organization:university of edinburgh

  • Anderson Tan — The Renaissance Man
    https://hackernoon.com/anderson-tan-the-renaissance-man-842fcc7ab3e3?source=rss----3a8144eabfe3

    Anderson Tan: The Renaissance ManAnderson Tan — The Renaissance Man first appeared on Blockleaders, written by Jillian Godsil on 4th October 2018Anderson Tan is positively voracious in his search for knowledge and learning. In 2014, while between jobs (and by jobs I mean having sold two companies and being involved in real estate before casting about for a new adventure), he studied continuously computer science, physics, entrepreneurship, philosophy, technology, coding, creative problem solving, space, music among other things through online learning platforms operated by Stanford, MIT, Harvard, Wharton, Yale, Princeton, Babson, Berkeley, Northwestern, IBM, Linux, University of London, University of Edinburgh, University of Oxford, University of Tokyo and many more.He is a graduate of the (...)

    #startup #blockchain #cryptocurrency #angel-investors #profile

  • [Appli] The Vistorian | Benjamin Bach et al.

    Attention pépite.

    The Vistorian (anciennement NetworkCube) est une famille d’applications web d’exploration et de co-géo-visualisation de réseaux complexes par domaine (thématique). Gratuite, libre et ouverte, elle est développée par un collectif interdisciplinaire (Bach et al., 2015).
    –-> http://vistorian.net

    The Vistorian est l’appli. dédiée aux humanités numériques (!), pour leur permettre d’explorer de manière dynamique des réseaux temporels catégoriels (ou typés), temporels, géographiques ou multiples.

    https://pic.infini.fr/qdi4k1Xj/YbTaj6sv.PNG

    A noter que "ConnectoScope" développée par le même ensemble, est dédiée aux neuroscientifiques, pour visualiser des réseaux neuronaux fonctionnels ("brain connectivity networks").

    The Vistorian est intéressante, d’abord parce qu’elle propose de charger son propre jeu de données, une matrice (.csv) ; ensuite parce qu’elle permet de le représenter selon plusieurs modalités graphiques (sur le modèle de la variante) ce jeu de données : sous la forme de graphe (analyse de la structure, morphologie), de matrice bloquée (analyse de l’ordonnancement, des relations), de carte (analyse de la géographie des relations) et de diagramme en bande (analyse temporelle, de l’évolution des relations). Enfin, parce qu’elle est facile d’utilisation et fluide...

    https://pic.infini.fr/pZ20AnsP/sYkFhM4y.PNG

    –> Voir une présentation en ligne : https://networkcube.github.io/networkcube/web/index.html#video_div
    –> ou consulter les librairies sur leur dépôt : https://github.com/networkcube/networkcube

    Ces développements résultent d’une collaboration entre Benjamin Bach (The University of Edinburgh), Jean-Daniel Fekete (Inria), Nicole Dufournaud (EHESS, LaDéHIS et Histoire du genre) et Nathalie Henry Riche (Microsoft Research).

    Référence : Benjamin Bach, Nathalie Henry Riche, Roland Fernandez, Emmanoulis Giannisakis, Bongshin Lee, Jean-Daniel Fekete. « NetworkCube : Bringing Dynamic Network Visualizations to Domain Scientists ». Posters of the Conference on Information Visualization (InfoVis), Oct 2015, Chicago, United States.
    https://hal.inria.fr/hal-01205822/document

    –> A noter que le tutoriel sera présenté par Benjamin Bach dans un webinar des TutoM@te, le 18 octobre (14h30-18h30). Contacts : Benoit Tudoux : benoit.tudoux<at>univ-tlse2.fr / Viviane Le Hay : v.le.hay<at>sciencespobordeaux.fr

    #flowmap #cartedeflux #matriceOD #reseau #covisualisation #application #gflowiz #graphe #carte

  • University of Glasgow :: Story :: Biography of Mortimer Sackler
    https://www.universitystory.gla.ac.uk/biography/?id=WH27277&type=P

    Dr Mortimer Sackler (1916-2010) was an American physician and entrepreneur. He was Chairman and co-Chief Executive of Purdue Pharma, a leading American pharmaceuticals company. Alongside his brothers Arthur and Raymond, he used his fortune from the pharmaceutical industry to become a prominent philanthropist and he greatly supported the University of Glasgow.

