5 items found in 1 pages
Masters degrees in Science and Technology Studies (STS)
UCL Department of Science and Technology Studies (STS) offers two MSc degrees (Science, Technology and Society MSc, and History and Philosophy of Science MSc). These cover a wide range of material and provide students with the skills they need in their future careers. How best to demonstrate this? We asked our students to discuss how they found the course and where they plan to go next. Students: Feodora Rayner (MSc STS) Sophie Perry (MSc STS) Amelie Peschanski (MSc STS) Leah Christian (MSc HPS) Sophie Wang (MSc STS) Emily Gardner (MSc STS) UCL Department of Science and Technology Studies (STS).
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2/8/2021
UCL Prize Lecture in Life and Medical Sciences 2020
The UCL Prize Lecture 2020 will be given by Dr Ann Graybiel, Professor and Investigator at the MIT McGovern Institute for Brain Research About this Event The UCL Prize Lecture in Life and Medical Sciences 2020 (previously the UCL Clinical Prize Lecture) will be given by Dr Ann Graybiel, Institute Professor in the Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and an Investigator at the McGovern Institute for Brain Research. Title: Making Decisions Based on Value: Mood States and Brain Circuits
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1/19/2021
Cancer MSc
Nadia Bonnin tells us about her experience studying the Cancer MSc programme at UCL - including details on her final lab project and what she hopes to do next in her studies and career.
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3/25/2020
Cancer Biomedicine BSc
Students Ashton Hunt and Rahul Vital share their experiences studying the Cancer Biomedicine BSc programme at UCL. Both Ashton and Rahul have just finished their first year.
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3/10/2020
Rethinking Cancer Closing remarks - Mark Emberton
Professor Mark Emberton Dean, UCL faculty of Medical Sciences Rethinking Cancer | UCL Cancer Domain Symposium Monday 13 May 2019 The cancer treatment revolution and how we afford it? Cancer remains one of the major causes of morbidity and premature death worldwide; one in two people in the UK born after 1960 will be diagnosed with some form of cancer during their lifetime. UCL has a proud track record in addressing the societal, technical, and health challenges of cancer and in exploring its underling biology. This symposium, invited our broad community to assemble for the first time at scale to consider challenges and opportunities in cancer research, prevention and treatment, from biological, clinical, technical, economic and societal perspectives.
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6/4/2019