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brain

CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast

It's All Optical - Adam Packer

We discuss all-optical interrogation techniques and the mysterious claustrum.
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast

Facing Depression - Catherine Harmer

We discuss the brain mechanisms behind depression.
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast

At The Interface : Richard Mooney

We discuss Auditory Neuroscience in particular during vocal learning
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast

At First Sight - Holly Bridge

We discuss how the Brain processes vision.
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast

Sleeping with One Eye Open - Vladyslav Vyazovskiy

We discuss the Science of Sleep
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast

Intro : Cortex Just Keeps the Rest of the Brain Warm

We talk through what listeners can expect from future episodes of CortexCast.
Surgical Grand Rounds Lectures
Captioned

Genes, Hands, Nerves, and Brains

Professor Dominic Furniss and Dr Akira Wiberg discuss the tremendous connection we have between the hand and the brain, focusing their talk on Dupuytren's Disease and Carpal Tunnel Syndrome.
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

How does the brain identify voices?

In this episode of The Big Questions podcast we joined the experiment to ask: How does he brain identify voices? To find out we interviewed MRI Physicist Stuart Clare and Neuro Scientist Holly Bridge at the Wellcome Centre for Integrative for Neuroimaging
The Secrets of Mathematics
Captioned

Oxford Mathematics Public Lectures - Can Mathematics Understand the Brain?' - Alain Goriely

The human brain is the object of the ultimate intellectual egocentrism. It is also a source of endless scientific problems and an organ of such complexity that it is not clear that a mathematical approach is even possible, despite many attempts.
Musical Abstracts

Research Behind... Stomach is the Monarch

The research behind a song about how Victorians saw the conversation between the gut and mood, featuring an interview with researcher Dr Emilie Taylor-Brown at the University of Oxford
Musical Abstracts

Stomach is the Monarch

A song about how Victorians saw the conversation between the gut and mood, based on research by Dr Emilie Taylor-Brown at the University of Oxford
St Edmund Hall Research Expo 2017: Teddy Talks

What Does Philosophy Have to Do with Neuroscience?

When you examine the brain, you can learn a lot and see chemical interactions, but you cannot find anything about the first-person nature of things we experience as humans, such as colours and pain.
Psychiatry

The Microbiome and the Brain

An interview with Professor Phil Burnet, who discusses his research into the influence of the gut microbiome on brain health. He talks about novel findings, potential future work, and takes questions from trainee psychiatrists and researchers.
Shakespeare and the Brain

Shakespeare as Observer and Psychologist – Professor Paul Matthews (Fellow by Special Election, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford; Edmond and Lily Safra Chair and Head of Brain Sciences, Imperial College London)

Paul focuses on some of the questions that Shakespeare was asking about the mind, and how the same sorts of issues are approached now by neuroscientists.
Shakespeare and the Brain

Shakespeare, Mind and World – Dr Tom MacFaul (Lecturer in English, St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford)

Tom discusses how Shakespeare’s age thought about thinking. In particular, he looks at the transformative power of thought and the idea in some of Shakespeare’s works that the mind is free to create its own world.
Oxford Biomedical Research

Going Viral

Viruses have been a threat to humanity for as long as we have existed. As we make progress in the fight against them, can we also learn to use their tricks to our own advantage
Unconscious Memory
Captioned

And all this time it dwells behind the door

Annie Freud, the award-winning poet and artist, will talk about where her poems come from, her development as an artist and writer, and the relationship between her poems and paintings.
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences

The tempos of perception in the human brain

NDCN departmental seminar
Oxford Sparks: bringing science to life

You've Got a Nerve

In the early 1900s, Charles Sherrington examined microscope slides of muscles, nerves, the spine and the brain and traced the connections between them building a picture of how muscles are controlled. Researchers today still use principles he established.
Oxford Sparks: bringing science to life

A spin around the brain

Take a journey around the brain with Ossie from Oxford Sparks. Find out more and read about the science behind the animation at www.oxfordsparks.net/mri.

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