KITP Public Lecture (In-Person and Virtual)
**Events may have been canceled or postponed. Please contact the venue to confirm the event.
Date & Time
Mon, Oct 14 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM
Address (map)
Kohn Hall, UCSB
Venue (website)
UCSB - Kohn Hall
Join the Kavli Institute for Theoretical Physics for the next exciting installment in the KITP Public Lecture series, “Recreational Biology: From Animals in Flatland to Cellular Origami” with Manu Prakash (Stanford).
Recreational mathematics involves mathematical puzzles and games, often appealing to children and untrained adults, inspiring their further study of the subject. Can a similar analogy be drawn in biology? Without making any claims of usefulness, we will explore a wide range of puzzles and paradoxes from the living world: Can single cells be toroidal in nature? What would an animal from Flatland look like? Can cells “literally” talk to each other? Can single cells think? Can cells act as a mason and build out of rocks? Finally, we will discuss and share initiatives to democratize science and highlight the role of curiosity and observation in exploring the microscopic world.
About the speaker:
Manu Prakash is an Associate Professor in the Department of Bioengineering, Biology (courtesy) and Oceans (courtesy) at Stanford University, working in the field of physical biology and oceanography. He runs a curiosity-driven lab at Stanford combining his passion for basic science while also developing ultra-affordable and accessible technologies with the goal of democratizing access to scientific tools – a term he calls Frugal Science.
His interdisciplinary lab at Stanford uses theory and experiments to understand how computation is embodied in biological matter. Finally, the lab engages broader communities in inventing and distributing “frugal science” tools to democratize access to science (Foldscope, Abuzz), diagnostics of deadly diseases like malaria and convening global citizen science communities to tackle planetary scale environmental challenges, such as mosquito surveillance or plankton surveillance by citizen sailors mapping the ocean in the age of Anthropocene.
Manu grew up in India and got his PhD from MIT. He was a Junior Fellow at Harvard Society of Fellows and a 2016 MacArthur Fellow.
In-Person RSVP: https://www.kitp.ucsb.edu/public-lecture-rsvp
Zoom Webinar Registration (if unable to attend in-person): https://ucsb.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_l3oSaXqiTriP4xlXybehuA#/registration
Parking will be provided in UCSB Lot 10.
Please contact friends@kitp.ucsb.edu for more information.