Seven days in science - 18 March 2010
18 March 2010This week
began with the Ferrier prize lecture by Professor
Colin Blakemore FRS (pictured) on Monday (15 March). The lecture discussed
plasticity of the brain, and how it could be the key to human development,
cognition and evolution.
A discussion meeting on the frontiers of
influenza research took place at the Society on Tuesday (16 March). The
meeting included a session from one of the organisers, Professor Neil Ferguson,
titled: Analysis of modelling of the 2009 pandemic: lessons learned.
The first
of the science themed Great North Debates
took place on Tuesday (16 March). The lively debate Should
We Trust Science? was held at Tyne
and Wear Museums and was chaired by Quentin
Cooper.
Broadcaster
Melvyn
Bragg offered his perspective on the history of the Royal Society at Wednesday’s (17 March) Wilkins–Bernal–Medawar
lecture: Notes from
an amateur: on the history of the Royal Society. The lecture was held
at the Sheldonian Theatre in Oxford.
The Universities
of Dundee and St Andrews are celebrating the 150th anniversary of
D’Arcy Thompson at the exhibit D'Arcy
150, which starts on Friday (19 March) and runs until early May.
As part of
the Capital Science
programme, Tate and the Royal Society are collaborating to bring together
scientists and artists at the event Rising
to the Climate Challenge: Artists and Scientists Imagine Tomorrow's World (19-20 March).
Next week begins with the discussion meeting Handling
uncertainty in science, a
highly multi-disciplinary meeting discussing how scientists from a range of
disciplines handle the issue of uncertainty in their area of specialisation:
i.e. how uncertainty can be characterised, estimated, predicted and
communicated.