    Sackler was born on 7th December 1916 in Brooklyn to Isaac and Sophie (nee Greenberg), Polish Jewish immigrant Brooklyn grocers. After attending Erasmus Hall High School, Sackler sailed to the UK in 1937 and, with the help of Glasgow’s Jewish community, enrolled at Anderson’s College of Medicine, an institution that became part of the University of Glasgow in 1947. He attended the College between 1937-1939. His brothers Arthur and Raymond also studied at Anderson’s College in the years 1937-39 and 1938-40 respectively. Mortimer Sackler was prevented from finishing his degree at the University by the outbreak of the Second World War and finished his MD degree in Massachusetts. Dr Mortimer Sackler and his brothers bought the New York pharmaceuticals company Purdue Frederick Co in 1952. All three were research psychiatrists.

    Mortimer Sackler received an honorary degree from the University of Glasgow in 2001 for his support of the University. He funded the Sackler Institute of Psychobiological Research, a research unit at the Southern General Hospital which investigates neuro-psychiatric disorders in association with the Sackler Institute at the University of Edinburgh. The Institute was opened in 2004.

    Dr Mortimer Sackler died on 24th March 2010.

    #Opioides #Sackler #Mortimer_Sackler

  • Male contraceptive pill is safe to use and does not harm sex drive, first clinical trial finds
    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2018/03/18/male-contraceptive-pill-safe-use-does-not-harm-sex-drive-first

    male contraceptive pill has been developed which is effective, safe and does not harm sex drive, scientists have announced.

    In what has been described as a “major step forward”, the drug was successfully tested on 83 men for a month for the first time.

    So far efforts to create a once-daily pill to mimic the mainstream female contraceptive have stalled because men metabolise and clear out the hormones it delivers too quickly.

    It means temporary male contraception has relied on condoms alone, with the main hopes for future contraceptive developments resting on a long-acting injection or topical gel, both of which are also under development.

    However, the new drug, called dimethandrolone undecanoate, or DMAU, includes a long-chain fatty acid which slows down the clearance, allowing just one dose to be taken each day.

    Like the pill for women, the experimental pill combines activity of an androgen - a male hormone such as testosterone - and a progestin.

    Investigators at the University of Washington Medical Centre tested three doses of DMAU - 100, 200 and 400mg - on 100 healthy men between 18 to 50 years old, 83 of whom completed the study.

    Contraception innovations
    Male hormone injections

    Progestogen jabs to cut off sperm production were found to be 96 per cent effective in clinical trials at University of Edinburgh last year. Research stalled due to side effects, including depression, mood disorders, libido changes and acne (which may sound familiar to women who’ve used the contraceptive pill)
    Male contraceptive gel

    A non-hormonal and non-surgical ‘reversible’ vasectomy, Vasalgel would be injected into the vas deferens, the small duct between the testicles and the urethra, to block sperm from being released. After successful tests on animals, the first clinical trials are expected to be finished in 2020.
    Contraceptive chip

    A computer-activated version of the levonorgestrel implant, this device being developed at MIT could last 16 years and let women turn off the hormone release using a wireless remote control.
    Unisex pill

    Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley are testing a Catsper blocker, to stop sperm from entering and fertilising an egg. In women, it would be effective within a short window after sex. In men, it could work like the daily contraceptive pill, but it is unlikely to be on shelves for at least a decade.

    They were subject to blood sampling for hormone and cholesterol testing on the first and last days of the study.

    At the highest dose of DMAU tested, 400 mg, subjects showed “marked suppression” of levels of their testosterone and two hormones required for sperm production.

    The results showed that the pill worked only if taken with food. “Despite having low levels of circulating testosterone, very few subjects reported symptoms consistent with testosterone deficiency or excess,” said Professor Stephanie Page, senior investigator on the study.

    “These promising results are unprecedented in the development of a prototype male pill,” All groups taking DMAU experienced some weight gain, as well decreases in HDL ("good") cholesterol.

    However, all subjects passed their safety tests, including markers of liver and kidney function. “DMAU is a major step forward in the development of a once-daily ’male pill’,” said Professor Page.

    “Many men say they would prefer a daily pill as a reversible contraceptive, rather than long-acting injections or topical gels, which are also in development.”

