Science and Beers

By: Michael Magee
  • Summary

  • Beer fuelled science talk, with scientists. A new hot topic each episode.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Michael Magee
    Show More Show Less
Episodes
  • Fat Cells
    Jul 3 2021

    Fat cells are specialised to store large amounts of fat that act as metabolic energy depots. However, fat cells carry out many other vital functions such as appetite regulation. Fat cells can talk to each other, the brain and the other organs. In this episode, Professor Susanne Mandrup talks about fat cells, as well as the epigenetics and DNA associated with fat cells and metabolic disease.


    Ph.D. Susanne Mandrup is Professor at Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at SDU where she serves as Director of the Center of Excellence in Functional Genomics and Tissue Plasticity (ATLAS) and Center for Adipocyte Signaling (ADIPOSIGN), as well as Head of the Functional Genomics & Metabolism Research Unit. Click here for more information about ATLAS and ADIPOSIGN.


    Professor Susanne Mandrup is an elected member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, Academia Europaea, AcademiaNet, and the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) and Knight of the Order of Dannebrog.


    For more information about Professor Susanne Mandrup, please refer to the SDU Research Portal.


    Follow Susanne on Twitter @susmandrup


    Please fill out our podcast review form to help us evaluate the season.


    Follow us and get in touch.

    Twitter: @Science_Beers, @DanishIAS

    Facebook: @Scienceandbeers, @DanishIAS

    Email: scienceandbeers@gmail.com

    www.scienceandbeers.com/podcast

    Sign up for our newsletter.


    This season of the podcast is made with the support from the Danish Institute for Advanced Study. Follow their Lecture series.


    This podcast is hosted by Michael Magee.

    Cheers to Science!


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    53 mins
  • Football is Medicine
    Jun 25 2021

    "Football is medicine, football is for everyone, football is for life." That's the message from Peter Krustrup as we have a beer and a chat at the Euro 2020 Fan Zone is Copenhagen. Episode recorded June 24th, 2021. You can find some pictures of the meeting here.


    Peter is Chair of Health Sciences at the Danish Institute for Advanced Study. He is Professor of Sport and Health Sciences at the Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics at SDU and Honorary Visiting Professor at University of Exeter, United Kingdom and Shanghai University of Sport, China. He is also a UEFA Pro-License football coach, currently working as Fitness Coach for the Danish Women’s National Team.


    He initiated the international “Football is Medicine” platform with more than 250 researchers from 25 countries. Football is medicine is the result of a 15 year study with 150 peer-reviewed articles.


    Peter's research interests consist of two main areas: Fitness and health effects of physical activity across the lifespan with special reference to team. This includes investigations of the link between the locomotor activities and physiological demands of various sports disciplines and other types of physical activity types, the cardio-vascular, metabolic and musculoskeletal adaptations after short and long-term interventions, and the potential for prevention, treatment and rehabilitation of lifestyle related diseases, such as hypertension, obesity, type 2 diabetes and osteoporosis, and also for men with prostate cancer and women with breast cancer.


    Secondly he examines sports performance, fatigue, training and testing of male and female elite athletes. This includes analysis of physiological demands and locomotor activities in training and match-play for elite athletes and the general population, fatigue, recovery, development of sport-specific testing protocols, reliability and validity of tests in relation to sports performance, effects of aerobic training, anaerobic training, strength training, sprint training and agility training for elite and recreational athletes and effects of environmental factors, playing surface and diet manipulation on performance and recovery.


    Find more links to Peter's research here or on Twitter @sdusport


    Please fill out our podcast review form to help us evaluate the season.


    Follow us and get in touch.

    Twitter: @Science_Beers, @DanishIAS

    Facebook: @Scienceandbeers, @DanishIAS

    Email: scienceandbeers@gmail.com

    www.scienceandbeers.com/podcast

    Sign up for our newsletter.


    This season of the podcast is made with the support from the Danish Institute for Advanced Study. Follow their Lecture series.


    This podcast is hosted by Michael Magee.

    Cheers to Science!


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    53 mins
  • Educational Philosophy
    Jun 18 2021

    In this episode, I speak with Professor Nina Bonderup Dohn about education and knowledge transfer. Nina is a Senior Fellow og Humanities and the Danish Institute for Advanced Study (DIAS). For further insights into her research, watch her DIAS lecture "Designing for situated knowledge in a world of change."


    MA, Ph.D, Dr.phil Nina Bonderup Dohn is Professor in Learning and ICT at the Department of Design and Communication at the University of Southern Denmark.


    She is Head of the Center for Learning Computational Thinking, an interdisciplinary center involving researchers from the Faculty of Humanities (Department of Design and Communication and Department for the Study of Culture), the Faculty of Science (Department of Mathematics and Computer Science) and the Faculty of Engineering (Maersk-McKinney Moller Institute). She also leads the research program Learning, Design and Digitalization at the Department of Design and Communication. She currently (2020-2024) holds a research grant from Independent Research Fund Denmark for the project Designing for Situated Computational Thinking with Computational Things which involves researchers from three Danish universities and four international ones (in Great Britain, Australia, and the Netherlands). She recently finalized another project, Designing for Situated Knowledge in a World of Change, also financed by Independent Research Fund Denmark


    In 2004, she was awarded the Teaching Prize for the Faculty of Humanities, upon nomination from her students.


    Her research field bridges between epistemology, learning theory, and cognitive theory, and does so both philosophically and in terms of the development and testing of concrete designs for learning in practice, with a special focus on the role of ICT. Interdisciplinarity is key in her work, including the metaphilosophical explication of the roles philosophy can have in relation to other disciplines. Her research centers on questions such as what human knowledge is, how it is developed, how one can facilitate others’ in developing knowledge, and what roles technology can play.


    Follow us and get in touch.

    Twitter: @Science_Beers, @DanishIAS

    Facebook: @Scienceandbeers, @DanishIAS

    Email: scienceandbeers@gmail.com

    www.scienceandbeers.com/podcast

    Sign up for our newsletter.


    This season of the podcast is made with the support from the Danish Institute for Advanced Study. Follow their Lecture series.


    This podcast is hosted by Michael Magee.

    Cheers to Science!




    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins

What listeners say about Science and Beers

Average Customer Ratings

Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.

In the spirit of reconciliation, Audible acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.