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University of Oxford
United Kingdom
Registrace 28. 10. 2005
Watch lectures, learn how to apply, and hear stories about the research, students and staff of this incredible university.
Oxford was the first University in the English-speaking world. Our aim is to remain at the forefront of centres of learning, teaching and research. Students from more than a hundred and forty countries and territories make up a student population of over twenty thousand.
Oxford was the first University in the English-speaking world. Our aim is to remain at the forefront of centres of learning, teaching and research. Students from more than a hundred and forty countries and territories make up a student population of over twenty thousand.
Oxford professor reveals myths about sleep
❌ You need 8 hours of sleep
❌ Tablets and alcohol help you sleep
❌ Blue light will keep you more awake
❌ Melatonin is a sleep hormone
❌ You need beauty sleep
Prof Russell Foster reveals six myths about sleep.
#WorldSleepDay #SleepDay #SleepExpert #OxfordUni #OxfordUniversity #SleepHacks #SleepPsychology #OxfordExpert #OxfordAcademic #Myths #SleepMyths
❌ Tablets and alcohol help you sleep
❌ Blue light will keep you more awake
❌ Melatonin is a sleep hormone
❌ You need beauty sleep
Prof Russell Foster reveals six myths about sleep.
#WorldSleepDay #SleepDay #SleepExpert #OxfordUni #OxfordUniversity #SleepHacks #SleepPsychology #OxfordExpert #OxfordAcademic #Myths #SleepMyths
zhlédnutí: 3 022
Video
Prof. Geoffrey Hinton - "Will digital intelligence replace biological intelligence?" Romanes Lecture
zhlédnutí 209KPřed 3 měsíci
Professor Geoffrey Hinton, CC, FRS, FRSC, the ‘Godfather of AI’, delivered Oxford's annual Romanes Lecture at the Sheldonian Theatre on Monday, 19 February 2024. The public lecture entitled ‘Will digital intelligence replace biological intelligence?’ discussed the dangers of artificial intelligence (AI) and how to ensure it does not take control of humans, and consequently, wipe out humanity. H...
The Secret Forest Beneath the Trees | Wytham Woods
zhlédnutí 2KPřed 3 měsíci
People don’t usually describe plants as ‘moving’ organisms. We often think of landscapes like woodlands as changing little year-to-year, but that’s due to our perception. Plants exist on a different timeline. Human life, to them, is on fast-forward. Over long periods (and even some shorter ones), plants move around a great deal, but we didn’t always have evidence for this. Luckily, renowned res...
Bizarre, egg-laying mammal finally rediscovered after 60 years
zhlédnutí 32KPřed 3 měsíci
More than sixty years after it was last recorded, an expedition team has rediscovered an iconic, egg-laying mammal in one of the most unexplored regions of the world. Attenborough's long-beaked echidna, named after famed broadcaster Sir David Attenborough, was captured for the first time in photos and video footage using remote trail cameras set up in the Cyclops Mountains of Indonesia's Papua ...
Lord Patten of Barnes announces his retirement as Chancellor of the University of Oxford
zhlédnutí 16KPřed 4 měsíci
A message from Oxford Chancellor, The Rt Hon the Lord Patten of Barnes. Learn more about the office of Chancellor: www.ox.ac.uk/about/organisation/university-officers/chancellor
Dr Hedgehog and the Robot Lawnmowers
zhlédnutí 1,4KPřed 4 měsíci
Researchers led by the University of Oxford have developed a new test to assess how dangerous robotic lawnmowers are to hedgehogs. They hope this will lead to a certification scheme that will allow consumers to choose ‘hedgehog-friendly’ mowers to help protect these lovable mammals. Learn more here: www.ox.ac.uk/news/2024-01-16-researchers-develop-hedgehog-safety-test-robotic-lawnmowers Lead re...
The bizarre things Oxford University students got up to in medieval times
zhlédnutí 2,7KPřed 5 měsíci
- Student expelled for playing tennis in public - Students disciplined for saying 'hey you' to tutors - Weird rituals - Exuberant costumes to settle land disputes Prof Hannah Skoda reveals some of the quirky things Oxford students got up to in medieval times. #NationalTriviaDay
Healing touch: working in hospitals to ease infant pain
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 5 měsíci
A story about the collaboration between Oxford Researchers and Neonatal charity Bliss, to tell parents of premature babies about the therapeutic power of human touch.
'Graecum est!' A Christmas tale with Professor William Whyte
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 5 měsíci
'Graecum est!' A Christmas tale with Professor William Whyte
The Perfect (Multisensory) Christmas Meal
zhlédnutí 2,4KPřed 5 měsíci
The Perfect (Multisensory) Christmas Meal
What does AI mean for the environment?
zhlédnutí 971Před 6 měsíci
What does AI mean for the environment?
What does AI mean for global health & human wellbeing?
zhlédnutí 416Před 6 měsíci
What does AI mean for global health & human wellbeing?
