CANCELLED: Food for Thought: The future of nutrition

The Food for Thought series has been cancelled for 2020, but the topic and speakers will be rescheduled for 2021. For more information or to be added to our events email list, please contact the events team

 

How is it that a blob of slime instinctively knows what and how much to eat, yet humans can’t seem to figure it out?

 

What can a baboon’s diet teach us about the science of obesity in humans?

 

How do our genes, diet and microbiome work together to inform our risk of disease?

 

Join us to explore the big questions in nutrition with molecular nutritionist Dr Emma Beckett and nutritional ecologist Professor David Raubenheimer. In the final installment of Food for Thought, our speakers will draw on the Nourishing Australia ten-year plan as well as their own research expertise to deliver an engaging look at the future of nutrition science.

 

David is professor of nutritional ecology at the University of Sydney. He studies how nutrients influence animals’ interactions with their environment, using an evolutionary and ecological lens. This involves looking at foraging behaviour, food choices and health of different species from slime moulds to monkeys. These insights can inform our understanding human issues such as obesity and ageing.

 

Emma is a molecular nutritionist at the University of Newcastle and a sought-after science communicator. She researches at the interface of genetics, taste and the food we eat. She investigates the effects of nutrients such as folate and vitamin D at a cellular level. She also has a diverse portfolio of taste research, examining how the way we taste food changes our food choices and the roles of taste receptors—which aren’t just on our tongues, but are found throughout our body.

This is the final event in a six-part series. Throughout this series, experts from around Australia, will cover a range of topics relating to food and nutrition, including food waste, gut health, Australian native foods, edible insects, GM foods, the future of nutrition and more! Visit the series page for more information and tickets to other talks.

 

Date: Tuesday 8 December 2020
Time: 5.30pm–7.00pm. Refreshments served from 5.30pm, with the talk 6.00pm-7.00pm. 
Location: The Shine Dome
Price: $75 for a season pass, $15 for single tickets

The Shine Dome,15 Gordon Street Australian Capital Territory

Contact Information

events@science.org.au

5:30 PM July 08, 2020
FOR Public
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Add to Calendar 08/07/2020 5:30 PM 08/07/2020 5:30 PM Australia/Sydney CANCELLED: Food for Thought: The future of nutrition

The Food for Thought series has been cancelled for 2020, but the topic and speakers will be rescheduled for 2021. For more information or to be added to our events email list, please

 

How is it that a blob of slime instinctively knows what and how much to eat, yet humans can’t seem to figure it out?

 

What can a baboon’s diet teach us about the science of obesity in humans?

 

How do our genes, diet and microbiome work together to inform our risk of disease?

 

Join us to explore the big questions in nutrition with molecular nutritionist Dr Emma Beckett and nutritional ecologist Professor David Raubenheimer. In the final installment of Food for Thought, our speakers will draw on the Nourishing Australia ten-year plan as well as their own research expertise to deliver an engaging look at the future of nutrition science.

 

David is professor of nutritional ecology at the University of Sydney. He studies how nutrients influence animals’ interactions with their environment, using an evolutionary and ecological lens. This involves looking at foraging behaviour, food choices and health of different species from slime moulds to monkeys. These insights can inform our understanding human issues such as obesity and ageing.

 

Emma is a molecular nutritionist at the University of Newcastle and a sought-after science communicator. She researches at the interface of genetics, taste and the food we eat. She investigates the effects of nutrients such as folate and vitamin D at a cellular level. She also has a diverse portfolio of taste research, examining how the way we taste food changes our food choices and the roles of taste receptors—which aren’t just on our tongues, but are found throughout our body.

This is the final event in a six-part series. Throughout this series, experts from around Australia, will cover a range of topics relating to food and nutrition, including food waste, gut health, Australian native foods, edible insects, GM foods, the future of nutrition and more!  for more information and tickets to other talks.

 

Date: Tuesday 8 December 2020
Time: 5.30pm–7.00pm. Refreshments served from 5.30pm, with the talk 6.00pm-7.00pm. 
Location: The Shine Dome
Price: $75 for a season pass, $15 for single tickets

The Shine Dome,15 Gordon Street Australian Capital Territory false DD/MM/YYYY

Contact Information

events@science.org.au

5:30 PM July 08, 2020

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