Sci21 Science Webcast Series

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Synopsis

Join renowned southern hemisphere scientists for an insight into the science that will transform our lives in the 21st Century. The Sci21 webcast series aims to entertain, inform and inspire interest in the science of tomorrow. For more information or to watch our associated videos please go to http://sci21.co.nz

Episodes

  • Nanotechnology webcast with Dr. Michelle Dickinson

    24/09/2016

    Dr Michelle Dickinson from the University of Auckland talks about how nanotechnology will (and is) changing the way we do everyday things and how it will help build a better future.

  • eHealth webcast with Asso. Prof. Duncan Babbage

    24/09/2016

    Associate Professor Duncan Babbage from the Auckland University of Technology talks about the eHealth revolution: Health and wellness in the century ahead.

  • Astrobiology: The Search for life on other planets

    24/09/2016

    Professor Steve Pointing from the Auckland University of Technology talk about Astrobiology and the search for life on other planets.

  • Climate change: Looking back to the future

    24/09/2016

    Professor Tim Naish from Victoria University of Wellington talks about how climate change can be predicted from Antarctic ice sheet cores.

  • Microbial Ninjas: Bacteriophages take on antibiotic resistant superbugs

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Dr Heather Hendrickson, Massey University One of the key science questions of our time is how to beat bacteria in an age where antibiotics are no longer effective.

  • Emerging Infectious Diseases

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Assoc. Prof. Gavin Smith talks about Emerging Infectious Diseases

  • Matauranga Maori: Connecting Indigenous Knowledge with Science

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Dr John Perrott, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand Speaks about how Matauranga Maori can help involve indigenous people in science.

  • Urban Coastal Waterways: Can Blue be Green?

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Professor Peter Sternberg, Sydney Institute for Marine Sciences, Australia On our increasingly urban planet most people encounter the marine environment in their backyard – in cities. How then, can we manage urban marine systems—coasts, estuaries and harbours—for the benefit of city dwellers, the “blue” economy and the environment?

  • The Unseen Majority: The World of Microbes

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Prof. Don Cowan, University of Pretoria, South Africa We are in the midst of a new scientific revolution! In little more than a decade, dramatic developments in the technologies available for sequencing genetic material (DNA and RNA) have reduced the costs of sequencing by a million fold and opened entire new fields in environmental, biotechnological and medical research.

  • Is Gravity a Social Construct?

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Prof. Shaun Hendy, the University of Auckland, New Zealand Are scientific theories objective or do they depend on the eye of the beholder? Most people would agree that gravity affects our lives in more-or-less the same way, no matter who you are. But what about the science of gravity

  • Curious Citizens: Engaging People with Science

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Dr. Victoria Metcalf, Office of the Prime Minister’s Chief Science Advisor, New Zealand We are in an era of unprecedented issues facing humanity and the world we live in. Science is central to many of these global problems we face and yet often there is a mistrust or lack of understanding around science. Hence, raising our science literacy is incredibly important, especially to the future of young New Zealanders.

  • Conservation Drones

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Barbara Bollard Breen, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand Low flying unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) offer ecologists new opportunities to collect scale appropriate data at high spatial and temporal resolution.

  • Open Science

    24/09/2016

    Sci21 Speaker Dr. Siouxsie Wiles, Auckland University of Technology, New Zealand Picture this. You commission me to draw your portrait and send me a photo to work from. When you and your friends ask to see the finished portrait, I tell you I gave it away to someone else, and paid them several thousand dollars to take it, because it was in colour. When you ask them to see your portrait, they charge you and each of your friends $30 to look at it for 24 hours. And when someone else asks me to see the photo I worked from to check how good a likeness the portrait is, I tell them they can only see one corner of the photo. Or maybe I decide not to let them see it all, in case they want to draw a portrait of you too. Ridiculous as this scenario sounds, it’s a fairly accurate description of a lot of publicly-funded biomedical science. In her Sci21 webcast, Siouxsie describes how the internet age is challenging this outdated model and calls for scie