03/2016: Fusion Power (S. Fell)

Place and Time: Abingdon, March 24, 2015  from 19:00 for 19:30

Barn Room, Crown and Thistle (18 Bridge St, Abingdon OX14 3HS)

TITLE: Fusion – Within our Grasp?

With fossil fuel reserves diminishing and concerns over climate change increasing, the hunt for alternative sources of energy has never been more important. In the middle of rural Oxfordshire, a thousand scientists and engineers are undertaking a project to develop a new source of energy – nuclear fusion. Join us to hear Sarah Fell from the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy talk about the quest for this seemingly ideal power source…

Speaker: Sarah Fell

02/2016: Slime Molds (M. Fricker) & Medival Colour Perception (H. Smithson)

Place and Time: Abingdon, February 25, 2015  from 19:00 for 19:30

Barn Room, Crown and Thistle (18 Bridge St, Abingdon OX14 3HS)

TITLE: The Third Mode of Life – The Magic of Slime Molds

Networks are ubiquitous in modern society ranging from road, rail and utilitiesserpula rainbow 256 infrastructure to the internet, World Wide Web and social media. What makes a network useful is more challenging to define – typically there is benefit in rapid and efficient transfer of material or information across the network, but the network also needs to be resilient to damage or faults without substantially increasing the costs. We are studying biological organisms that grow as interconnected networks to try to infer how implementation of growth rules at a local scale can lead to emergence of robust and efficient adaptive networks on a large scale. Surprisingly, simple slime molds and fungal networks are capable of building networks with comparable properties to real-world infrastructure networks, but in the absence of any centralized control.

Speaker: Prof Mark Fricker

IMarkFricker started as an undergraduate reading Botany at Pembroke in 1981, followed by a PhD in Stirling on stomatal physiology with Colin Willmer in 1984, a post-doc in Edinburgh with Tony Trewavas on calcium signalling, before returning to Pembroke as a Fellow of Pembroke in 1989. I am currently an active researcher in the Plant Sciences Department.


TITLE: All the colours of the rainbow – Medieval and modern accounts of human colour perception

The De colore – Robert Grosseteste’s treatise on colour written c. 1225 – is a dense text of fewRainbow colourser than 400 words that presents an abstract account of the perceptual variation in colour, linked to specific properties of light and matter. It introduces new terminology in a way that assumes very tight definitions but that permits no straightforward translation or interpretation. We present an analysis of Grosseteste’s account of colour that draws upon his later treatise – the De iride – on the rainbow, which explicitly links the terminology of the De colore to properties of natural rainbows. A deeper understanding of the 13th century terminology is revealed by considering the physical constraints on colour production in rainbows, and the biological and psychological constraints on human colour perception – areas of science that are still active areas of discovery today.

Speaker: Prof Hannah Smithson

My research focuses on the neural mechanisms that underlie perception.Hannah 2014 Pembroke I am fascinated by how the eye and brain process visual information. My research addresses this question primarily through psychophysical experiments – inferring the perceptual processes that underlay particular patterns of human performance on tasks with carefully selected visual stimuli.

I am particularly interested in the perception of colour. How are the signals from the three classes of cone photoreceptors processed to give rise to our perceptions of hue, saturation and brightness? What are the neural circuits of comparison and combination that permit the efficient transmission of colour information from retina to cortex? How does our perception of colour depend on our ability to identify objects and light sources in the visual scene? I am also interested in the way in which our visual systems process rapid sequences of visual events – a sequence of changes in illumination, a sequence of images from successive fixations, or the complex trajectory of a moving object.

 

01/2016: What makes us Human (C. Pasternak)

Place and Time: Abingdon, January 28, 2015, 19:00 for 19:30

Barn Room, Crown and Thistle (18 Bridge St, Abingdon OX14 3HS)

TITLE: What makes us Human?

The talk will show that man’s unique behaviour is best explained by an apparent paradox. Man’s actions depend on the one hand on a fundamental3 chimps quality of all living organisms – the tendency to search – and on the other hand on a combination of human attributes that enable him to search more intensely than any other creature: to search for answers as well as for objects, to search out of curiosity as well as need.
Human attributes do not depend on typically human genes: they result from genes that are common to man and his closest relative, the chimpanzee. It is merely a few mutations within such genes that have enabled the one to dominate the globe, the other to be in danger of extinction.
Where will human quest lead man over the next 100 years, over the next million? Will it lead to his own destruction?

Speaker: Dr Charles Pasternak

Charles Pasternak is a biochemist by training. He taught at Oxford University and London University (St George’s Medical School: foundation Professor of Biochemistry) and his specialised area of research is the field of biological membranes. In 1992 Charles founded the Oxford International Biomedical Centre (OIBC), a charity that depends entirely on public support. It moved to Culham Innovation Centre in 2003. In his spare time Charles writes popular science books such as Quest: The Essence of Humanity and Blinkers: Scientific Ignorance and Evasion.

11/2015: AGM & Member Talks

Place and Time: Abingdon, Crown and Thistle, Barn Room, November 26, 2015 at 19:30

Agenda

  1. Annual General Meeting
    1. Welcome
    2. Apologies received
    3. Approval of the minutes of the Inaugural Meeting 2014 (Kings Head and Bell, Abingdon, 27 Nov 2014)
    4. Matters arising from the minutes
    5. Chairs Report (Carl Lloyd)
    6. Presentation of the accounts (Richard Gardner, Treasurer)
    7. Approval of the accounts
    8. Election of the Officers of the ATOM Society Committee
    9. Election of the Ordinary Members of the Standing Committee
    10. Any other business
  2. Member Talks
    1. Steve Vaughan, “How mobile phones work”
    2. George Kalmus, “Interesting people I met and their scientific legacy.”
  3. Feedback (time permitting)
    1. an opportunity for members of the ATOM Society to express their thoughts about the Society’s events and talks, past and future

10/2015: Diffusion of the Dead (T.Woolley)

Place and Time: Abingdon, October 22, 2015 at 19:30

new venue: Barn Room, Crown and Thistle (18 Bridge St, Abingdon OX14 3HS)

TITLE: Diffusion of the Dead

Knowing how long we havzombi2e before we interact with a zombie could mean the difference between life, death and zombification. Here, we apply the same mathematical models to zombies that you would use to describe flu, or measles. We use this model to derive exact and approximate interaction times and use these to develop strategies which allow the human race to survive impending doom

Speaker: Thomas Woolley

ThomasWoollyT. Woolley has been doing mathematics at University of Oxford since 2004 and now specialises in mathematical biology. His doctorate understanding the pattern formation behind fish spots and zebra stripes, but now he researches mathematical models of stem cells movement. The hope is that by understanding how stem cells move we can influence them and, thus, speed up the healing process.

When not doing mathematics he is a keen participant in mathematical outreach workshops and has given a variety of popular maths lectures nationally and internationally. He has previously worked for the BBC, illustrated Marcus du Sautoy’s book and he recently worked on the popular maths show “Dara O’Briains school of hard sums”. He is currently the Fellow of Modern Mathematics at the London Science Museum and is helping redesign their mathematics gallery.