 So, if you can start by introducing yourself first, so tell us who you are and what you're interested in in terms of microbiology. So I am Pascal Cossat. I am working in the Pasteur Institute in Paris and I am interested in bacterial infection and I take as a model the Bacterium Listeria Monocytogenes, which I choose in the late 80s. So we are interested in the infection process, but we are interested in the bacteria and the way it behaves during infection. So we study the infection on the bacterial side, on the cell side, at the animal level, but concerning the Bacterium itself, we are interested in the infection, but also in the physiology of the Bacterium. That means we are interested in the genes which are used by the Bacterium, in the way this Bacterium behaves during infection, and I think over the years we have tried to cover a lot of these issues. What will you be talking about during the FEMS meeting? Okay, during the FEMS meeting what I would like to show to the audience is that over the years we have discovered a number of new concepts. So I will come back to these new concepts. For example, I will talk about the way the Bacterium are moving inside cells and how the study of the movement of the bacteria inside mammalian cells was somehow opening a new concept in the field of cell biology. So there are a number of issues that are classic now that I will describe very briefly and then I will also go to all the new results that we have gathered over the last two years, starting from how the Bacterium is behaving in the context of the microbiota in the gut and also how we have discovered by studying the transcriptome of the Bacterium, how we have discovered, for example, new RNA-mediated regulation and also a new type of resistance mechanism, antibiotic resistance mechanism that the Bacterium is using probably in the environment. Is there anything in particular you're looking forward to about the FEMS meeting? Well, I am very interested to go to the FEMS meeting because this is always the place where young people are bringing new results, fresh ideas. And I particularly that type of meeting for that reason. Great. And are you, is there anything you're looking forward to about the place, about Glasgow? Like any scientist I've been to Glasgow coming and then leaving very rapidly, so I'm very happy to go to Glasgow, especially in July because it might be a nice time to visit at least a few things.