The Wytham Tit Project - Revisited | Wytham Woods
zhlédnutí 773Před 7 měsíci
The Wytham Tit Project - Revisited | Wytham Woods
Oxford Psychiatrist: Six ways to manage your mental health
zhlédnutí 2KPřed 7 měsíci
Oxford Psychiatrist: Six ways to manage your mental health
WHO recommends Oxford vaccine against malaria
zhlédnutí 1,6KPřed 8 měsíci
WHO recommends Oxford vaccine against malaria
Exploring the importance of early brain development: Professor Zoltán Molnár
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 9 měsíci
Exploring the importance of early brain development: Professor Zoltán Molnár
Investigating the impact of sleep on brain and mental health: Professor Russell Foster
zhlédnutí 1,2KPřed 9 měsíci
Investigating the impact of sleep on brain and mental health: Professor Russell Foster
Advocating for better perinatal mental health: Dr Nicole Votruba
zhlédnutí 565Před 9 měsíci
Advocating for better perinatal mental health: Dr Nicole Votruba
So this people are most intelligent 🙄
Page 17 made me tear up a little bit
What makes a book a book is dependent on your personal definition, bc thats how language works Or if youre boring its just the legal definition
Listening to her is relieving my stress and dissatisfaction. My feelings on England have improved.
As a Dutch person… I’m only disappointed in the fact you guys picked (excuse my Dutch) fucking American Cheddar to make your first book..
American cheese has a lot of preservatives and is hardly edible so it makes a good choice
In my opinion as a plebian, a book: Has a Cover Contains some words
Art books:
@@Keeby. art books also contain words? Like, the author, or the name of the piece
This book has words on the cover 😂
This is every student's dream university 🥲💞
تشبه جامعة ذي قار وانتم مامحلفيني
Who else is here after seeing “Joe Rogan Experience #2152 Terrence Howard”…? 🐇 . .. …
😇😇😇😇😇😇😇🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
❤
I love Oxford University🤤 Does anybody study here?I like to talk with him/her
This is my draem university ❤
For a smart guy he is easily manipulated by leftist propaganda.
hey
Dreaming spires
OXFORD IM COMING FOR YOU!!!
Wooow!
Im a young student in 6 grade my dream is oxford universty im always talking about it and i hope i get in
Excellent vdo lecture bt.as a professional in my opinion implementation of new technologies r important in the present scenario and for the future in this Competitive world bt.HR top executives should be competent enough related to policies, strategies, Evaluations, Review process,true statistical analysis nd techniques nd reviewing the whole process time to time as Trainers r the backbone of any organization nd there r different Training Methodologies which imparts skill development in employee.I m also taking the lecture in normal way as compared to biological aspects sir.Ther r pros nd cons in every field so perfect learning is essential apart from different aspects of perfect knowledge.Intermingling nd effective communication skills induce confidence in the workers' nd top level executives to for OD nd OB.It is a continuous process in brief in my opinion though it is a vry broad field.Vry.innovative nd inspiring Lecture.Thanx.
is there a q&a? also why no comments? :o this was a profound talk!
gud video
No sun flowers.
As someone who is a non-expert in AI, and the father of a 2 year old, I don't feel convinced by parallels between AI and Humans when it comes to language acquisition. My daughter after looking at a something like say a 'Chair', understands the concept at a deeper level. She connects 'being seated' to a Chair. Doesn't need to look at a million images of chairs, doesn't get confused between different kinds of chairs. Can draw make new statements which probably have never been uttered before by connecting several dots. All this from relatively very small training data sets.
As a scientist and clever, Geoffrey thinks that putin or Xi are evils is disrupting
Love
My dreams
Why is this school so popular? It looks completely washed and unsupervised
I shall go to Oxford university for reading
Is, big problem for the world
Wait is it Harry potter ifl😮
May my sons study here
Thanks for sharing
First
There's no such thing as digital intelligence
I always wondered what tutorials were. Awesome 👍
How comes this video has no comments
OK, i got it, we are doomed (i truly believe him, no satire)
So circle x circle= donuts???
A national treasure!
UK Oxford University 🎓
This has aged well.
You guys stole all our stuff
"We know that the biological visual system does this with a hierarchy of feature detectors" somwhere around 4:40 - Actually we don't know that at all. There are structures that appear to be feature detectors, e.g. in primary visual cortex, and cells do appear to respond to isolated features, like edges and so on. However, this only works in very specific lab conditions. It was carefully studied in monkeys in the second half of the last century. And, we can now see related results in humans using fMRI. However, the responses of these cells turn out to be much more complex in natural conditions, as opposed to carefully constructed lab experiments. As technology has improved, we've improved our ability to study neurons in awake, behaving animals and discovered it's not so simple. At the same time, our increased understanding of the connectional anatomy of the visual system has called into question the idea that the visual system is arranged as a heirarchy. It's not that simple, because there are more connections going "down" the hierarchy from primary (simple features) to secondary (more complex features) areas than "up" it. So the simplest "feature detectors" in the primate visual system are more heavily tuned to whats going on in the regions "above" them than to the "signals" from the eye. So not a hierarchy in the sense Hinton assumes. And I would say he is indeed "assuming" rather than being up do date on the actual biology. The genuine biological solutions to the problem of vision are at best only partially captured by AI methods, which remain very brittle. It is 2024. Let's see if we have widespread self driving cars (that aren't limited in where they can drive) in 10 years time. I would guess we still won't have cracked it. Impressive as they are, current systems do not solve fundamental problems any more than they did 10 or 20 years ago.
what a scared coward saying nonsense, these old dudes just need to make way for the new
Love you Oxford you are my dream
Thank you so much for the help I really needed ✨
SO?
Really?? From my reading of the subject, as someone who is neither a rocket scientist, nor Terrence Tao, Andrew Wiles provided a proof for the Taniyama-Shimura conjecture, which, via an argument by Gerhard Frey has been popularly presented as the léger de main of a proof for Fermat's Last Theorem.
Amazing and smart guy. This man.