Biology in the Real World past talks
The following are the Biology in the Real World talks that have taken place at the Association for Science Education's Annual Conference:
2018
In 2018, the talks for Biology in the Real World theme was Separating fact from fiction:
- Is it true an elephant never forgets? (Dr Graeme Shannon, Bangor University)
- Photosynthesis for a changing world (Dr James Hartwell, University of Liverpool)
- Obesity: is it all in your head? (Dr Simon Cork, Imperial College London)
- CRISPR: separating fact from fiction (Professor Malcolm White, University of St Andrews)
- Creating great fieldwork (Sara Lanyon, Field Studies Council)
2017
In 2017, the talks focused on Biology around the world:
- Fertility and the future of IVF (Dr Sophie Clarke, Imperial College London)
- Food security (Professor Peter Gregory, University of Reading)
- Influenza: discoveries and controversies (Professor Wendy Barclay, Imperial College London)
- Games of thrones: conflict and cooperation from fish to finance (Dr Rupert Marshall, Aberystwyth University)
- Making sense of stress in the wild (Dr Kimberley Bennett, Abertay University)
- New horizons in stem cell research (Dr Julie Holder, Roslin Cell Sciences)
- Plant disease: the human story (Professor Gary Foster, University of Bristol)
- Biodiversity and tropical agriculture (Dr Ed Turner, University of Cambridge)
2016
In 2016, the talks focused on Biology from the inside:
- 10% human: the impact of microbial partners on animal life (Professor Greg Hurst, University of Liverpool)
- Biofilms: greater than the sum of their parts (Professor Jo Verran, Manchester Metropolitan University)
- Britain's plant health scientists (Dr Charles Lane, Fera Science)
- Hormones, homeostasis and health (Professor Saffron Whitehead, Society for Endocrinology)
- Personalised medicines (Dr Virginia Acha, Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry & British Pharmacological Society)
- The physiological responses to physical activity (Dr Gladys Onambele-Pearson, Manchester Metropolitan University)
2015
In 2015, the talks focused on A voyage of discovery:
- Osteoporosis: rhe final frontier (Dr Adrian Moore, University College Birmingham)
- Growing cells in a new dimension (Professor Stefan Przyborski, Durham University)
- Space flight: a model of human ageing (Professor Stephen Harridge, King’s College London)
- Life on Mars: the past and the possibilities (Dr Louisa Preston, University of Cambridge)
- Beloved barnacles: learning from Darwin’s collections (Miranda Lowe, Natural History Museum)
- Life in town: adapting to city life (Linda Birkin, University of Sussex)
- Wandering seabirds (Professor Tim Guilford, Oxford University)
2014
In 2014, the talks focused on Powering life:
- Mighty mitochondria (Dr Daniel Tennant, University of Birmingham)
- Waste into energy (Dr Angela Murray, University of Birmingham)
- Metabolism and energy balance (Professor Julian Hamilton, University of Bristol)
- Natural selection as the power house of diversity: adaptation of form and behaviour to the environment (Dr Susannah KS Thorpe, University of Birmingham)
- Life without light (Dr Rich Boden, Plymouth University)
- Drug development: the unexpected role of plants (Dr Alison Foster, University of Oxford)
- Plants and pressure (Dr Jeremy Prichard, University of Birmingham)
2013
In 2013, the talks focused on Brilliant breakthroughs:
- Brewing-up the technologies of tomorrow with synthetic biology (Tom Ellis, Imperial College, London)
- Eye research (Russell Foster, University of Oxford)
- Tuberculosis (Helen McShane, University of Oxford)
- Cannabis and epilepsy (Ben Whalley, University of Reading)
- Transforming photosynthesis: frontier biology for a changing world (Colin Osbourne, University of Sheffield)
- Paris japonica and the discovery of the largest genome (Mike Fay, Royal Botanical Gardens, Kew)
- Astrobiology: the hunt for alien life (Lewis Dartnell, UCL)
- Super stable isotopes (Andrew Robertson, University of Exeter)
2012
In 2012, in recognition of the Olympics taking place in the UK, the series of talks focused on A sporting chance:
- Drugs in sport (Professor David Mottram, Liverpool John Moores University)
- The systems physiology of exercise (Professor Graham Kemp, University of Liverpool)
- Fighting fit: how exercise affects your immunity and susceptibility to infection (Professor Michael Gleeson, Loughborough University)
- The five rings to success (Dr Valerie Gladwell, University of Essex)
- The race to reproduce (Dr Rob Thomas, Cardiff University)
- The original Olympic pool: succeeding in extreme conditions (Professor Geoff Boxshall, Natural History Museum)
- Pressure in the organism Olympics (Dr Jeremy Pritchard, University of Birmingham)