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Research Seminar: Applied Linguistics and Second Language Acquisition

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Add to Calendar Research Seminar: Applied Linguistics and Second Language Acquisition The Levett Room
Location
The Levett Room
Speakers
Jinning Zhang, Xinyu Liao
Event price
Free
Booking Required
Not Required
The event will feature paper presentations covering various topics, including innovative teaching methodologies, cognitive processes in language learning, and practical applications of linguistic theory. Interactive discussions will facilitate a deeper understanding of research findings and their implications.



Attendees will have the opportunity to participate in Q&A sessions, enabling them to seek clarification, exchange ideas, and gain insights from presenters and panelists. Networking opportunities will be available to foster connections and collaborations within the academic community.



Additional activities, including language-themed icebreakers and mini-workshops on language acquisition strategies, will be provided to enhance the seminar experience.
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Tibetan Losar Party

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Add to Calendar Tibetan Losar PartyThe Haldane Room
Location
The Haldane Room
Speakers
The Tibetan and Himalayan Studies Centre
Booking Required
Not Required
The Tibetan and Himalayan Studies Centre welcomes you to celebrate the Tibetan Year of the Wood Dragon 2151 at Wolfson with music, poetry, and momos. Featuring Buddhist prayers by Lelung Rinpoche, Tibetan dunglen (guitar) songs by Dr Tsering Samdrup, and various performances by Oxonian Tibetans and Tibetanists.

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MBB Research Cluster Lunch Table

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Add to Calendar MBB Research Cluster Lunch TableThe Hall
Location
The Hall
Booking Required
Not Required
The Mind, Brain & Behaviour Research Cluster will have a lunch table in Hall. This is opportunity to meet other members of the Cluster, talk about your research, and to find out more about the Cluster's activities. All welcome, no booking necessary.

Ida Toth

University Research Lecturer, Convener of Medieval Latin, Byzantine Greek, and Byzantine Epigraphy, The Faculties of History and Classics
ida.toth@wolfson.ox.ac.uk
The Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies66 St GilesOxford OX1 3LU

Ida Toth is a historian of late antique and medieval literary (and textual) culture working in the Greek, Latin, and Slavonic linguistic areas. She convenes graduate courses in Medieval Latin, Byzantine Greek, and Byzantine Epigraphy, and she supervises master and doctoral students in Late Antique and Byzantine Studies. Dr Toth's external appointments include charing the the International Commission for Byzantine Epigraphy and the Membership Board of the British Committee for Byzantine Studies. She is a co-editor of the series Studies in Byzantine Epigraphy (Brepols). Dr Toth has been awarded an Einstein Berlin-Oxford Visiting Fellowship for the project ‘The Seven Sages of Rome Revisited: Striving for an Alternative Literary History’ (2024-27).

Dr Toth's areas of expertise include rhetoric and performance, epigraphy, and wisdom literature. She currently works on the Greek and Slavonic traditions of the Life of Aesop and on medieval inscriptions from Constantinople.

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Wolfson College Governing Body Fellow recognised by International Science Council

Submitted by isobel.holling on

Professor Riede has been awarded the Fellowship in recognition of his outstanding contribution to promoting science as a global public good. ISC Fellows will support the Council in its mission at a critical moment for science and sustainability for science as we enter the UN’s International Decade of Sciences for Sustainable Development in 2024.

Turing-Gandy Bursaries

Submitted by george.mather on

The books had been bequeathed to the College as part of the estate of Robin Gandy (1919-1995), a friend and student of Turing. Gandy joined Wolfson shortly after its foundation, becoming a Governing Body Fellow in 1970, and upon his death generously left his entire estate to the College. The inscribed volumes, which dated largely from Turing’s undergraduate years at King’s College, Cambridge, included his personal copy of G.H. Hardy’s Pure Mathematics (1908), which represented his first serious foray into mathematics and logic.

Frédérique Duyrat

Director of Collections and Keeper of the Heberden Coin Room, Ashmolean Museum
07340725018
Ashmolean Museum, Beaumont Street, Oxford OX1 2PH

Frédérique Duyrat studied at Sorbonne University in Paris for her undergraduate and graduate degrees. She graduated with an MA in 1996, then spent two years at the French Archaeological Institute in Damascus where she wrote a PhD on Aradus, the most northern Phoenician city, during the Hellenistic period. She took her PhD in 2000 at Sorbonne University, and then was awarded a Habilitation à diriger des recherches by the same university in 2010 for her work Wealth and Warfare. The Archaeology of Money in Ancient Syria. She taught Ancient History at Sorbonne University, then at the University of Orléans where she was also a member of the Institut de recherche sur les archéomatériaux – Centre Ernest-Babelon (CNRS), a laboratory specialized in elemental analyses of the metal of coins (2002-2013). In 2010, she was appointed curator of Greek coins in the department of Coins, Medals, and Antiques of the Bibliothèque nationale de France, before taking the position of director of this department in September 2013. She was appointed to her current post at the University of Oxford in September 2023. At the same time, she is the Director of Studies in the Monetary History of the Greek World (7th-1st century BC) at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes in Paris.

Research: Ancient Greek Numismatics;Ancient Greek History, Economy and Society, especially in the Eastern Mediterranean;Linked Open Data, Artificial Intelligence applied to ancient artefacts and archives;Fight against the trafficking of cultural heritage

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Ester Hammond

Professor of Molecular Cancer Biology
ester.hammond@oncology.ox.ac.uk
Department of OncologyORCRBChurchill CampusOxford, OX3 7DQ

Tumour hypoxia (conditions of low oxygen) is known to be a major mechanism of resistance to radiotherapy. My research is focused on the biological response to hypoxia and specifically the level of hypoxia where radiation resistance is observed. We carry out mechanism focused studies on the signalling which occurs in these conditions, including the DNA Damage Response, unfolded protein response and changes to chromatin marks, with a view to identifying novel targets to target in combination with radiotherapy. As part of this approach we have repurposed drugs, known to be effective in hypoxic conditions, as hypoxia activated prodrugs therefore limiting normal tissue toxicity. We have been focused on both hypoxia and redox and are involved in a large collaborative effort to generate and validate novel redox probes for use in complex biological systems.

Research: Tumour microenvironment, hypoxia, radiation response