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Interacting Minds

Author: Interacting Minds

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Interacting Minds is an interdisciplinary research podcast hosted by Kirsi Tilk, Arnault-Quentin Vermillet and Savhannah Schulz. In each episode, they are joined by fellow interdisciplinary researchers to explore and discuss the work they have been doing and share a glimpse of the journey that brought them there.
Sound engineer : Kirsi Tilk
Music : Simon Karg

22 Episodes
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The 4th season of the Interacting Minds Podcast introduces 3 research projects chosen for the 2024 IMC Postdoc Training Programme. The participants introduce what they worked on, the outcome of the projects, and possible benefits for the future. In this episode we take a look at how capitalist development, hereunder infrastructure, changes our environment and poses a threat to the local ecological balance. The three main locations for this research are Botswana, Canada and Spain. Pierre...
The 4th season of the Interacting Minds Podcast introduces 3 research projects chosen for the 2024 IMC Postdoc Training Programme. The participants present what they worked on, the outcome of the projects, and possible benefits for the future. The first episode in this season discusses the problems that arise from the overpopulation of house crows in coastal Tanzania, how people dealt with it in the past and what can be done about it in the future. Our guest today is Samwel Moses ...
In the episode of this season we will discuss how religion, devotion and love can be intertwined. Postdoctoral Fellow Renée L. Ford shares her expertise in Tibetan Buddhism and how can love and devotion manifest itself. Produced by Kirsi Tilk Music by Simon Karg Find more information at interactingminds.au.dk/podcast
In this episode we will dig deep into cave art, early human behavior, meaning making and what can we find looking back to these primordial times. Here to guide us are Izzy Wisher and Kristian Tylén from the eSYMb project. Produced by Kirsi Tilk Music by Simon Karg Find more information at interactingminds.au.dk/podcast
In the fourth episode of the season, we will discuss what is joint action, non-verbal communication and also what comes out of a collaboration between science and art. The expert on the show is an associate professor in Cognitive Science and Cognitive Semiotics from Aarhus University, Cordula Vesper. Produced by Kirsi Tilk Music by Simon Karg Find more information at interactingminds.au.dk/podcast
In this episode we will discuss what role music played in peoples lives during COVID19 pandemic. The co-creator of MUSICOVID, Niels Christian Hansen, shares his research about peoples listening habits, new trends that emerged and coping methods for musicians. Produced by Kirsi Tilk Music by Simon Karg Find more information at interactingminds.au.dk/podcast
In this episode, Rajiv Vaid Basaiawmoit who is the head of science-technology innovation & entrepreneurship for both the natural and technical science faculty at Aarhus University, talks about his methods of gamification that he uses and what are the benefits of it in education. Produced by Kirsi Tilk Music by Simon Karg Find more information at interactingminds.au.dk/podcast
In the first episode, “Sexism in Academia”, Lea Skewes, a prominent danish gender researcher, talks about her findings on gender discrimination in academia. On the backdrop of the VIVE study, her research will shed light onto some systemic problems we encounter. Produced and edited by Kirsi Tilk Music by Simon Karg Find more information at interactingminds.au.dk/podcast
Scientists are busy. Always with the next deadline in sight. Looking back at a century of technological progress and theoretical debate is quite a daunting task. Yet, taking some distance is always a good idea to ground your work. During their visit to the IMC, Arnault had the opportunity to organise a recording session with two lifelong researchers: Chris and Uta Frith. As we discuss the past 60 years of theoretical, technological and cultural changes they experienced in research. Their sto...
On a fundamental level, perspective-taking and storytelling are the main undertakings of both artists and scientists. They take an object, study it - sometimes deconstruct it - to reveal a new aspect of it. Yet, they evolve in clearly distinct social niches. So what happens when scientists and artists are brought together to crack the same object? Can their perspectives be complementary? Or does something new emerge? For this podcast, Arnault visited artist Olafur Eliasson (Olafur Eliasson S...
