探花视频

Campus round-up - 19 September 2013

Published on
September 19, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Scientific resolution

This image (main picture) is a 3D scan of a glass sculpture of a jellyfish created in the 19th聽century by father-and-son team Leopold and Rudolf Blaschka. The German glass artists used techniques that are not fully understood even today, according to the Great North Museum in Newcastle University, which is聽displaying the scan as聽part of its International Images for Science 2013 exhibition. X-rays were used to image the model and the artificial colours are based on the density of the glass. It is hoped that the scan will reveal more of how the Blaschkas created their models. Other images featured at the exhibition, which runs until 29聽September, include a scanning electron micrograph of a tardigrade or water bear (top left); a polarised light microscope image of the chemical compound Dimedone (middle left); and an interferometry image of the complex patterns created by a reflected shock wave (bottom left).

University College London
Branch blossoms

The first campus established by a聽UK university at Qatar鈥檚 Hamad bin Khalifa University has been formally inaugurated. University College London Qatar was opened at a ceremony in Doha on聽9 September. The campus was established in 2011 in collaboration with the聽Qatar Foundation and the Qatar Museums Authority as a research and postgraduate institution studying cultural heritage. UCLQ鈥檚 first cohort of master鈥檚 students are set to complete their studies later this year.

Robert Gordon University
Gas, gas, gas (and oil)

A Scottish university is to offer an MSc in oil and gas engineering in concert with a Russian firm. From October, Robert Gordon University will link up with Oilteam to teach 鈥渢he next generation of Russia鈥檚 offshore energy professionals鈥 in the Black Sea town of Sochi. The partnership, worth more than 拢1.2 million, will help Russia to access as yet untapped offshore resources, the university said, adding that the scope of the arrangement 鈥渋s expected to grow with time鈥.

University of Cambridge
Dirt is good for the brain

Better hygiene may increase the聽risk of Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, a聽study has found. Research from the University of Cambridge shows that even accounting for greater life expectancy, people in high-income industrialised countries appear more likely to develop the disease because of reduced contact with bacteria, viruses and other microorganisms. The study analyses the prevalence of the disease in 192 countries and has found strong correlation between levels of national sanitation and Alzheimer鈥檚. Researchers say that the study supports the hypothesis that lack of exposure to microbes weakens the immune system and makes dementia more prevalent.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

University of Bedfordshire
Precocious art of persuasion

Debate and communication skills should be taught to primary school children, research has suggested. A study co-sponsored by the University of Bedfordshire and charity the English-Speaking Union has found that children taught how to use 鈥減ersuasive speech鈥 and placed in situations requiring them to argue, question, debate and speak publicly gain in聽confidence and improve their national curriculum assessment scores by 6 to 19 per cent more than those not involved. The effect is particularly pronounced for children of lesser ability, those for聽whom English is a second or additional language, and boys. Results of the study will be passed on to a government consultation on the new national curriculum.

Newcastle University
Postcode health lottery

Differences of up to 11聽years in how long Newcastle citizens can expect to live healthy and active lives have been recorded in people living just eight miles apart. A team of experts from Newcastle University has simulated differences in health outcomes across the city and found stark disparities. At the end of the month, academic, council, NHS, business and voluntary sector representatives will meet to discuss the issue, with the aim of cutting the discrepancies in half over the next 10 years.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Harper Adams University
Big cheese on campus

One of the UK鈥檚 leading dairy food companies is to create an innovation centre at a university specialising in agricultural and food studies. Dairy Crest, known for successful brands such as Clover and Cathedral City, will base the centre at Harper Adams University in Shropshire, giving students and staff access to technical expertise and state-of-the-art facilities. Dairy Crest aims to deliver 10 per cent year-on-year growth through new聽product development, with research and technology at the core of its plans to meet the objective.

