Cambridge Philosophical Society mini-series #1: Dr Francisco Sahli

Duration: 14 mins 4 secs
Share this media item:
Embed this media item:


About this item
Cambridge Philosophical Society mini-series #1: Dr Francisco Sahli's image
Description: In recent years, the generous support of the Cambridge Philosophical Society has allowed INI to further support the attendance of early career researchers in its programmes and workshops. This first of three interviews speaks to one such recipient: Dr Francisco Sahli.
 
Created: 2020-11-30 12:39
Collection: Living Proof - the Isaac Newton Institute podcast
Publisher: University of Cambridge
Copyright: Dan Aspel
Language: eng (English)
Keywords: mathemathics; early career research; funding; cambridge philosophical society;
Credits:
Anchor:  Daniel Aspel
Anchor:  Dr Ciara Dangerfield
Person:  Dr Francisco Sahli
 
Abstract: In recent years, the generous support of the Cambridge Philosophical Society has allowed INI to further support the attendance of early career researchers in its programmes and workshops. This first of three interviews speaks to one such recipient: Dr Francisco Sahli. Francisco is a postdoctoral researcher in the field of computational cardiology at Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile and attended the 2019 programme "The fickle heart". Dan Aspel and Ciara Dangerfield speak to him about his experience of the Institute, the ensuing collaborations and the importance of funding for more junior members of the community.

00:00 - Welcome
00:55 - Introductions
01:50 - Attending “The Fickle Heart” programme, the mathematics of modelling the human heart
04:15 - Being an early career researcher at an INI workshop
07:45 - … and ensuing collaborations
08:30 - Favourite memories of time at INI
09:30 - The importance of funding: “Just the airplane ticket to go to Europe is pretty expensive from Chile”
11:58 - Future plans
Available Formats
Format Quality Bitrate Size
MP3 44100 Hz 249.82 kbits/sec 25.74 MB Listen Download
Auto * (Allows browser to choose a format it supports)