might all be able to drive from A to B without encountering endless miles of cones, numerous temporary traffic lights, and hours of infuriating delays - while workmen drink cups of tea and stare into several deep holes in the road - you'd probably think that person was telling porkies. But thanks to the 'Mapping the Underworld' project, it's a possibility! Lucy chats to Dr Nicole Metje, senior lecturer in the School of Civil Engineering at the University of Birmingham, about the 25-year vision to locate and map the network of buried pipes and cables under Britain's roads. Not only will this project save time and money (no need for utilities companies to dig multiple 'dry holes' while they search for pipes), but it will also make the maintenance of those underground utilities a lot safer. Ultimately, this is a project that could benefit us all. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep25)
- Political Theory Dr Luis Cabrera First broadcast: 13/06/2011 When you think about a World Government, it's almost impossible not to imagine a cold, all-powerful body that ruthlessly controls all of humanity. But believe it or not, there are several arguments in favour of such a thing. If you think about it as an antidote to our impending nuclear destruction or a way of tackling global poverty, through greater integration between states, there might actually be something in it. And Einstein was all for it! Lucy chats to Dr Luis Cabrera, senior lecturer in Political Theory in the Department of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Birmingham, about the Millennium Development Goals, the recent launch of Academics Stand Against Poverty (ASAP), developments around global democracy, and the prospect of a World Government. Interesting stuff. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep24)
- Biogeochemistry Dr Joanna Renshaw First broadcast: 30/05/2011 Ideas Lab's Project Director, Lucy Vernall, interviews Dr Joanna Renshaw, lecturer in biogeochemistry at the Water Sciences group at the University of Birmingham, about her research into the spread of contaminants in the environment, and the restoration or remediation of those environments. Jo explains how microbes could be used to clean up nuclear sites, and also looks at how microbes could play a part in extracting crucial rare earth elements from waste electrical components going to landfill. |
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Predictor Podflash
- UK gives aid to Rwanda as Met police warn exiles of
assassination threat Dr Danielle Beswick First broadcast: 24/05/2011 Lucy talks to Dr Danielle Beswick, lecturer in International Development at the University of Birmingham, and Research Associate for the All Party Parliamentary Group on the Great Lakes of Central Africa, about news that the Metropolitan police have warned two Rwandan exiles living in London that they face an "imminent threat" of assassination by the Rwandan government. The men are believed to have been targeted because of criticisms made of President Paul Kagame, and now fear for their lives. The news could prove extremely embarrassing for the Conservative-led coalition, which ploughs millions of pounds of aid into Rwanda, and has continued to cultivate a strong relationship with the country ever since the 1994 genocide. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep23)
- International Economic Law Dr Celine Tan First broadcast: 16/05/2011 The world is an unjust place. As the powerful, industrialised nations continue to produce huge carbon footprints, the resulting climate change ravages the poorer, least developed nations, who subsequently struggle to cope. Lucy chats to Dr Celine Tan, lecturer in law at the University of Birmingham, about international economic law, the effects of climate change on developing countries, and how international trade laws can impact heavily on the local industries of poorer nations. Celine Tan has now left the University of Birmingham and is currently Assistant Professor at Warwick School of Law, Warwick University |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep22) - Micro-Engineering Dr Emma Carter First broadcast: 18/04/2011 Picture this: you jump in your car and drive over to a friend’s house for some lunch. When you get there, you tip your smartphone into the landscape position and show off some recent holiday photos, guzzle down some food, then work off the calories with several games of Wii tennis. You’ve just had so many brushes with MEMS devices (microelectromechanical systems), it’s difficult to count them all! Lucy chats to Dr Emma Carter, a Research Fellow in Micro-Engineering at the University of Birmingham. As well as talking about the MEMS devices which can be found in equipment we use every single day, Emma reveals the multiple applications of E-Nose technology, and how energy scavenging - such as using blood pressure - can power these devices. Where's this amazing microtechnology going next? Listen and find out! |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep21) - Reclaiming St George Professor Ewan Fernie First broadcast: 04/04/2011 Lucy chats to Professor Ewan Fernie, Chair of Shakespeare Studies at the University