Political hostility is on the rise. The increasing polarisation in the political landscape stands hand in hand with political disengagement and apathy of third parties, and presents a challenge to our democratic institutions. This growing hostility couldn't be more palpable than on the web. Scrolling on your favourite social media platform, you probably run into some hate speech from time to time. How do you typically react in these situations? While research within political science h...
Are dreams just cognitive trash? Or do they fulfil a specific role in human evolution? How does dream time work? And what has Harrison Ford to do with dumb dream brain and eel related dice rolling games? Philosopher and former Interacting Minds colleague Melanie Rosen (Trent University) has spoiled us with a visit from Canada to take us along on a journey into the depths of dream research. We get to talk about the continuity theory of dreams, explore the potential explanations for why h...
Consciousness, despite millennia of heated debate, remains one of the most puzzling phenomena to humankind. Theories are vast and continue to evolve with new technologies and fields of study. Yet, what happens when we move away from the theoretical discourse and enter a clinical setting where our conception of consciousness has critical implications to the lives and survival of patients at the borderlands of living. Lise Marie Andersen (Interacting Minds Centre & Region Midtjylland)...
Clinicians tending to unresponsive patients with serious brain injuries face critical end-of-life decisions. They must decide to continue or withdraw life-sustaining treatment based on the best available knowledge and resources. Looking into the future, can researchers aid this decision making process by designing supportive computational tools? And if yes, what considerations should they keep in mind? Lise Marie Andersen (Interacting Minds Centre & Region Midtjylland) & Alberte Seebe...
Wearable technologies have become increasingly prevalent in our daily lives. From tracking running times to monitoring stress, pulse and breathing — little in our life is left untracked. But what can all this data tell us? Could we gain new knowledge about human physiology and behaviour by drawing on information gained through wearable technologies in an ethical and responsible way? Psychologist Christine Parsons (Director of the Interacting Minds Centre) has joined us this week to disc...
Mette Terp Høybye (Interacting Minds Centre & Silkeborg Regional Hospital) takes us along to the boundaries of consciousness and shares with us insights from her interdisciplinary research group Borderlands of Living that has spent the last 3 years empirically studying the high-stake relationship and uncertainties between clinical practice and research practice in the prognostic assessment of unresponsive patients with serious brain injuries. Examining these intersections of r...
What is the role of interdisciplinary and social science research in navigating a global pandemic? Computational Linguist Rebekah Baglini & Political Psychologist Michael Bang Petersen (Interacting Minds Centre) have stopped by this week to talk about the HOPE project — the largest Danish social science research project on the COVID epidemic. We unpack HOPE’s interdisciplinary efforts to engage in data-gathering and rapid on-going analyses since the onset of the COVID pandemic in 20...
Constructivist Designer, Educator and Researcher Amos Blanton (Interacting Minds Centre & Dokk1, Aarhus Public Library) joins us this episode to talk about tinkering, play, and the adjacent possibilities that come with it. We talk about past endeavours - running the Scratch online community, designing learning through play experiences in LEGO House, founding the LEGO Idea Studio, and co-developing the vision for the Scintillae Research Atelier - and then move to Amos current researc...
Interdisciplinary scholar Ingela Visuri (Dalarna University & Interacting Minds Centre) has come over from Sweden to talk about her new research project that explores to what extent educational live action role playing (eduLARP) contributes to social and theoretical learning in autistic youths. We revisit the epiphany that started her research career while a religion studies teacher at a Secondary School in Sweden and follow her path as a curious mixed-methods scholar to the present...
Play Researcher Marc Malmdorf Andersen (Interacting Minds Centre & Recreational Fear Lab) has stopped by to talk about his cognitive theory of play, recreational fear, dark play, and why sweet spots of surprise could be at the core of making sense of why humans of all ages play. We also get to talk about some of Marc’s past and future research endeavours: Studying senses of agency in Ouija Board sessions, asking participants to detect beings in a virtual reality forest, and using a ...
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