Team:KU Leuven/Human Outreach/Seminars
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Revision as of 16:05, 3 October 2013
Secret garden
Congratulations! You've found our secret garden! Follow the instructions below and win a great prize at the World jamboree!
- A video shows that two of our team members are having great fun at our favourite company. Do you know the name of the second member that appears in the video?
- For one of our models we had to do very extensive computations. To prevent our own computers from overheating and to keep the temperature in our iGEM room at a normal level, we used a supercomputer. Which centre maintains this supercomputer? (Dutch abbreviation)
- We organised a symposium with a debate, some seminars and 2 iGEM project presentations. An iGEM team came all the way from the Netherlands to present their project. What is the name of their city?
Now put all of these in this URL:https://2013.igem.org/Team:KU_Leuven/(firstname)(abbreviation)(city), (loose the brackets and put everything in lowercase) and follow the very last instruction to get your special jamboree prize!
Seminars
There were different seminars
Symposium
We hoped to encounter a wide array of valid points on the benefits and dangers of our project and synthetic biology by organizing a debate with several experts on the field of synthetic biology. This also offered a great opportunity for reaching out to the public. In order to make the program more attracting and to make sure that the public understood the basics of synthetic biology we extended it with two seminars. We also added our own project presentation to the menu. This opened up the possibility of including other teams so they have a chance to practice presenting their project. We invited all the Benelux’ teams, but that close to the deadlines, only the team from Groningen could make it.
The first seminar was given by professor Johan Robben, who is one of our instructors this year and has been for every participation of the KU Leuven in the competition. He currently supervises the new lab for molecular and synthetic biology. His seminar revolved on the basic understanding of living nature and how this eventually evolves into changing nature.
This was followed by a seminar of professor Kevin Verstrepen. After a period of scientific research and teaching at the MIT and Harvard professor Verstrepen returned to the KU Leuven where he continues his research about fundamental genetics. The subject of the seminar is related to that: how DNA coding for new functions comes into existence.