of Birmingham's Shakespeare Institute in Stratford-upon-Avon, about Redcrosse, a new poetic liturgy written by Ewan, former poet laureate Andrew Motion, award-winning poets Jo Shapcott and Michael Symmons Roberts, and Andrew Shanks, the canon theologian of Manchester Cathedral. The liturgy aims to reinvigorate and offer a new exploration of St George and Englishness, and to produce an inclusive celebration that will ultimately bring people together. As St George's Day falls on Easter Saturday this year, the next liturgical event will be held at Manchester Cathedral on Sunday May 8th, which will be preceded by a procession, through the city streets, featuring two Catalan-style ‘gegants’ representing St. George and the Dragon. It certainly sounds like a spectacular way to reclaim St George! |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep20) - Value-based
pricing Dr Amitava Banerjee First broadcast: 21/03/2011 Lucy chats to Dr Amitava Banerjee, a Clinical Lecturer in Cardiovascular Medicine, about value-based pricing of medicines, which is part of the government's current Health and Social Care Bill, and, from 2014, will see drugs priced according to their effect on patients and the value society places on those drugs. When you consider that drugs aren't currently priced according to their effectiveness, it might not be a bad idea! Ami also co-writes an evidence-based blog called trusttheevidence.net, which aims to 'unpack' the data and statistics in news stories about health and health research, to make it easier for the layperson to understand. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep19)
- Water
Dr John Bridgeman First broadcast: 07/03/2011 We've all heard the famous line from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner: "Water, water, everywhere, nor any drop to drink," but with roughly one and half billion cubic kilometers of water on the planet you'd be forgiven for thinking that there's probably plenty to gulp down! Unfortunately, that isn't the case. With World Water Day coming up at the end of March, Lucy chats to Dr John Bridgeman, Reader in Envronmental Engineering in the University of Birmingham's School of Civil Engineering, about global water scarcity and what we can do to tackle the problem. He also talks about a new water sampling instrument he's helped to develop, which can detect contaminated water in disaster areas, and answers the big question on all our minds: do carbon water filters actually make any difference to our tap water? |
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Predictor Podflash
- Laughing babies and ripping paper Dr Joe McCleery First broadcast: 04/03/2011 In our first quick Ideas Lab Podflash, Lucy speaks to Dr Joe McCleery about how current research in Birmingham University’s ‘Babylab’ is shedding light on the science behind the viral video hit of baby Micah laughing as his dad rips up a job rejection letter. Dr McCleery has been conducting a study which involves monitoring babies’ brain activity as they watch and listen to paper being ripped up, and compares it to their reactions to sounds not caused by human activity. This research is showing that infants have a special interest in sounds made by people, and that they process them in specialist brain regions on the left side of the brain. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep18) -
Stress Dr Anna Phillips First broadcast: 21/02/2011 None of us is going to live forever. But one thing's for sure: we're all giving it a damn good try! By the year 2050, one in four people will be aged over 65 years. We're certainly living for longer, but we're not necessarily healthier for longer. Lucy chats to Dr Anna Phillips, a Roberts Research Fellow and health psychologist at the University of Birmingham's School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, about the results of a recent study into bereavement and subsequent ill health in the elderly, and also about her research into how stress and other factors can affect our immune systems. Anna also reveals measures we can take to ensure that our long lives are healthy ones. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep17) -
Health and Social Care Professor Jon Glasby First broadcast: 07/02/2011 We're living in an era of sweeping governmental changes to some of our most beloved and crucial services and institutions. But what does this reorganisation mean for the Health Service? Lucy chats to Professor Jon Glasby, Professor of Health and Social Care and Director of the Health Services Management Centre at the University of Birmingham, about the positive and negative aspects of the reforms outlined in the Health and Social Care Bill, published in January this year. Jon also predicts where he thinks health and social care in the UK will be in 10-15 years time. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep16) -
