We are delighted to announceHay Festival Digital#Imaginetheworld which will be free to view and runs 18–31 May 2020. We have worked hard to ensure our virtual Festival doors are wide open and look forward to sharing Hay Festival Digital with you.
ֱ̽Hay Festival is one of the most prestigious cultural and literary events in the world.
ֱ̽ ֱ̽ of Cambridge has partnered with the Festival for 11 years to deliver ֱ̽Cambridge Series which gives a taste of the research being conducted at the ֱ̽.
ֱ̽Cambridge Series at Hay Festival Digital 2020
Sally Davies
Join us online:Saturday 23 May 2020, 5.30pm – 6.15pm
Virtual venue:Baillie Gifford Digital Stage
Antibiotics add, on average, twenty years to our lives. For over seventy years, since the manufacture of penicillin in 1943, we have survived extraordinary operations and life-threatening infections. We are so familiar with these wonder drugs that we take them for granted. ֱ̽truth is that we have been abusing them: as patients, as doctors, as travellers, in our food.No new class of antibacterial has been discovered for twenty six years and the bugs are fighting back. If we do not take responsibility now, in a few decades we may start dying from the most commonplace of operations and ailments that can today be treated easily.
Professor Dame Sally C. Davies was the Chief Medical Officer for England and the first woman to hold the post. She holds a number of international advisory positions and is Master of Trinity College, Cambridge. Introduced byMagdalena Skipper, Editor in Chief ofNature.
This event is live and there will be a Q&A afterwards.
Dan Storisteanu, Julia Fan Li, Emma Glennon and Samir Ali Khan, chaired by Dan Davis
Join us online:Wednesday 27 May 2020, 11.30am
Virtual venue:Llwyfan Cymru Digidol – Wales Digital Stage
Four exceptional innovators in the field of vaccination introduce their work on some of the world's biggest medicalchallenges, and discuss the scope and scale of vaccine development and its importance for global health.
Dr Julia Fan Li is CEO ofMicrographiaBio,a London-based venture backed company working at the intersection of software and biology. Our proprietary technology mines multidimensional data acquired during pharmaceutical research. Whereas traditional drug discovery asks the question: “which of these million molecules can cure this specific disease?” We ask the opposite question: "given this specific chemical compound, which disease is it best suited to cure?". By mapping each chemical to its true activity, we are engineering the chemical atlas for modern drug discovery. If Micrographia had existed 12 months ago, we would have a potential therapeutic candidate for COVID-19 in real time.
Samir Ali Khan is a health innovation and market access professional focusing on commercialisation and market access of futuristic technologies, from genomics and AI-led discovery and diagnostics to healthcare system transformation. He is the co-founder of Lighthouse Innovations Ltd, an Oxford-based strategy consultancy advising several global impact-focused start-ups and entrepreneurs on international market access, payer engagement on value-based pricing and risk-sharing agreements. Samir is also co-inventor of a vaccine for Hepatitis E in India and drug targets in neurological and cardiovascular diseases in the UK.
EmmaGlennonis an infectious disease epidemiologist who examines why new diseases emerge,working at the intersections of ecology,data science, and the social and economic determinants of disease. She is interested in how technology in an unequal world can counteract or contribute to the spread of disease. She has worked on epidemiological research and outbreak response around the world, including in the UK, India, Australia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Dan Storisteanu is a co-founder of Simprints, where he focuses on research, testing, and deployment of a biometric system for global health applications. In his work with another Cambridge start-up, DIOSynVax, Dan supports efforts to develop Ebola, influenza, and Covid vaccines. He is a Research Fellow at Darwin College, ֱ̽ of Cambridge and a Forbes 30 Under 30 Social Entrepreneur.
Dan Davis is Professor of Immunology at the ֱ̽ of Manchester and author of ֱ̽Beautiful Cure.
David Spiegelhalter
Join us online:Wednesday 27 May 2020, 6.30pm – 7.15pm
Virtual venue:Baillie Gifford Digital Stage
Do busier hospitals have higher survival rates? How many trees are there on the planet? Why do old men have big ears? David Spiegelhalter reveals the answers to these and many other questions - questions that can only be addressed using statistical science.
Statistics has played a leading role in our scientific understanding of the world for centuries, yet we are all familiar with the way statistical claims can be sensationalised, particularly in the media. In the age of big data, as data science becomes established as a discipline, a basic grasp of statistical literacy is more important than ever.
In ֱ̽Art of Statistics, David Spiegelhalter guides the reader through the essential principles we need in order to derive knowledge from data. Drawing on real world problems to introduce conceptual issues, he shows us how statistics can help us determine the luckiest passenger on the Titanic, whether serial killer Harold Shipman could have been caught earlier, and if screening for ovarian cancer is beneficial.
'Shines a light on how we can use the ever-growing deluge of data to improve our understanding of the world' –Nature.
This event is live and there will be a Q&A afterwards.
ֱ̽2019Hay Festival ranfrom 25th May to 2nd June, you can catch up and listen tosome of the 2019 events below.
25th May
Emily Shuckburgh
Dr Emily Shuckburgh is a climate scientist and mathematician and co-author of the Ladybird book on climate change. Shespokeabout her research on modelling localised effects of climate change.
