IMAGES

  1. COVID19 WINNER Dance Your PhD 2021: Biochemical & Biophysical Studies of the COVID-19 N Protein

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  2. Dance Your PhD 2022 [SOCIAL SCIENCES WINNER]: Active learning

    dance your phd ted talk

  3. Dance your PhD 2018

    dance your phd ted talk

  4. Dance Your PhD

    dance your phd ted talk

  5. Dance your PhD 2018/2019

    dance your phd ted talk

  6. Watch the winners of this year’s ‘Dance Your Ph.D.’ contest

    dance your phd ted talk

VIDEO

  1. DanceYourPhD2010

  2. Wendy Grus PhD dance

  3. Innovation & Tradition

  4. Dance Your PhD 2008: Anton Wutz

  5. Dance Your PhD 2008 *WINNER* Brian Stewart

  6. Dance Your PhD 2008: Josef Penninger

COMMENTS

  1. Dance your PhD

    Music by: Greg Brosofske Minneapolis, USA based composer.Dancers: Jessica Elhert, Bryan Godbout, Stephanie Laager, Edward Bruno OroyanNelle Hens, Camille Pri...

  2. Watch the winners of this year's 'Dance Your Ph.D.' contest

    The Lithuanian scientist's colorful and clever interpretation of the electric stimulation of yeast—replete with people representing prancing cells and mouthwatering baked goods—is the winner of this year's "Dance Your Ph. D." contest. Šimonis's Ph.D. investigated how yeast, the single-celled fungus that powers bread baking and a ...

  3. Announcing the annual Dance Your Ph.D. contest

    Turn your Ph.D. thesis into a dance. Post the video on YouTube. Send us the link by 26 January 2024. The rules. For the normal categories, you must have a Ph.D., or be working on one as a Ph.D. student. For the special AI/Quantum category, the dance does not need to be based on a PhD thesis. Your Ph.D. must be in a science-related field (see FAQ).

  4. Watch The Winners Of The 'Dance Your Ph.D' Contest : NPR

    Dance Your Ph.D is broken down into four categories: biology, chemistry, physics and social sciences. This year's competition included a special new category: COVID-19 research. The winning COVID ...

  5. Watch the winner of this year's 'Dance Your Ph.D.' contest

    The judges—a panel of world-renowned artists and scientists—chose Groneberg's dance from 30 submissions based on both artistic and scientific merits. She takes home $1000 and a distinction shared by 11 past overall winners. "This year's Dance Your Ph.D. featured some of the best combinations of science and interpretive dance I have seen!

  6. Molecular Clusters [Dance Your PhD 2020/2021 OVERALL WINNER]

    Authors: Jakub Kubečka, Ivo Neefjes, Vitus Besel et al.About: Jakub Kubečka, Ivo Neefjes, and Vitus Besel (Twitter: @Supervitux) are PhD students of Atmosphe...

  7. Dance Your Ph.D.

    Origins. Dance Your Ph.D. is an international science competition founded by John Bohannon, who studies microbiology and artificial intelligence, is a former contributing correspondent for Science, and the current Director of Science for Primer.ai.Bohannon explained that the idea for Dance Your Ph.D. began at a New Year's Eve party that was "heavy on scientist attendees and light on the ...

  8. Meet this year's winners of the Dance Your PhD contest

    Jennifer Ouellette - 3/3/2021, 7:00 AM. Finnish researcher Jakub Kubecka won this year's Dance Your PhD contest with a rap-based dance inspired by his work on the physics of atmospheric molecular ...

  9. Harvard astrophysics student wins 'Dance Your Ph.D.' competition

    On Thursday, Wu was named the winner of the physics category of " Dance Your Ph.D .," an international competition hosted by the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and Science magazine. The competition challenges graduate students and those with Ph.D.s to turn their complex doctoral theses into dances that the ...

  10. Dance your Ph.D., win a trip to TEDxBrussels

    Scientific Ph.D. dissertations are notoriously difficult to explain. That's why, for the past three years Science Magazine has sponsored the Dance Your Ph.D. competition. Scientists, from graduate students to professors, are invited to film an interpretive dance illustrating their research.

