Leap into Science Blogging

Leap into Science Blogging

Today, I produced an event connected to the European City of Science, which brought together some fantastic experts in science blogging. We had Stephen Harris from The Conversation, Sam Illingworth from Manchester Metropolitan University, and Laura Wheelers from Digital Science. 

It was great to assemble this community and work towards producing work around ESOF and ECOS.

Sport's Digital Revolution

Sport's Digital Revolution

My second talk in South Africa allowed me to reprise my forthcoming book for MIT Press on eSports - and all things digital about sport. It was a lot of fun, especially going across the breadth of subjects that come together. There are so many ways in which the future of sports are digitally constituted and this one covered some key trajectories...

 

the $50b Mobile Health Industry

the $50b Mobile Health Industry

My first talk at the Sports Institute of South Africa's 10th meeting on Sport & Fitness focused on the mobile health industry. I wanted to focus on the economics, in part because they are so hard to unravel. The key thing to know is that the mobile health industry is promising efficiencies, but a new era of ingestible sensors is also upon us!

 


Drone Dating Day

Drone Dating Day

This week, I produced a day long research event for the University of Salford, bringing together interested academics and professional services to talk about how we might use drones within our work. It drew interest from a range of schools across the university and was a really great deep dive into the subject, bringing external expertise - such as world-leading drone conservationist Prof Serge Wich. It was a fantastic day with some excellent presentations.

 

Drones for Film

Drones for Film

Last week, I took part in an event run by the British Film Institute focused on the use of drones in film making. It brought together architect film maker Liam Young, extraordinary drone film makers The Helicopter Girls, and the amazing Seb Hagemeister who's worked with Marshmallow Laser Feast on our Project Daedalus. 

The conversation was pretty far reaching and I opened the event with a video essay, taking people through the recent history of drone creativity and innovation. It felt like such a privilege to be amongst such amazing people who are at the cutting edge of film production. 

My video essay is being held for live presentation only, so I'm not posting it online. However, you can find out more about my drones in a piece I wrote for the Conversation.

Prolific North Live

Prolific North Live

This week, i gave a talk with colleagues at Salford University, focusing on how we want to build collaboration with industry partners and work towards more co-creation of research. Here's the presentation.

 



`Esports

`Esports

A really early start today on BBC Radio 5 Live with Nicky Campbell and Rachel Burden talking to them about the recent signing of eSport player Dave ByTheWay to Wolfsburg football team. Here's a story about what happened.

The Beautiful Gamers

The Beautiful Gamers

Tonight, I appeared on BBC 5 Live, a feature 90min show about the development of digital gaming in football. It was hosted at the National Football Museum and brought together a great cast of expertise in the room, including the England's Captain of the Women's team, Steph Houghton. Here's the show.

FameLab Taster session

FameLab Taster session

This week, I ran a FameLab taster session at the Museum of Science and Industry with Dee-Ann Johnson from Manchester University and Sam Illingworth from Manchester Metropolitan University. It's a wonderful thing that the universities are collaborating on making Manchester a mecca for science communication and the whole event was loads of fun.

I focused my contribution on what I describe as the 10 Commandments of FameLab - a number of principles taken from recent winning performances.

It's a work in progress, but you get the idea. Blatantly reliant on other films, but hopefully done enough to them to make it a worthwhile contribution and a distinct thing, a homage even.

I also spent my time getting the participants to go through a mock FameLab test, filming each other with mobile phones and shooting with a bigger camera, just to get over that first hurdle! We had some great candidates and I think it will be a strong regional heat!

 

Social Media for Academics

Social Media for Academics

This week, we had a 2 day event for PhD students, to give advice and guidance on how to use social media to build profile, develop research collaborations, and to discover new ideas. My contribution focused around key platforms and how best to use them, covering, Twitter, ResearchGate, Whatsapp, YouTube, Slideshare, Prezi, and we covered ResearcherID and ORCID too.... that said, the main thing was about how social media is a crucial way for academics to get behind the digital revolution, which is transforming what universities do, how they do it, how they relate to the media, publishers, government, and everything. I wanted to show this classic, but I didn't have time...

Digital Participation

Digital Participation

Last week, I was at the Scottish Government in Edinburgh, for one of our regular meetings of the Ministerial Advisory Group for Digital Participation. It was a really uplifting meeting, focused on the Scottish strategy to get the remaining number of the population online, who presently are not. The strategy is being driven by Fiona Hyslop MSP and is drawing on libraries as a focal point of investment.

There was a sense of needing to revisit the role of libraries for a digital age, make them core to society and communities in ways that many are not. It's a wonderful approach and a privilege to be a part of it.

Generation eSport

Generation eSport

In December, I interviewed for journalist Fabien Mulot on a feature article for L'Equipe on eSport. It is perhaps the most comprehensive news article on the subject and is a beautiful example of how long form journalism can work well online. Take a peek!

DIY Steroid Labs

DIY Steroid Labs

A big story broke this week on Sky News, which has been investigating the rise of DIY steroid labs around the UK. It tells a story of how body building and performance/image enhancement is not just a matter for the world of elite sport to address.