Sander van der Linden
How do we counter fake news and can we inoculate public opinion about misinformation? Dr Sander van der Linden is Director of the Cambridge Social Decision-Making Lab and is investigating the psychological mechanisms behind the spread of misinformation.
26th May
Nicole Soranzo
ֱ̽sequencing of the human genome has revolutionised how scientists search for the genetic causes of human diseases. Human geneticist Professor Nicole Soranzodescribed how the field has evolved in the last 15 years, and discussed how new genetic evidence is used to better understand the interplay between our DNA (‘nature’) and the environment (‘nurture’).
27th May
Victoria Bateman
ֱ̽Industrial Revolution brings to mind famous male inventors and industrialists. In her new book economist Victoria Bateman instead argues that the everyday woman underpinned Britain’s – and indeed the West’s - rise.
28th May
Christopher Reynolds
Black holes are nature’s most extreme objects. Professor Christopher Reynoldsdescribed how they stretch our understanding of space-time to the limits and power some of the most energetic phenomena in the Universe.
Bill Sutherland
Bill Sutherland, who holds the Miriam Rothschild Chair in Conservation Biology at the ֱ̽ of Cambridge,described attempts to make global evidence available to all, improve the effectiveness of experts and change attitudes toward the use of evidence, especially in relation to conservation.
Anthony Shillito and Neil Davies
Throughout its ancient history, the UK has been home to many amazing creatures that are now long extinct. From dinosaurs to giant millipedes, discover how these animals shaped the land around them and what secrets are held within their prehistoric footprints.
29th May
Adrian Weller
AdrianWelleris Programme Director for AI at ֱ̽Alan Turing Institute, where he is also a Turing Fellow leading a group on Fairness, Transparency and Privacy. In addition he is a senior research fellow at the Leverhulme Centre for the Future of Intelligence leading work on Trust and Transparency and is on theboard of the firstCentre for Data Ethics and Innovation and a lecturer in machine learning. For his Hay talk, heexaminedthe implications of machine learning and artificial intelligence for society and the importance of ethics, trust and transparency.
Martin Jones
Professor Martin Jones is Emeritus Professor of Archaeological Science at the ֱ̽ of Cambridge and a member of its Global Food Security research centre. An expert in archaeobotany and archaeogenetics, hediscussed how our prehistoric ancestors built resilience into their food supply and what we can learn from them.
30th May
Mike Kenny, Eluned Morgan and Adam Price
What are the Brexit implications for Wales and for the coherence of the United Kingdom. Professor Kenny is co-director of the British Academy’s “Governing England” programme, and is a member of an external experts panel convened by the Scottish Parliament to advise on the constitutional implications of Brexit. Morgan is Welsh Government Minister for International Relations and the Welsh Language. Price is leader of Plaid Cymru.
31st May
Tyler Shores
What is the difference between reading in print and digital? How is our reading experience affected in a digital age where we are prone to endless distractions? Writer, editor and researcher Tyler Shores exploredhis latest research.
Paul Fletcher
Paul Fletcher is Bernard Wolfe Professor of Health Neuroscience at the ֱ̽ of Cambridge. A central principle of his research is that the brain is occupied in the process of forming predictions and associations to minimise error and uncertainty and to maximise reward. In many instances the processes engaged with this goal can conflict with underlying automatic and habitual processes, shaping our decisions and behaviours. ֱ̽end result may be that our behaviours can seem irrational and in conflict with our longer term goals and plans. Given that major global non-communicable diseases are profoundly influenced by health-harming decisions and behaviours, understanding how body, brain and environmental signals are integrated and how they shape these behaviours will be a crucial part of improving health.
1st June
Fiona Maine
What is the potential of complex, ambiguous wordless picturebooks and short films as springboards for children’s critical and creative discussions about the world and how we live together in it? Fiona Maine is a lecturer in literacy education at the ֱ̽ of Cambridge.
2nd June
MorganSeag,RagnhildFrengDale,ChandrikaNathwithMelody Clark
Does having more women involved in climate change-related research make a difference to discussions? What kind of adaptations will be required as global warming increases and how do we bring a broad range of the public on board, particularly with regard to the more complex issues around climate change? Panel discussion with Morgan Seag, co-chair of the international council of the Association of Polar Early Career Scientists, anthropologist Ragnhild Freng Dale from the Scott Polar Research Institute and the Western Norway Research Institute, Chandrika Nath, executive director of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, and Professor Melody Clark from the British Antarctic Survey.
Catherine Aiken
We’re constantly bombarded by advice on what pregnant women should do - but what does science really tell us about how early development impacts on future health? Dr Catherine Aiken, ֱ̽ Lecturer and Honorary Consultant in Maternal and Fetal Medicine, exploredhow life in the womb affects not only our children’s lifelong health and well-being, but maybe even our grandchildren too.
Other ֱ̽ of Cambridge speakers at the Festival included Professor Martin Rees, neuroscientist Giles Yeo, author and lecturer Robert Macfarlane and neuroscientist Hannah Critchlow. Charlie Gilderdale, NRICH Project Secondary Coordinator, ran maths masterclasses with Alison Eves from the Royal Institution.