 Good afternoon everyone. Welcome to 2015 Fallen Walls Lab Ohus edition. How are you? Yeah, good. Happy to see so many smiling faces. The jury's already laughing. That's a good thing. Good sign for you guys, right? Five competitors here today. Three minutes. Three sides maximum. All here vying for one golden ticket to the Berlin final in 33 days. How's it make you feel, Alexander? Are you ready? Yeah. Nice. Nice. Quick question. How many of you guys know about Fallen Walls, the concept behind it? Okay. Fallen Walls, the whole idea was created on the 20th anniversary of the Fallen of the Berlin Wall. So the whole idea there is which walls will fall next. That's the underlying premise. And the whole idea, again, is to foster discussion about research, about innovation and promote the latest scientific findings to a broad audience. And that's you guys. And you guys represent the latest scientific findings. I don't know about you, but that sounds like the recipe for a very good competition. And we're gonna have a lot of fun today. We're gonna get these guys up here. There's gonna be a clock behind them. No pressure. It's gonna start turning red as the three minutes decreases. Again, no pressure. The jury is gonna be listening very closely. They're gonna be marking each participant and we're gonna be following up with a Q&A as well. But they're not the only ones deciding who's gonna win today because you, ladies and gentlemen, you're also gonna be deciding a winner because we have an audience winner. So in front of you, you should have a little voting sheet. So what we also want you guys to do is listen intently and at the end of the day help us pick a winner. And it's gonna be your winner. So what we'll do is, in addition to having Q&A from the jury, we'll also give you guys opportunities to ask some questions as well. However, we want to limit it and we want to be fair in the spirit of competition. So roughly 10 minutes per contestant. Those are the ground rules. Okay? Any questions? No? Do you have any questions? You're still wondering how I'm gonna pronounce your name, right? How you feeling right now, Alexander? I'm Graham. I'm sorry. Why don't you call me Alexander? No idea. I think Alexander Graham Bell. Okay. Well, I'm not claiming to have invented the telephone today. Okay. That would be too good. That would be a breakthrough idea. Well, that would be a winning idea. Right. How are you feeling? I'm good. How are you? How are you feeling? Fine. Okay. And you? You? I'm very empowered. Okay. You're empowered. Nice. Anna, you're first up. How are you feeling right now? Great. Looking forward to present. Yeah. You're gonna set a really hard example for the others to follow, right? Yeah, I plan to. Absolutely. Awesome. So, ladies and gentlemen, that's gonna happen a few times today. Before we get started, let's meet our jury, should we? And I've actually asked them to present themselves, because I don't think I could do a good enough job doing it. So why don't you start with us? Yeah, I'll be brief. Sure. Do you have more? Three minutes and three slides. You wanted 10 minutes before, right? Yeah, I can do it. Okay. Okay. And the clock starts now. My name is Christian Oleg Andersen. I'm chair of the PhD committee at the Faculty of Arts, and I also research in the area between humanities and technology. Awesome. Perfect. Thank you. Hello. My name is Nanna Junker. I'm a representative from the other side, from the industry. I'm from Nova Nordisk, where I am a volunteer, and I'm a researcher there. Hi. My name is Louisa Halles-Gostogat. I'm an assistant professor at this university. I'm a lawyer as well, working in the crossfield between European Union Law and Human Rights. And I'm really looking forward to the presentation here today. Hello, everybody. My name is Dilo Borsen. I'm from the Department of Molecular Biology. Here at Oles University, I'm a member of the PhD Board of Molecular Biology. And I work on something called structural biology, which has to do with how biomolecules look and feel. So I'm going to be looking a lot at the visual presentations and how things come across here today. Hello. My name is Steen Tiedemann. I'm a rector at the Folke University, or as we call it in a direct translation to the People's University. We run open lectures 1,000 each year with 1,000 different professors from the university. So I will be looking at how you present your research for a wider audience. Great. You guys can keep that, because you can use that for the Q&A afterwards. So contestants, are you ready? Are we good? Did I forget anything? Okay. The rules have been communicated. The platform has been set. And now let the competition begin. I have the baton in my hand, the magic clicker. So we're going to get her on stage. And before we start, I told each... I'm sorry, you're pointing at something? Right. So what I told each contestant is they can get on stage, they can find their footing, they can get situated, and when they're ready to go, they'll indicate to us, that's when we'll start the three minutes, okay? And then I'll yell really loud when three minutes is finished. No, I'm just joking. You ready? Here you go.