  11. Dance your PhD

    Performers:Wesley van Oeffelen and Helga Deasy .Explain Science through the Art.Embodied animation or Dance your PhD is a new form of collaboration of Scien...

  12. 'Joyful madness': ANU scientist wins global prize for 'dancing his PhD

    Weli's video was described as 'joyful madness' by Science magazine. Photograph: Nic Vevers/ANU. Weli based his entry on his four-year PhD study on animal behaviour, in a video Science ...

  13. Dance Your Ph.D. FAQ

    Basically, to win this contest, you have to impress the judges. Some of them are scientists, some of them are artists. Your dance has to convey something essential about your Ph.D. research. Whatever that is, the judges need to "get it". But you also have to make something that is fun to watch. Sure, it can be funny.

  14. The Many Ways to "Dance Your Ph.D"

    The winning video featured hip hop dancers as farmers who put demands on the water supply Screen shot from "Dance Your PhD 2015- Florence Metz" via YouTube.com. Communicating scientific research ...

  15. How John Bohannon created "A Modest Proposal"

    He loved the Dance Your PhD contest and wanted me to come give a talk about it. I was traveling in Europe so we met in London. Over drinks, I told him that I didn't want to actually screen the dance videos during my talk. ... Subscribe to the TED Talks Daily newsletter. Related Stories. Comments (7) Pingback: El arte de presentar » Danza o ...

  16. Tiny "nano-sponges" inspire killer moves in 2023 Dance Your PhD winning

    University of Oregon chemist Checkers Marshall took top honors in the 2023 Dance Your PhD contest, combining hand fans, blue balloons, and original lyrics to make a dance video explaining their ...

  17. Dance vs. powerpoint, a modest proposal

    100+ collections of TED Talks, for curious minds. TED Series. Go deeper into fascinating topics with original video series from TED. TED-Ed videos. Watch, share and create lessons with TED-Ed. ... Dance vs. powerpoint, a modest proposal. 596,227 views | John Bohannon | TEDxBrussels • November 2011.

  18. Watch the winners of this year's 'Dance Your Ph.D.' contest

    The winner of that honor is Heather Masson-Forsythe at Oregon State University, Corvallis. She's looking for new drugs that could block SARS-CoV-2 and stop viral replication. In her dance, she becomes the virus' different proteins, spinning and moving erratically. She also uses a flaming red scarf to symbolize the virus' genetic material.

  19. Dance your PhD

    After posting John Bohannon's TED talk I did some looking into Dance Your PhD and found this winning submission from 2010 by Maureen McKeague, a chemistry Ph.D. student at Carleton University in Ottawa, Canada… enjoy.

  20. How dance can unleash your inner joy

    "We all have our own beautiful ways of moving, and this is worth celebrating," says dancer and choreographer Ryan Heffington. Inviting you to reconsider your connection to dance, he shows how even everyday experiences -- tying your shoes, rocking a baby, whisking up some mac and cheese -- can offer choreographic inspiration and help you find joy and release when you need it most. After the ...

  21. Ideas about Dance

    08:17. Chinyanta Kabaso. The dazzling diversity of African dance — in 14 moves. 14:48. Melaku Belay. The ecstasy of Eskista, an ancient Ethiopian dance. 08:56. Ryan Heffington. How dance can unleash your inner joy.

  22. Dance Your Ph.D.: And The Winner Is...

    Liddicoat is the winner, announced today, of the chemistry prize and the grand prize of the 2012 Dance Your Ph.D. contest. He will receive $1000 and a trip to Belgium where his dance will be screened at TEDxBrussels. Explaining a scientific Ph.D. thesis to nonscientists is never easy, even with words.

  23. John Bohannon: Dance vs. Powerpoint, a Modest Proposal

    Science writer, John Bohannon is a both a scientist and writer, and currently, runs the annual Dance Your Ph.D. contest. In this most unusual yet riveting TED-Talk, Bohannon proposes that the average presentation may be far more effectively communicated via the medium of dance than by means of a boring slide deck or power point.