My arguments focused on the cultural shift towards enhancement and the need to re-appraise the morality and law surrounding such practices. If so many people are doing it, it's hard to still claim them as morally bankrupt.

If we can just address the health risks more effectively, then we need not worry. This means a harm reduction model and supervised doping.

eSport Summit

eSport Summit

This week, I was in Seoul for the 7th eSport World Championships. Recently, I have begun working with the International eSport Federation and they ran their 1st eSport summit during the champs. It was a great chance to air some ideas I have about the field, many of which are in a book I have coming out next year with MIT Press. Here's what happened.


Future Hospitals

Future Hospitals

This week, I took part in a panel discussion about the future of hospitals, following this brief:

The Government is committed to a vision for hospital services structured around the needs of patients, both now and in the future. Delegates will explore the need for changes to how we organise and deliver hospital care and treatment that is safe, effective and meets the needs of patients, 24 hours a day, seven days a week. 

As the constraints on NHS spending continue, coupled with patient’s expectations of safer and higher-quality health care, the need to provide health services differently has never been more crucial.

Under intensifying pressure to change, hospitals are adapting their organisation and services to cope with cuts to financial resources. Simon Stevens, NHS England Chief Executive, has made facing financial challenges a priority. He has also emphasised how frontline staff will be vital to create change and generate innovation to deliver services differently.

A core part of the vision laid out by Simon Stevens in the NHS five year forward view involves hospitals becoming more closely integrated with other forms of care. If the health and social care system is to respond to the changing needs of the population, and also address the financial challenges it faces, all hospitals will need to play a fundamentally different role within local health economies.

Hospitals across the UK and around the world face significant challenges as a result of demographic change, rising demand and a staffing challenges. The changing needs of the population make it increasingly important that hospitals are able to provide high-quality care for people with multiple chronic conditions and complex needs, including but not limited to the growing numbers of frail older people. To respond effectively to these changing needs, health and social care services must be capable of providing ongoing support over time, anticipating and preventing deterioration and exacerbations of existing conditions, and supporting a person’s multiple needs in a well-co-ordinated way.

With all this in mind, hospitals will need to develop new ways of working that span traditional service and organisational boundaries – including working more closely with other hospitals (for example, through alliances and partnerships), and strengthening connections with community-based services such as primary care, social care, community services and mental health. This points towards hospitals playing a more outward-facing role in their local health system, in which they shift

from an organisational focus to a system leadership role, and play a more active part in preventing illness and promoting health in local communities.

What the future hospital will look like and what its central role will be will emerge out of the remnants of a system currently not fit for purpose. The Future of Hospitals Conference will address all the key issues and ask the main question, namely, what will the future hospital look like and how will it operate on a day to day basis

Sport 2.0

Sport 2.0

Salford University's Creative Entrepreneur event has become a huge success, with over 400 delegates registered over 1 day. I took part in a panel this year focused on Sport Business 2.0, at which I spoke about the game development community around sports and the growing mobile health market. 

Communicating Chernobyl

Communicating Chernobyl

Over the last year, I've been working with Dr Mike Wood and Prof Nick Beresford on a NERC funded public engagement project, examining life in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone, 30 years later. As part of this, I was in Chernobyl this semester making films about the research consortium behind the work. 

This week, the team had a meeting near Oxford at which the films were launched. You can find a play list of them all here, or simply scroll through to  see what we did.

#PeaceForParis

#PeaceForParis

This week, I was due to take part in an event in Paris, which was all about how to make cities places of greater intercultural connectedness. However, on Friday, the terrorist attacks in Paris led to my event being cancelled.

For a while, the organizers and the ministry felt that we would go ahead, but the severity of the attacks, coupled with the 3 days of mourning announced by President Hollande led, finally, to it being postponed until the spring. We were only told about this less than 24 hours before I was due to take my flight and, along with other participants and organizers, I felt I still strongly wanted to go. So I did. The event was still cancelled, nobody met, but I wanted to go.

I wanted to go because to not go would have seemed to give in to the terrorists, to accept their disruption to our lives, and to even cease to go about our business for fear of further incidents. To me, it also seemed like the most important time to visit Paris, to show support.

Arriving on the Monday, the city was mostly quietly going about its business. The key sites of the attacks were full of citizens paying their respects, and the media with 24 hour coverage of what was going on. Away from these locations, people were getting on with their Monday, so that's what I did.

I met a wonderful, intelligent French Professor, Bertrand Pullan, with whom I was due to have a conversation within the conference about cities, events, and social change. Instead, we had a lovely lunch in a restaurant he has been visiting for 30 years. We found more common ground in our pursuits, research interests, and way of life than I could ever imagined. His interests were as far reaching as mine and we have led similar lives through academia, good lives.  It was a most wonderfully, typical trip to Paris, one of many I have enjoyed over the years.

Strangely enough, I happened to be in Paris on 9/11; I had forgotten about that. It seems I am destined to be with this city in tough times. I'm fine with that. It is a place that shines through all weathers.







Doping in Sport

Doping in Sport

Appearance on Sky News talking about the doping debate, in the wake of findings that prevalence  is much higher than was previously thought.