Medieval English Literature Professor Wendy Scase First broadcast: 24/01/2011 We all like curl up by the fire with a good read, don’t we? But when your chosen reading material weighs 22 kilos and is two and a half times the length of Tolstoy’s War & Peace, that’s easier said than done! Lucy chats to Professor Wendy Scase, Geoffrey Shepherd Professor of Medieval English Literature at the University of Birmingham, about her work to bring The Vernon Manuscript to a wider audience. Regarded as the biggest and most important surviving manuscript in medieval English, an online exhibition (The Vernon Manuscript: A Literary Hoard from Medieval England) is planned for spring 2011, which will coincide with the release of a DVD featuring the work (available from the Bodleian Bookshop). You no longer have to be a scholar to enjoy this exquisite work. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep15) - Music
Dr Kenneth Hamilton First broadcast: 10/01/2011 Whether you’re a musical genius or can only bash out ‘Chopsticks’ on a piano, this should still make for interesting listening. Recorded in the concert hall of the Barber Institute, Lucy chats to Dr Kenneth Hamilton, concert pianist and Reader in Music at the University of Birmingham's Department of Music. Speaking shortly after an afternoon concert, Kenneth talks about improvisation in musical pieces during performances, differences in 18th century instruments, and also gives details about forthcoming performances to celebrate the Franz Liszt bicentenary in 2011. |
| Ken has now left the University of Birmingham and is currently Professor of Music at Cardiff University. | |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep14) 2010 Christmas Compilation First broadcast: 13/12/2010 With clips from podcasts featuring Professor Scott Lucas, Dr Chris Allen, Dr Matt Bridge and Professor Isabelle Szmigin, Lucy and Andy (the other half of Ideas Lab) review some of podcasts from the last year in relation to what’s happened in the news since they were first broadcast. We also have a preview of a forthcoming podcast with Professor Wendy Scase, Geoffrey Shepherd Professor of Medieval English Literature at the University of Birmingham, who's been working on a translation of the The Vernon Manuscript. Wendy reads The Birth of Christ in the Stable from the Estorie del Evangelie; first in medieval West Midlands English and then in modern English. Merry Christmas! |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep13) -
U.S. Politics Professor Scott Lucas First broadcast: 29/11/2010 In a podcast that covers both U.S. politics and the American version of Strictly Come Dancing (Dancing with the Stars), you might be forgiven for thinking that we’ve mistakenly cut two separate recordings together. But I assure you, we haven’t! Lucy chats to Professor Scott Lucas, Professor of American Studies at the University of Birmingham and editor of the news and current affairs site EA WorldView, about what's next for President Barack Obama, the rise of Sarah Palin and the Tea Party movement, and the politicisation of dance programmes! |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep12) -
Cold Atom Physics Professor Kai Bongs First broadcast: 15/11/2010 Unless you’re a physicist, you might find this podcast a little difficult to understand in places. But that’s not to say it’s not fascinating stuff! Lucy speaks to Professor Kai Bongs, Professor of Cold Atom Physics at the University of Birmingham's School of Physics and Astronomy, and the local head of the Midlands Ultracold Atom Research Centre. Kai talks about cold atoms, quantum computing and how atomic clocks on GPS satellites help the sat-navs in our cars. I bet you didn't know that, did you? |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep11) -
Sport Dr Matt Bridge First broadcast: 01/11/2010 With the 2012 London Olympics now visible on the horizon, there are exciting times ahead for British sport. Lucy chats to Dr Matt Bridge, Senior Lecturer in Coaching and Sports Science at the University of Birmingham's School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, about young people's engagement with sport in school, and whether we’re developing talented youngsters in the right way. Are we giving them enough choice – enough sports – to find out what they’re good at? Matt also discusses the forthcoming 2012 Olympics and gives his verdict on whether the games will leave Britain with an Olympic legacy. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep10) -
Islamophobia Dr Chris Allen First broadcast: 18/10/2010 Coinciding with the release of his new book ‘Islamophobia’, Lucy speaks with Dr Chris Allen, a Research Fellow at the University of Birmingham's Institute of Applied Social Studies. Chris talks about the causes and ramifications of Islamophobia, such as community reactions to new mosques being built, controversial Koran burnings, and the rise of the English Defence League (EDL). Chris also talks about his work towards the establishment of an All Party Parliamentary Group on Islamophobia and anti-Muslim hate crimes. This is still a really hot topic, so don’t miss this one. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep9) -
Obesity Dr Eliot Marston First broadcast: 04/10/2010 Lucy interviews Dr Eliot Marston, BUPA Translational Research Manager at the University of Birmingham's College of Medical and Dental Sciences. Eliot talks about the major causes of obesity in children and how bariatric surgery is increasingly becoming a front line treatment. He also reveals the efforts being made to tackle the obesity problem in Birmingham, such as the Health Research Bus, which is a mobile clinical research facility that can conduct research in the community. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep8) -