University of Salford
Social media optimisation

A student-designed free online course will help businesses and individuals to make best use of web search engines and social media marketing. The massive open online course, designed by master鈥檚-level marketing students at Salford Business School with support from academics and industry experts, covers topics including online personal branding, search engine optimisation, blogging and marketing through social media such as Twitter. Amanda Broderick, executive dean at Salford鈥檚 College of Business and Law, said: 鈥淭his鈥pen access online course, offering critical business skill development opportunities, is the first in a聽series demonstrating our continuing commitment to address鈥kills gaps.鈥

University of West London
Song and dance of the desert

Academics and students from the University of West London have taken part in a performance by an聽innovative theatre company that attempts to mix Eastern and Western dance styles. Desert, a聽production from SpiralArts, tells聽the story of a traveller who is聽expelled from the 鈥渆scalating cacophony of inner city hustle and its computerised obsessions鈥o seemingly silent and empty desert lands鈥. Music theatre students Evelyn Nagy and Claire Hutchinson and lecturers Emma Evans and Bryony Williams, based at the university鈥檚 London College of Music, helped with the performance. It was held in London鈥檚 Cockpit Theatre last month, with another performance scheduled for West London鈥檚 Lawrence Hall on 21聽October.

Newman University, Birmingham
Black in the Union Jack

An academic conference has brought together scholars engaged in researching the past, present and future condition of the UK鈥檚 black population. Blackness in Britain, held at Newman University, Birmingham on 12聽September, unveiled research papers including the 鈥淣ew Black 鈥楽ocial Conservatives鈥欌 and 鈥淭he Impact of Public Spending Cuts on Black People in Contemporary Britain鈥.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

Loughborough University
Taking the public temperature

Academics have developed software that can gauge the public鈥檚 reaction to events by analysing up to 2,000 tweets a聽second. The program, known as聽Emotive, analyses tweets for expressions of eight emotions: anger, disgust, fear, happiness, sorrow, surprise, shame and confusion. Principal investigator Tom Jackson, professor of information science at Loughborough University, said: 鈥淭witter is a very concise platform through which users express how they feel about a particular event, be that a criminal act, a new government policy or even a聽change in the weather鈥e can collate these expressions in real time, map them geographically and track how they develop.鈥

Queen Mary, University of London
Birth defects detected

The most comprehensive study of聽congenital anomalies among babies born in England and Wales (including heart and lung defects, Down鈥檚 syndrome, neural tube defects and limb malformations) brings together data drawn from six regional registers. Covering the period 2007 to 2011, the third annual report by聽the British Isles Network of Congenital Anomaly Registers was compiled by researchers at聽Queen Mary, University of London and released earlier this month. It estimates that at least 16,000 babies with such anomalies were born in 2011, 2.2 per cent of the total 鈥 higher than the levels recorded by comparable European registers.

University of Edinburgh
Clear speech

Researchers have created a聽computer program that can modify the speech in public announcements to make them聽easier to understand in noisy environments such as airports or聽train stations. Scientists from the University of聽Edinburgh monitored how people listen to voices amid background noise, and then developed a system that amplifies the particular sounds people use to understand what is聽being said. In some cases, the improvement is equivalent to reducing the background noise by聽five聽decibels. The Edinburgh researchers hope that the program can be utilised to make smartphone voices, loudspeaker announcements and聽satellite navigation systems more audible for users.

University of Manchester
Horror soundtrack

The regime of Chilean dictator General Pinochet used Julio Iglesias records to torture political opponents, an academic has discovered. Katia Chornik, a postdoctoral researcher in the University of Manchester鈥檚 music department, is investigating the treatment of almost 40,000 political opponents imprisoned after the dictator seized power in 1973. She discovered that most were tortured physically and psychologically. This included being forced to listen to music played at聽high volume, sometimes for days on end. Other records used included the soundtrack to Stanley Kubrick鈥檚 A Clockwork Orange.

探花视频

ADVERTISEMENT

University of Leicester
Language of reform

The English Association is to host a conference examining A-level reforms and how they will affect the teaching of English at all levels. The conference, to be held on 5聽October at the Institute of English Studies in London, will be聽addressed by representatives from examination boards and academics involved in the reform consultation process. The event is being organised by the University of Leicester-based association鈥檚 University Admissions and Transition Special Interest Group, set up in 2008 with a聽view to promoting dialogue between English teachers at sixth-form and degree level.

Register to continue

Why register?

  • Registration is free and only takes a moment
  • Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
  • Sign up for our newsletter
Please
or
to read this article.

Sponsored

Featured jobs

See all jobs
ADVERTISEMENT