    Contraceptive pills for females have been available for almost 70 years, although the only achieved widespread use in Britain, including availability on the NHS, in 1961.

    However, other than the condom, which were first invented in 1855, there have never been a temporary male contraceptive.

    16 types of birth control you need to know about - plus their pros and cons

    #contraception_masculine

  • Edinburgh principal faces revolt by 300 professors over pensions

    The new principal of Scotland’s largest university is facing a revolt from hundreds of senior staff members over his refusal to speak out against a “devastating” downgrade to their pensions.

    More than 300 professors at the University of Edinburgh have signed an open letter to Peter Mathieson, urging him to join calls for Universities UK (UUK) to back down in an industrial dispute that has caused disruption on campuses across Britain.


    https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/f6a6234e-1bff-11e8-95c3-8b5a448e6e58
    #université #UK #Angleterre (oui, je sais, je sais... mais c’est pour le retrouver) #Ecosse #Edimbourg #université_d'Edimbourg #retraites #résistance

  • Scientists Discover 91 Volcanoes Hidden Beneath Antarctic Ice Sheet
    https://www.forbes.com/sites/trevornace/2017/08/14/scientists-discover-91-volcanos-lying-beneath-antarctic-ice-sheet

    What is troubling scientists is the ability for these volcanoes, if they erupted, to cause wide scale melting and breakup of Antarctica’s ice sheets. The research was conducted by a group of geologists at the University of Edinburgh and recently published in a special publication of the Geological Society of London.

    #antarctique #volcans #climat

  • Foreign Policy Centre: Publications / Europe and the people: Examining the EU’s democratic legitimacy

    http://fpc.org.uk/publications/eudemocratic

    Europe and the people: Examining the EU’s democratic legitimacy
    [Cover of Europe and the people: Examining the EU’s democratic legitimacy ]

    Adam Hug (Ed.)

    June 2016

    Download Europe and the people (2.15 megabyte PDF)

    Europe and the people: Examining the EU’s democratic legitimacy examines the concerns across Europe around the democratic legitimacy of EU institutions and the European project as whole. It looks at how the debate about EU democratic legitimacy fits within the broader context of a crisis of institutions at both the national and global levels, particularly in the wake of the 2008 economic crisis. The publication explores the mechanisms through which EU institutions seek to gain democratic legitimacy and how they try to engage the public, comparing and contrasting with other organisations at the national and international levels. It places the debate around European democratic legitimacy within the context of the UK referendum on EU membership, as well as the fallout from the Greek debt crisis. It sets out ideas for potential improvements in how the EU operates to increase its democratic legitimacy and accountability but recognises that some of the challenges will persist irrespective of efforts to reform.

    This publication contains contributions from: Dr Jim Buller, University of York; Professor Damian Chalmers, LSE; Oli Henman, Civicus; Dr Victoria Honeyman, University of Leeds; Adam Hug (ed.), Foreign Policy Centre; Professor James Mitchell, University of Edinburgh; Dr Marina Prentoulis, UEA; Adriaan Schout and Hedwich van der Bij, Clingendael; and Dr Matthew Wood, University of Sheffield.This publication is supported by the European Commission Representation in the UK Call for Proposals for civil society organisations 2015-16.

    #europe

  • #Memoryscape

    Enjoy two of the most dramatic riverside walks in London and hear the voices of people whose lives have been entwined with the Thames. These sound walks take place at some of the most fascinating stretches of the river Thames. You can listen as you walk with a CD player, ipod or MP3 player. Click on the links below to explore the trails

    http://www.memoryscape.org.uk
    #son #ballade_sonore #rivière #fleuve #Londres #Angleterre #UK
    cc @daphne

    • Echoes of Blackburn Meadows

      The most recent stint of conservation work at Blackburn Meadows by BTCV is now in its final stages. Over the past four weeks, volunteers have worked in all weathers to complete the vital improvements that will lay the foundations for Echoes of Blackburn Meadows. Tasks have comprised draining footpaths, laying new surfaces and removing masses of unwanted litter, bracken and Buddleia.

      http://www.sheffieldelectricity.com/uploads/blackburn-meadows-power-station-1.JPG
      http://www.sheffieldelectricity.com
      #Sheffield

    • Scottish National Gallery soundwalk

      We* wanted to create a soundwalk through the Old Town, narrated by interviews with people working in various jobs across central Edinburgh. We soon, however, saw this as a long-term project, after numerous refusals from potential interviewees.
      After we received the cold shoulder to do an interview with the proprietors of the seasonally blind Christmas Shop, we headed to Oxgangs, a 1950s suburb to the city’s southwest. The area has some striking signage and architecture, particularly the bell tower of St. John’s church.

