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Under Laboratory Conditions

I’m surprised and pleased to note that threespeed79 has uploaded the series on to youtube. You can watch the whole thing via the playlist.

Originally broadcast BBC FOUR television 9pm, Wednesdays 11th and 18th January 2006.

In this 2 part series UCL neurobiologist Dr Daniel Glaser takes a journey around Britain’s labs and scientific institutions to find out how science really works and what goes on behind the white coat. Nobel prize winners, professors, lecturers and PhD students reveal what it’s like to be a scientist, what motivates them, what the levers and mechanisms are that drive a scientific career and the joys and frustrations of being involved in research. For many scientists like Prof Richard Templar at Imperial College, the thrill is of the new:

All of a sudden you’ve discovered something that nobody else understands and it’s like being an explorer and discovering a new continent. It’s the most wonderful feeling.

Yet for even the most successful, the journey to discovery is arduous. Dr Tim Hunt won a nobel prize in 2001 for working out what controls cell division and cancer:

Anybody who says that it’s an easy life being a scientist hasn’t really grappled with nature. Most of the time you don’t understand what’s going on and trying to make sense of it is unbelievably difficult

Under Laboratory Conditions also reveals that contrary to the perceived image of science as a genteel and worthy pursuit of the truth, science is in fact highly competitive. Scientists speak candidly about how healthy rivalry can easily spill into professional eye-scratching and plagiarism.

With a lively Django Reinhardt sound track interspersed with science archive from 1960’s and 70’s, Under Laboratory Conditions hears contributions from Bill Bryson, Lord Robert Winston, former President of the Royal Society Lord May and head of the Royal College of Art – Prof Sir Christopher Frayling.

The second programme on the 18 th January focuses on the bane of a senior scientist’s life – funding. Daniel Glaser meets the winners and the losers of the funding game in an attempt to understand the Research Assessment Exercise, the importance of publishing in the right journal and how to squeeze money out of cash rich charities and big business.

Contributors

Here you can read about credits and contributors for Programme 1 and Programme 2 .

Please feel free to send me better links if you have them.

Credits:

  1. Presenter: Dr Daniel Glaser

  2. Series Producer: Jim Booth

  3. Producer: Nick Mattingly

  4. Assistant Producer: Simon Brown

  5. Researcher: Kirk Barber

  6. Archive Research: Barry Purkis

  7. Film Editor: Ivan Probert

  8. Executive Producers: Dave Stanford and Farah Durrani

Programme 1: Homo scientificus

  1. Prof. Sir Christopher Frayling, Royal College of Art

  2. Dr Jon Copley, University of Southampton

  3. Dr Tim Hunt FRS, Cancer Research UK

  4. John Silverdale, University of Hull

  5. Dr Oliver Choroba, Charterhouse School

  6. Bill Bryson

  7. Dr Stephen Dealler, Lancaster Royal Infirmary

  8. Don Simms

  9. Prof Colin Blakemore FRS, Medical Research Council

  10. Dr Lena Eriksson, University of York

  11. Stephen Cox, Royal Society

  12. Dr Arpad Pusztai

  13. Prof Sir Robert May FRS, Royal Society

  14. Dr Cornelia de Moor, University of Nottingham

  15. Prof Colin Kleanthous, University of York

  16. Dr Ritu Dhand, Nature

  17. Dr Karl Ziemelis, Nature

  18. Prof Lord Robert Winston, Hammersmtih Hospital

  19. Jeremy Stribling, MIT

  20. Prof Sir Philip Cohen FRS, University of Dundee

  21. Prof Steve Yeaman, University of Newcastle

  22. Prof Richard Templer, Imperial College, London

  23. Prof Dame Nancy Rothwell FRS, University of Manchester

  24. Prof Richard Jones, Sheffield University

  25. Dr Jonathan Howse, Sheffield University

Programme 2: Chasing the Money

  1. Prof Jeremy Baumberg, University of Southampton

  2. Dr Peter Cotgreave, Director, Campaign for Science and Engineering.

  3. Prof Russell Howe, Head of Chemistry, Aberdeen University

  4. Prof Chris Shaw, Prof of Neurology and Neurogenetics, King’s College, London

  5. Dr Stephen Minger, The Wolfson Centre for Age Related Diseases, King’s College

  6. Prof Sir Patrick Bateson, Prof of Ethology, University of Cambridge

  7. Tony Juniper, Director, Friends of the Earth

  8. Dr Rupert Sheldrake

  9. Steve Grand

  10. Prof Chris Lamb, Director, John Innes Centre

  11. Prof Chris Leaver, Prof of Plant Sciences and Head of Plant Sciences, University of Oxford. Governor, John Innes Centre

  12. Prof Graham Richards, Chairman of Chemistry, University of Oxford

  13. Dr Philip Campbell, Editor, Nature

  14. Prof Mike Ferguson, Prof of Molecular Parasitology, University of Dundee

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