I remember so many laughing with the Duke of Edinburgh saying “looked like it was put in by Indians”. One only need google to see the contribution of Indians to science. Thank you 🇮🇳 keep up the great work
Wonderful! Well done. Running and cycling and skiing have always felt to me to be a for of dancing. And I am metabolizing in a positive way. Playing music comes to mind as a healthy way to engage our brain. Thank you so much!
Awespiring talk! Wondering if sound can perturb metabolome in a predictable way? If so, can we map these specific metabolic patterns of change to the type of music?
I spent a good portion of my working life studying human physiology, cell biology, and microbiology. That is to say LOTS of chemical pathways, including positive feedback and negative feedback, etc. I loved the stuff! Back when I had to outrun a dinosour or two on the way to the lab, the library (i.e., paper) was pretty much the only way to see what other perple were doing in order to avoid reinventing whe wheel and to get inspiration from related research. VERY time-consuming. It's good to see "whippersnappers" being able to make progress much more rapidly with the incredible access they have to relevant information.
I can understand from this lecture that as "healthy diet and exercise" is a consistently prescribed practise for managing and averting a huge variety of ailments and diseases we should try to understand how these practices help in the regulation of various energy biomolecule metabolites and if there is a significant change to the transcriptome over a period of time i.e. if it is at all possible to alter our blueprint instruction conveying mechanisms. We should find out how different things in our day to day lives can influence these lasting changes so that we can manage them more precisely and tailor relevant practices to our lifestyles.
Yes we constantly hear about the importance of eating healthy and getting excercise.. While simultaneously not being able to afford healthy food and being told to stay inside because it's unsafe to leave.
Though there were many parts that I don't understand, being not very well educated, this video sounds more or less what I have always thought about the mechanics of cancer. My theory is that a gene is altered after getting hit by some sort of ionizing radiation particle and it tricks your body to produce the wrong proteins and due to a blockage (fats) or the lack of resources (illness) to remove the wrongly structured proteins, a tumor is formed. The wrongly structured proteins then accumulates and depending on what kind of protein that is, it may even be identified as hostile and is then attacked by your body (malignant).
Very very engaging lecture. I saw the title and thought of my Granma, so i click it right away. She is like a little girl with 90+ years now but i remember when she could interact with me and her beloved animals.
Heart disease, lung disease, brain disease, liver disease. We really are a mess. I wonder if we don’t need yet another broad category, protein disease, or dna disease.
Doesn't this imply that you consider "Royal Institution" to be is superior to whatever India has? Otherwise you would've instead felt that Royal Institution was lucky manage to get one of people of Indian ethnicity. This persistent submissive disposition of some Indian people towards England and the West in general is really peculiar. India hasn't been a colony for quite a few years already, and is already far more powerful than the UK
@@NJ-wb1cz there are millions of people having their individual perspective royal institution is historica*place where michael faraday and other great scietists appeared in the past do y!think RI is the only symbol of power ?
@@sunahangrai3601 when it comes to scientific history India is more important and foundational than England since Indian mathematicians created the entire basis for modern mathematics on which other sciences were built. Without India there would've been no Faraday
@@sunahangrai3601 I'm not even from India, it's just weird when people dismiss their own country that way. I have never seen English people do the same and venerate Indian history of scientific discoveries up to a point of being proud if an English person is ever allowed to speak in India
@@NJ-wb1cz Whoa-you've completely misconstrued the OP's words. He said nothing about dismissing his own country or considering the English as superior to Indians. Those are _your_ words-are you projecting or something? The RI has a reputation for providing a platform for high-quality lectures. Acknowledging it doesn't diminish any Indian institutions. The RI is highly selective in whom they invite to lecture. Not many people of Indian origin lecture there. We're all justifiably proud that Dr. Priyanka Joshi presented this lecture. Just as much as the contributions of other Indians. Our pride has nothing to do with past colonialism, economic and military power, history of math and science, or a "persistent submissive disposition." Those are your misinterpretations-and yours alone.
I remember so many laughing with the Duke of Edinburgh saying “looked like it was put in by Indians”. One only need google to see the contribution of Indians to science. Thank you 🇮🇳 keep up the great work
27:55 so cool how she kept composure & handled the situation!
"Sorry, I dropped an atom...."
Excellent lecture. Thank you
Wonderful talk. Keep it up Priyanka.
Great presentation and sorry for your loss.
I am so proud of you 🥺 You aced it.
Wonderful!
Well done.
Running and cycling and skiing have always felt to me to be a for of dancing. And I am metabolizing in a positive way.