      We took the number 4 bus back in to the city centre, and walked east. Posters for a Scottish photography retrospective in the Scottish National Gallery drew us in. The exhibit was strong, but it was small, so we walked around the permanent collection. As we walked through the rooms among the paintings and marble busts, we got on to the topic of gallery audio tours. How fun would it be to make our own? The idea started to unfurl and was built over repeat trips.

      We realized there was a wealth of re-interpretations to be made, as we started to assign songs and other texts that seemed to fit, however esoterically, with what we were seeing. We also paid attention to the experience of being in the gallery, especially the sounds of each room.

      The Scottish National Gallery soundwalk is an audio tour played out in real time that can be listened to anywhere (try it out in your local gallery).

      http://12gatestothecity.com/projects/scottish-national-gallery
      #art #musée

    • P r o j e c t D e t a i l : A R e c o r d o f F e a r

      A Record of Fear was a commission for Contemporary #Art in Historic Places, a partnership between the National Trust, English Heritage and Commissions East in which three artists were invited to create new work inspired by historic properties.

      Once a secret military testing site and now a nature reserve, #Orford_Ness temporarily played host to a series of audio and video works exploring aspects of broadcast and transmission.

      The viewing gallery of the #Black_Beacon building - used to develop an experimental navigation device - was the location for an audio work, which used manipulated sound recordings from the Ness. Visitors were invited to listen carefully to what is already there as well as what is generally inaudible to the human ear. An array of contact mics, hydrophones, ultrasonic recorders and regular microphones had been used to capture the subtle ambient sounds of the site.

      The Exmoor Choir were invited to perform madrigals in some of the remaining military buildings, once used for environmental testing of the atomic bomb. The human presence singing songs of love and an awareness of the passing of time provided a poignant counterpoint to the stark and disturbing interiors. A specially commissioned piece by Yannis Kyriakides entitled “U” provided a meditation on the passing of time.

      For one-day only, visitors were allowed to enter some normally inaccessible test laboratories that become locations for sound installations, including the sited recording of a working centrifuge at AWE Aldermaston which was formerly in use at AWRE Orfordness.

      http://www.lkwilson.org/index.php?m=proj&id=26&sub=images&prev=

    • Experimental Research Network

      The Experimental Research Network is a space for academics, artists and anyone else who has an interest in creative experimentation with research practice.

      Currently, the network includes academics using experimental audio and visual methods in their research, researchers using experimental narrative, textual and print-based methods, sound artists, avant-garde film makers, photographers, performance artists and musicians.

      The aims of the Network are:

      – To actively promote and encourage experimentation within research practice, helping to create an enlarged and enlivened sense of what research might encompass

      – To initiate and coordinate experimental research events – conferences, workshops, meetings

      – To distribute and share information about relevant events and funding opportunities

      – To foster new links between individuals and institutions working experimentally with research methods

      In short, we aim to bring together people who are using creative, innovative, novel, or risky research practices in their work, regardless of their location, affiliation or research topic, in a way that is mutually supportive, intellectually stimulating and fun. If this sounds like your thing, why not join us?

      The Experimental Research Network was initiated in 2010 by Dr Michael Gallagher and Jonathan Prior, both currently based at The University of Edinburgh, Scotland. It developed out of an international training and networking project funded by the UK Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC).

      https://experimentalnetwork.wordpress.com

  • James Barry
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Barry_%28surgeon%29

    James Miranda Stuart Barry (vers 1789-1799 – 25 juillet 1865, née Margaret Ann Bulkley) est un chirurgien militaire dans l’armée britannique. Après son diplôme de l’University of Edinburgh Medical School, Barry sert en Inde et au Cap, en Afrique du Sud. À la fin de sa carrière, il atteint le grade d’inspecteur général chargé des hôpitaux militaires. Dans ses voyages, il a non seulement amélioré les conditions des soldats blessés, mais aussi les conditions des habitants indigènes. Parmi ses réalisations, on trouve la première césarienne en Afrique par un chirurgien britannique par laquelle la mère et l’enfant ont tous deux survécu à l’opération1.

