If Donald Rumsfeld were a scientist
- đ¤ Speaker: Professor Stephen Emmott, Head of Computational Science at Microsoft Research Cambridge đ Website
- đ Date & Time: Wednesday 02 April 2014, 19:00 - 20:00
- đ Venue: Institute of Continuing Education, Madingley Hall
Abstract
The past five decades have been characterised by spectacular scientific advances, spanning particle physics, molecular biology and neuroscience. Yet some of the most ‘basic’ building blocks of biology, the brain and the biosphere remain poorly understood. What are some of the outstanding known unknowns? What might be the key unknown unknowns in some of the most important areas of science? Finally, what might we need to do differently in future to address them?
About the speaker
Stephen Emmott is Head of Computational Science at Microsoft. He leads an international, interdisciplinary research programme and scientific team, centred on Microsoft’s Computational Science Laboratory, in Cambridge, whose goal is to make, enable and accelerate transformational advances in science in areas of societal importance. Stephen is also Visiting Professor of Biological Computation at University College London, Visiting Professor of Computational Science at the University of Oxford, and a Distinguished Fellow of the UK National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts (Nesta).
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Series This talk is part of the Madingley Lectures series.
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Professor Stephen Emmott, Head of Computational Science at Microsoft Research Cambridge 
Wednesday 02 April 2014, 19:00-20:00