Showing posts with label cambridge university. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cambridge university. Show all posts

5 Mar 2024

University concert - NOT amateur radio

Most Tuesdays we go into Cambridge on the bus. As we are old, it is free with our bus passes. We grab a bite to eat then walk through the grounds of King's College to West Road concert hall. Every week they feature different students and different sorts of music.

Today, it was the final of the concerto competition. The standard is very very high! The concerts are free with a retiring collection.

There is no doubt that Cambridge University has some excellent musicians and we are lucky to be able to enjoy them for free.

The photo shows me having a bite to eat.


8 Nov 2021

Heffers, Cambridge - NOT amateur radio


In recent years, "physical" bookshops have had a hard time as more of us buy books online. The biggest in Cambridge is Heffers in Trinity Street. Recently they have had a makeover. 

When I came to Cambridge first in 1970 much of the stock was academic books. In those days the internet was still to come!

20 Apr 2013

My wife's choral concert next weekend in Cambridge

Concert Poster
My wife sings with the Cambridgeshire Choral Society (guess who does their website!) and next weekend (Sat April 27th 8pm) her choir performs in St John's College Chapel in Cambridge. Both the Vivaldi Gloria and the Faure Requiem are great pieces. If you live in the area, may I suggest you come along? Tickets are available on the door as well as in advance (see poster).  I shall be on the door acting as a steward.

11 Aug 2011

Inside a QRPer's brain

G3XBM's brain!
Today I had my brain scanned for scientific research. For several years I've volunteered as a guinea pig at the Centre for Speech, Language and the Brain at Cambridge University.  It involves doing the occasional language test and about once a year having an fMRI scan whilst doing some task involving language. The university has its own MRI unit for medical research. The whole MRI thing is painless and is actually rather relaxing, especially when they are doing a full scan and the machine is vibrating which is like having a massage. If anything untoward is seen in the scans they inform your doctor, which is good. Let's hope that it looks OK. Certainly it looks much like the one I had done a few years ago.

The purpose of the research is to better understand how the brain functions and they hope this will help with people recovering from strokes.  It must be so rewarding to be working in this field either as a PhD student or as a post-doc researcher.

22 May 2009

A QRPer's brain

Yesterday I went to get my brain MRI scanned as part of a Cambridge University research project on speech and language. The result is attached. I spent nearly 90 minutes being scanned whilst listening to various sentences.

Someone suggested the missing top part of the brain explains why I am a QRPer!