    Bien que Barry a vécu sa vie d’adulte en tant qu’homme, il est estimé qu’il est né de sexe féminin, élevé comme une fille, sous le nom de Margaret Ann Bulkley, et qu’il a choisi de vivre comme un homme pour être accepté comme étudiant à l’université et poursuivre une carrière de chirurgien. Il serait en quelque sorte la première femme médecin britannique.


    Dr James Barry (left) with a servant and his dog Psyche, c. 1862, Jamaica

    #historicisation #travestis

  • Edinburgh University ends funding for US drone component maker
    http://www.theguardian.com/education/2013/sep/29/edinburgh-university-ends-funding-drone

    A leading UK university is ending its £1.2m investment in a defence company that makes components for lethal US drones because it says the business is not “socially responsible”.

    The University of Edinburgh has bowed to pressure from students and campaign groups and is withdrawing funding from Ultra Electronics. The company, headquartered at Greenford in Middlesex, makes navigation controls for the US fleet of Predator and Reaper unmanned aerial vehicles.

    #drones

  • 400 Years of Women Removing Their Body Hair - Jezebel
    http://jezebel.com/5969490/400-years-of-women-removing-their-body-hair

    If you’ve ever cursed the depilatory gods for why you feel you must shave your pits for summertime or wax your entire pubic area so that no man should tremble asunder at the sight of one errant hair, you’ve probably reached into the typical goody bag of suspects in search of a guilty party: pop culture, lady mags, Brazil, porn. Those are all good ones, and I say let’s keep them in our sights evermore, because they are definitely up to something. But it appears — says Jill Burke, lecturer in Italian renaissance art history at the University of Edinburgh — that all this obsessive hair eradication goes back a lot further back than a few decades of porn-induced frenzy, and that we may simply add “all history forever” to our list of female hair fascists. Or at least half a century.

    #épilation

    • Ou directement le papier original

      Did renaissance women remove their body hair? -
      Jill Burke’s Blog
      http://renresearch.wordpress.com/2012/12/09/did-renaissance-women-remove-their-body-hair

      Sandra Cavallo has noted an “explosion in treatments for facial appearance” in the sixteenth century, as propagated by the proliferation of household recipe books – often titled “books of secrets”. These books are full of all sorts of recipes that might be useful for the household including many for what we’d consider cosmetic use. Alongside the reams of advice on creating the perfect complexion – recipes for A cheap easy liquor which can be used to keep your skin smooth, soft and shiny, or a lotion To remove every kind of mark from the face and …keep the skin looking lovely, or Waters to make one look twenty or twenty-five years old, there is indeed advice on how to remove hair from every part of the body in all of these books I have consulted. The renewed interest in facial cosmetics was, then, matched by an explosion in treatments for body hair removal. The Renaissance could, indeed be called a golden age of depilation.

    • Cette remarque à la fin me parle beaucoup :

      Terry Eagleton, in his After Theory of 2001 said “not all students of culture are blind to the Western narcissism involved in working on the history of pubic hair while half the world’s population lacks adequate sanitation and survives on less than 2 dollars a day”.

      As several outraged pubic hair specialists have noted (and yes, they do exist), research into women’s personal grooming habits is, in many ways the study of systems of inequality – particularly the internalisation of the notion that a woman’s body is imperfect unless it is somehow modified.

    • « particularly the internalisation of the notion that a woman’s body is imperfect unless it is somehow modified »
      La bonne nouvelle c’est que désormais cette notion s’étend aux hommes aussi (cf témoignage Agnès Maillard sur les rugbymen épilés..) , on ne pourra plus parler d’inégalité du coup.. :-)

      Je rigole, mais ça me désespère...
      Barbie et Ken ont façonné en profondeur notre vision de l’humain : ne pas assumer notre appartenance au règne animal, se distinguer sur la forme, mais pas sur le fond. Distinction sexiste, physiologique, mythe de la pureté, volonté de s’émanciper de la nature peut être... Sauf que nos instincts prédateurs, pour ne pas dire anthropophages, tels qu’ils se manifestent dans la sphère économique, bizarrement on cherche moins à s’en débarrasser que de nos poils..