Playing music comes to mind as a healthy way to engage our brain.
Thank you so much!
my condolences for your loss. Great lecture, amazing work. Thank you
Awespiring talk! Wondering if sound can perturb metabolome in a predictable way? If so, can we map these specific metabolic patterns of change to the type of music?
I spent a good portion of my working life studying human physiology, cell biology, and microbiology. That is to say LOTS of chemical pathways, including positive feedback and negative feedback, etc. I loved the stuff! Back when I had to outrun a dinosour or two on the way to the lab, the library (i.e., paper) was pretty much the only way to see what other perple were doing in order to avoid reinventing whe wheel and to get inspiration from related research. VERY time-consuming. It's good to see "whippersnappers" being able to make progress much more rapidly with the incredible access they have to relevant information.
I can understand from this lecture that as "healthy diet and exercise" is a consistently prescribed practise for managing and averting a huge variety of ailments and diseases we should try to understand how these practices help in the regulation of various energy biomolecule metabolites and if there is a significant change to the transcriptome over a period of time i.e. if it is at all possible to alter our blueprint instruction conveying mechanisms.
We should find out how different things in our day to day lives can influence these lasting changes so that we can manage them more precisely and tailor relevant practices to our lifestyles.
Yes we constantly hear about the importance of eating healthy and getting excercise.. While simultaneously not being able to afford healthy food and being told to stay inside because it's unsafe to leave.
@@benjamindover4337 we have to wear our mask and re-breath all the moisture & microorganisms..
So terribly sorry for your loss Great lecture :)
Fascinating and a fun ending. Would love Priyanka Joshi to do the RI Christmas lectures this year.
The two who gave us a quick salsa dance lesson were good sports.
Fascinating lecture, thanks
Though there were many parts that I don't understand, being not very well educated, this video sounds more or less what I have always thought about the mechanics of cancer. My theory is that a gene is altered after getting hit by some sort of ionizing radiation particle and it tricks your body to produce the wrong proteins and due to a blockage (fats) or the lack of resources (illness) to remove the wrongly structured proteins, a tumor is formed. The wrongly structured proteins then accumulates and depending on what kind of protein that is, it may even be identified as hostile and is then attacked by your body (malignant).
Very very engaging lecture. I saw the title and thought of my Granma, so i click it right away. She is like a little girl with 90+ years now but i remember when she could interact with me and her beloved animals.
Is the volume really low on this or what?
So proud of you di.
So in a nutshell, overexpressed metabolites need to be supplemented? Not inhibited?
In conclusion, more PROTEIN less PROCESSED FOODs and more MOVEMENT. The cure for ALL DISEASES!!
Great presentation
Great lecture!
they’re not hiding it, they make you pay
you can find it either way you’ll see the effect of this new 3 days ago
Heart disease, lung disease, brain disease, liver disease. We really are a mess. I wonder if we don’t need yet another broad category, protein disease, or dna disease.
so fasting should help
called it 36:00
Nice video
i am feeling proud seeing an indian looking woman professor there in royal institution
Doesn't this imply that you consider "Royal Institution" to be is superior to whatever India has? Otherwise you would've instead felt that Royal Institution was lucky manage to get one of people of Indian ethnicity.
This persistent submissive disposition of some Indian people towards England and the West in general is really peculiar. India hasn't been a colony for quite a few years already, and is already far more powerful than the UK
@@NJ-wb1cz there are millions of people having their individual perspective royal institution is historica*place where michael faraday and other great scietists appeared in the past do y!think RI is the only symbol of power ?
@@sunahangrai3601 when it comes to scientific history India is more important and foundational than England since Indian mathematicians created the entire basis for modern mathematics on which other sciences were built. Without India there would've been no Faraday
@@sunahangrai3601 I'm not even from India, it's just weird when people dismiss their own country that way. I have never seen English people do the same and venerate Indian history of scientific discoveries up to a point of being proud if an English person is ever allowed to speak in India
@@NJ-wb1cz Whoa-you've completely misconstrued the OP's words. He said nothing about dismissing his own country or considering the English as superior to Indians. Those are _your_ words-are you projecting or something? The RI has a reputation for providing a platform for high-quality lectures. Acknowledging it doesn't diminish any Indian institutions. The RI is highly selective in whom they invite to lecture. Not many people of Indian origin lecture there. We're all justifiably proud that Dr. Priyanka Joshi presented this lecture. Just as much as the contributions of other Indians. Our pride has nothing to do with past colonialism, economic and military power, history of math and science, or a "persistent submissive disposition." Those are your misinterpretations-and yours alone.