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| Spanish subtitles now available for David Baltimore's HIV seminar! |
| About iBioSeminars | Download Poster |
| Modern biology is advancing at a staggering
pace, and it is critical for students and researchers from the US and around the
world (small colleges and large) to have access to outstanding seminars that describe
exciting advances in biology. However, many institutions have difficulty in accessing
top scientists for their seminar series, due to a lack of travel funds as well
as the limited travel time of speakers. Thus, there is a need for world-wide access
to lectures by leading scientists.
iBioSeminars® is a freely available library of seminars from outstanding scientists. Our mission is to host lectures that describe on-going research in leading laboratories (they are not basic, survey-style lectures as might be found in undergraduate or graduate student biology courses). However, iBioSeminars features a more extensive introduction into the subject matter than a typical 50 min university seminar. Thus, these lectures are intended to be more accessible than many typical department seminars to advanced undergraduates/beginning graduate students and researchers outside of the specific field. The lectures are divided into two or three segments, which can be downloaded separately. Some segments are crafted as more basic introductions (usually the first), other explore a particular research topic, and some segments provide a perspective of the field and where it is going. As is true of any seminar, each speaker has their own style of how they present their material. The biggest challenge for a www seminar is transmitting the "human element", which makes a seminar so different from reading lecture notes. To engage the viewer, we employed a technique used in the broadcast industry called "chroma key" or bluescreen", in which a speaker is superimposed upon another digital media (the weather person in the news often uses this technique). For iBioSeminars (which are taped in a studio at UCSF and edited), the speaker is superimposed and interacting with the material on his/her PowerPoint slides, creating what we hope will be an enjoyable format for viewers. The lectures can be accessed "on-demand" by: 1) www streaming, 2) after download onto a personal computer in lower and higher resolution formats, or 3) after download onto a video iPOD. The lectures can be used in different ways. Individuals (depending upon their computer resources) can view the lectures either at work, at home, or even while commuting on a train. Teachers may wish to use segments of these lectures in a classroom (ie. with a LCD projector) or assign a lecture for students to view on their own time. For teachers/students, the lecturers have included their powerpoints (in pdf format) as well as references that can be used as assigned reading. The Future of iBioSeminars We will expand iBioSeminars to 40 lectures in 2008 and hope to sustain the projects beyond. If you found this project useful and believe that it should be continued/expanded, please submit your comments using the feedback interface on this www site. If you have suggestions for improvement, we also would be very interested in hearing from you. In our future set of lectures, we are interested in expanding the geographical diversity of the speakers. Due to practical reasons of our initial funding, there is a heavy concentration of speakers from the San Francisco Bay Area. However, we will seek more international speakers as well as expand the representation of institutions throughout the United States. We also are exploring other features that might be added to iBioSeminars. Specifically, we are exploring adding English and Spanish subtitles (downloadable separately) and translations. We also are investigating formats in which the www audience might ask questions regarding the talk and then having the questions/answers posted. Enjoy iBioSeminars and thank you for your support and feedback. |
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