This month we’re looking at the invisible... the things you might not usually notice. Cerys and team are looking at city soundscapes, the Antarctica continent and the radio frequency spectrum. We’re looking at these three subjects through a new lens and discussing how we make the invisible, visible.
Hosts: Molly Rasbash, Maria Bunyun, Taqwa Sadiq (UCL Students)
Guests: Andrew Mitchell, Prof Ilan Kellman, Dr Matthew Ritchie (UCL Academics)
Act 1
Andrew Mitchell
In Act 1, hear Molly Rasbash's conversation with Andrew Mitchell.
Andrew Mitchell is a Research Fellow in urban soundscape modelling at University College London (UCL). His research interests include soundscape analysis and visualisation, machine learning, and human perception of complex sounds. Andrew has been awarded two PhD and one Post-doctoral Enrichment Awards from The Alan Turing Institute and spent a month in early 2022 as a visiting research fellow at Stockholm University. His ongoing projects include the Soundscape Indices (SSID) Horizon 2020 project, Soundscapy, Deep Learning Techniques for noise Annoyance detection (DeLTA), AI for Urban Soundscape Enhancement (AI USE), the Catalogue of Soundscape Interventions (CSI), and the Soundscape Attributes Translation Project (SATP).
Andrew is also the host of The Rest is Just Noise, a monthly podcast exploring the relationship between sound and our cities. Each episode, Andrew and his co-hosts and colleagues Dr Francesco Aletta and Dr Tin Oberman speak with researchers and experts from a wide range of backgrounds about their work in urban sounds and sound perception.
Act 2
Ilan Kelman
In Act 2, Maria Bunyun speaks with Prof Ilan Kelman about Antarticness.
Ilan Kelman is a Professor of Disasters and Health at University College London, England and a Professor II at the University of Agder, Kristiansand, Norway. His overall research interest is linking disasters and health, integrating climate change into both. Three main areas are: (i) disaster diplomacy and health diplomacy http://www.disasterdiplomacy.org ; (ii) island sustainability involving safe and healthy communities in isolated locations http://www.islandvulnerability.org ; and (iii) risk education for health and disasters http://www.riskred.org
You can find Ilan at http://www.ilankelman.org and Twitter/Instagram @ILANKELMAN
Antarticness can also be found on the UCL Press website.
Act 3
Dr Matthew Ritchie
In Act 3, hear Taqwa Sadiq's conversation with Dr Matthew Ritchie about Radio Frequencies.
Dr Matthew Ritchie received an MSci degree in physics from The University of Nottingham, in 2008. Following this, he completed an Eng.D degree at University College London (UCL), in association with Thales U.K., in 2013. He continued at UCL as a postdoctoral research associate focusing on machine learning applied to multi-static radar for micro-Doppler classification.
In 2017 Dr Ritchie took a Senior Radar Scientist position at the Defence Science and Technology Laboratories (Dstl) which also involved working as the Team Leader for the Radar Sensing group in the Cyber and Information Systems Division. During his time at Dstl he worked on a broad range of cutting-edge RF sensing challenges collaborating with both industry and academia.
As of 2018 he has now taken a lectureship role at UCL within the Radar Sensing group. Currently, he serves as the Chair of the IEEE Aerospace and System Society (AESS) for the United Kingdom & Ireland, is a Subject Editor-in-Chief for the IET Electronics Letters journal and a Senior Member of the IEEE. He was awarded the 2017 IET RSN best paper award as well as the Bob Hill Award at the 2015 IEEE International Radar Conference.