Infection |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep7) -
Binge Drinking Professor Isabelle Szmigin First broadcast: 06/09/2010 Lucy chats to Professor Isabelle Szmigin, Professor of Marketing at Birmingham Business School, about consumer behaviour, alcohol and binge drinking. Isabelle explains how the huge increase in the density of ‘vertical drinking establishments’ - concentrated in just one or two streets in city centres – has transformed the way we drink. She also discusses how suppliers look to market certain kinds of drinks; what the government is doing about the problem of binge drinking; and how we can educate people about the dangers of excessive alcohol consumption. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep6)
- Eating
Dr Jackie Blissett First broadcast: 23/08/2010 If you’ve had a tough day and are thinking of reaching for a comforting slab of chocolate, this podcast might be of interest to you. Lucy chats to Dr Jackie Blissett, Senior Lecturer in Psychology at the University of Birmingham, about emotional eating. With research interests in feeding and eating in infancy and childhood, particularly in relation to the role of the parent, Jackie discusses the psychology behind emotional eating and the numerous other factors contributing to obesity. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep5) - Money Professor Karen Rowlingson First broadcast: 09/08/2010 The perfect podcast for these austere times. Lucy speaks to Professor Karen Rowlingson, Professor of Social Policy at the University of Birmingham, and Director of the Centre on Household Assets and Savings Management (CHASM). Karen talks about personal finance in relation to the gloomy economic outlook, and discusses the idea of a maximum wage. And with the spectre of extensive government spending cuts on the horizon, she speculates about what the future holds for those at the top, those at the bottom, and those of us stuck in “the angry middle”. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep4)
- Food
Dr Phil Cox First broadcast: 26/07/2010 Is it possible to create a chocolate that tastes just as good as the real thing, but which has a massively reduced fat content? Lucy chats to Dr Phil Cox, lecturer in food micro-structural engineering at the University of Birmingham, to learn more. Phil talks about his research group’s efforts to design novel foods and novel food structures to try and combat a variety of food-related problems, such as obesity. He also talks about food manufacture. Ever wondered how much energy is required to produce that little jar of mayonnaise in your shopping basket? Well, listen to the podcast and find out! |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep3) -
Energy Professor Richard Green First broadcast: 12/07/2010 Lucy interviews Professor Richard Green, Professor of Energy Economics at the University of Birmingham, and Director of the Institute for Energy Research and Policy. Richard talks about the future of British energy in terms of supply, the likelihood of Britain meeting its EU renewable energy targets by 2020, and also discusses the technological developments that might alter the way we consume energy in the future. You’d best listen to this before the lights go out. Richard Green has now left the University of Birmingham and is currently the Alan and Sabine Howard Professor of Sustainable Energy Business at Imperial College, London. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep2) -
Intelligence Dr Jackie Chappell First broadcast: 28/06/2010 In this week’s podcast, Lucy chats to Dr Jackie Chappell, Lecturer in Animal Behaviour in the University of Birmingham’s Department of Biosciences. She also runs the Cognitive Adaptations Research Group. Working with both animals and humans, Jackie talks about her research into intelligence, which she defines as “individuals who can adapt their existing knowledge to new situations, and that also can innovate new behaviours to solve new problems”. When researching intelligence in animals, Jackie discusses her work with New Caledonian crows and their understanding and use of hooked tools. It’s fascinating stuff. |
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Predictor Podcast (Ep1) - Digital Heritage Dr Henry Chapman First broadcast: 14/06/2010 To kick off our podcast series, Lucy chats to Dr Henry Chapman, Director of the Visual & Spatial Technology Centre (VISTA) at the University of Birmingham. Henry talks about how digital content is transforming museums, allowing the public to access, explore and experience the collections and hidden riches of our museums and archives like never before. He also explains how new technology, such as augmented reality on smartphones, is allowing archaeologists to present the past in new and novel ways. If you’re not currently a frequenter of museums, this podcast might just change your mind. |
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