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'Land, Sea and Air' Part 3 - What happens when we fly

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
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Oxygen levels are slightly lower when you fly on commercial airlines, so what effects does this have on people? Can it cause any problems?
Dr Thomas Smith is both a researcher and a clinician with an interest in heart and lung function, specifically in relation to aviation. He describes what happens to the body when we fly and how the decreased pressure, equivalent to being 8,000ft up a mountain and equivalent lower oxygen levels, affects our bodies. This usually isn't a problem for healthy individuals but those with certain medical conditions could be at risk, and they want to find out how to make better, evidence-based, medical decisions about who can and can't fly.

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Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks

Earthquakes, can we make smarter buildings?

Major earthquakes across the world have damaged or destroyed numerous buildings, bridges, and other structures. But is there a way of monitoring the building structures to see if it is at risk of falling after an earthquake has struck?
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'Artificial Intelligence' part 2 - How to create machines that learn

Professor Nando de Freitas explains that understanding how our brains work has helped us create machines that learn, and how these learning machines can be put to completing different tasks.
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Episode Information

Series
Big Questions - with Oxford Sparks
People
Thomas Smith
Keywords
biology
Medicine
disease
heart disease
lung disease
high blood pressure
aviation
flight
Physiology
Department: Mathematical, Physical and Life Sciences (MPLS)
Date Added: 17/06/2016
Duration: 00:08:42

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