Search results for: associate chaplain urzula glienecke
Visual Research sharing session 20/10
Key take-aways Tools: associations, stream of consciousness, moodboard, drawing from memory and nostalgia, boredom/meditation/walk, collage and zines, enthuse with another (non-art) student, automatic writing, make 3D models, previous work, Pinterest, blind drawings, play with materials, media consumption of films etc Research and practice: for every line of research, create something and vice versa bring other […]
Links
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/docomomoiscul/resources/links/
Docomomo International TOWER BLOCK TOWER BLOCK is a multi-faceted historical initiative aimed at documenting and disseminating information about the great post-World War II mass housing drive. It was initially launched by Miles Glendinning and Stefan Muthesius in a fieldwork and research programme in the late 1980s into mass housing in the UK, published in definitive […]
2022/Dec/05 Davide Marenduzzo
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/ygutier2/2022/12/05/2022-dec-05-davide-marenduzzo/
Intranuclear phase separation, and its role in transcription and gene regulation Microscopy studies suggest that chromatin and its associated proteins often form phase separated droplets within the nucleus of eukaryotic organisms. I will discuss some possible biophysical mechanisms, suggested by coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations and theory, underlying such intranuclear phase separation and microphase separation (arrested […]
2022/Dec/05 Davide Marenduzzo
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/yair_fosado/2022/12/05/2022-dec-05-davide-marenduzzo/
Intranuclear phase separation, and its role in transcription and gene regulation Microscopy studies suggest that chromatin and its associated proteins often form phase separated droplets within the nucleus of eukaryotic organisms. I will discuss some possible biophysical mechanisms, suggested by coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations and theory, underlying such intranuclear phase separation and microphase separation (arrested […]
「Book Cover」Wuthering Heights
When I was pursuing this idea, I got started by choosing a book that I had recently read and loved. It was Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte. This book has great imagery of the mountain, the wind and the weather, and I felt like I would enjoy designing a book cover with these themes in […]
Working outside the lab within the Life Sciences industry
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/careersinformed/working-outside-the-lab-within-the-life-sciences-industry/
Interested in using your degree outside the lab? Carol Macdonald, Link Careers Consultant for the Deanery of Biomedical Sciences, provides a fantastic #EdLifeSciences insight from four alumni who showcase the career options available outside the lab. When thinking about career options in life science and pharma, thoughts often turn to laboratory-based roles… and whether a […]
The Hampden Case
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/sport-matters/2018/10/30/the-hampden-case/
By Grant Jarvie University of Edinburgh The Scottish Football Association decided to stay at Hampden and in this short review we consider some of the evidence, arguments and background to the decision. While the costs of the Hampden v Murrayfield cases were different the final judgement may not have been just about economic costs but […]
People
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/insectrobotics/people/
Academic staff Barbara Webb studied Psychology at the University of Sydney and did her PhD in AI at the University of Edinburgh. She held lectureships in Nottingham and Stirling before joining the School of Informatics in May 2003. She was promoted to Professor of Biorobotics in 2010. Her main research interest is in perceptual systems […]
How to tackle anxiety with the help of nature
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/sustainability/2022/how-to-tackle-anxiety-with-the-help-of-nature/
For Mental Health Awareness Week (9 to 15 May 2022), Kim Vender, Biodiversity and Climate Resilience Projects Officer, explains how engaging with nature can help. We’re all carrying stress If someone asks us “How are you?” we tend to give that generic answer “I’m fine, thanks”. But, to be honest, who is really “fine” nowadays? We […]
The importance of being idle
https://blogs.ed.ac.uk/research-bow/the-importance-of-being-idle/
Here I am, working my way through the 2nd year of the PhD studies at the scary time where we might be transitioning from face masks to gas masks, in addition to the more usual PhD stressors of collecting data, tutoring and writing ethics applications (apologies, making inappropriate jokes is how I deal with stress… […]
Recent comments