A University of Cambridge chemistry student who enlisted lab colleagues to star in a pop video explaining her research on cancer diagnoses聽is聽among the winners of this year鈥檚 Dance Your PhD contest.
Chemical engineering researcher Dina Haddad, who has been based at Cambridge since 2021, was one of five category winners of the international competition run by 聽for her dance video explaining her work on 鈥渃ell-free DNA using magnetic nanoparticles for urine biopsy鈥.
Filmed in laboratories in and around Addenbrookes Hospital, Cancer Research UK鈥檚 Cambridge Institute and college courtyards, Haddad鈥檚 dance video has been viewed more than 1,000 times on YouTube.聽
It features a self-penned track titled , in which Haddad sings and raps about her research.
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Haddad鈥檚 choreography drew on eclectic forms of dance, from ballet and hip-hop to pole dancing. Her triumph makes her the first UK winner of the award since 2017.
The overall champion was Sofia Papa from the BioRobotics Institute at the Sant鈥橝nna School of Advanced Studies in Pisa, Italy, who used a team of dancers in different monochromatic outfits to represent positive and negative charges. This explained how some crystalline materials, when subjected to stress, generate electricity, which is known as the 鈥減iezoelectric effect鈥.
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Papa鈥檚 dance was praised by judge Alexa Meade as 鈥渉ypnotic and entrancing鈥, earning her the competition鈥檚 top prize of $2,750 (拢2,050). Each category winner takes home $750 (拢559).
Now in its 17th聽year, the Dance Your PhD competition rewards outstanding dance videos in the categories of physics, biology, chemistry and social sciences, and for the first time, use of artificial intelligence.
The winner of this inaugural category was Maastricht University鈥檚 Kate Kondrateva who used ChatGPT to formulate a shot-by-shot script for a three-part dance on AI, MRIs, brain health and diagnostics that she developed from reading research papers.
She then fed prompts into Google鈥檚 AI video generator Veo to develop visual effects, including bright lights and intense colours, which she overlaid on her own dancing.
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