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behaviour

Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Personalised nutrition and dietary behaviour change in an online study across 7 European countries

Dr Anna Macready, associate professor in the School of Agriculture Policy and Development at the University of Reading, takes us through personalised nutrition and asks, ‘is there a right or wrong diet?’
CortexCast - A Neuroscience Podcast

The Moving Brain with Dr. Andrew Peters

We met with Dr Andrew Peters (a new PI) to discuss his career in neuroscience so far studying movement in the brain. By combining multiple modern techniques, Andy interrogates global circuits during motor learning and behaviour.
Oxford Martin Programme on the Future of Cooling

5 The behaviours and culture of cooling use

Our team member Dr Antonella Mazzone and Eric D Wilson discuss approaches that can make the use of cooling more sustainable
Strachey Lectures
Captioned

Strachey Lecture: Mixed Signals

Mixed Signals: audio and wearable data analysis for health diagnostics
Beyond boundaries: research worth sharing

Sociogenomics – when nature meets nurture

In this short talk, Professor Melinda Mills introduces her work on the role of gene and gene-environment interaction on reproductive health
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

'Learning' part 1 - Sleep for success

Sleep is really important. But do we realise how important it is, particularly for helping us think straight? Are teenagers lazy? Are their body clocks different?
Oxford Sparks: bringing science to life

Power People: what are we doing with all that energy?

Did you know that you are in charge of a power station? It's true. Every time you flick a light switch, a power station somewhere in the UK will respond and generate that little bit of extra power you need for your light.
St John's College

Lady White Lecture 2015: If not you, who? If not now, when?

Alumna and entrepreneur Caroline Plumb talks about the challenges of overcoming fears and expectations of normality to help find our path to success.
Journey of a Molecular Detective; David Sherratt

Behavioral biology and obesity

Trent Smith (Washington State University) gives a talk for the UBVO seminar series on 27th Novmber 2009
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars

How Do People Interact with Virtual Environments?

Andrew Przybylski discusses the motivational dynamics of how people approach ICTs, social media and video games.
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars

Computational Perspectives on the Structure and Information Flows in Online Networks

An increasing amount of social interaction is taking place online: analyzing this data computationally offers enormous potential to address long-standing scientific questions, and to harness and inform the design of future social computing applications.
Anthropology

Social evolution in primates and other animals

In this lecture, Dr Susanne Shultz (Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, Oxford) examines the social evolution of primates and other animals (10 March 2011).
Anthropology

Late Pleistocene Demography and the Appearance of Modern Human Behaviour

In this seminar for the Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, Professor Mark Thomas (University College London) discusses the origins of modern human behaviour (18 May 2011).
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars

Relationships and the Internet

This forum looks at the state of the art of academic research on relationships and the Internet and how this research informs research on the social aspects of the Internet in general, such as issues of trust and identity.
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars

When the Audience Clicks: Buying Attention in the Digital Age

Discussion of media buying and the attention-creation industry - showing how the fixation on audiences' click-like behaviour is a disruptive institutional force, and how buyers' new approaches to attention are creating new forms of social discrimination.
Complexity and Systemic Risk: Hilary Term Seminar Series 2010

Cooperation, Norms and Conflict: Towards Simulating the Foundations of Society

In order to understand social systems, it is essential to identify the circumstances under which individuals spontaneously start cooperating or developing shared behaviors, norms, and culture.
Oxford Internet Institute - Lectures and Seminars

Using the Web to do Social Science

Duncan Watts discusses how the Internet is beginning to lift a long-time constraint of social science research on emergent collective behaviour: the difficulty of measuring interactions between people, at scale, over time, while also observing behaviour.

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