ResearchPod

ResearchPod

ResearchPod science podcasts connect the research community to a global audience of peers and the public, raising visibility and impact. www.researchpod.org. All content is shared under the Creative Commons CCBY-NC-ND 4.0 licence. For further information, email contact@researchpod.org

  1. Digital Futures & Ancient History: Bridging Worlds Through Games | The Enterprise Sessions with Dr. Richard Cole 

    1D AGO

    Digital Futures & Ancient History: Bridging Worlds Through Games | The Enterprise Sessions with Dr. Richard Cole 

    In this episode of Enterprise Sessions from the University of Bristol, Professor Michele Barbour sits down with Dr. Richard Cole, Lecturer in Digital Futures within the Department of Classics and Ancient History, for a fascinating deep dive into the unexpected synergy between ancient narratives and cutting-edge technology.   Discover how Richard’s journey from historical fiction to virtual reality and AI-powered gaming led to the creation of the Bristol Digital Game Lab, a hub for interdisciplinary collaboration between academia and the gaming industry. From algorithmic bias to postnatal depression, learn how game jams and immersive storytelling are being used to tackle complex societal challenges.   🔍 In the episode:   The intersection of classics and digital innovation  How games can be tools for humanistic inquiry  Collaborating with industry to build meaningful experiences  The future of AI-driven gameplay and museum engagement  Empowering students through game design and research  🌐 About the Enterprise Sessions  The Enterprise Sessions bring together a diverse mix of company founders and researchers who talk openly about their personal experiences of forming spin-outs and start-ups, raising capital, academic-industry partnerships and the joys of translating research discoveries into real-world impact. The series aims to inform, inspire and challenge myths and stereotypes about research commercialisation and how businesses and universities can work together to tackle society's biggest challenges.     👍 Like, Share, Subscribe, Explore  If you found this episode inspiring or informative, please don’t forget to like and share. Visit our website or subscribe to the University of Bristol’s YouTube channel for more Enterprise Sessions.   https://www.bristol.ac.uk/enterprise-sessions

    55 min
  2. From Acoustic Levitation to Biotech Automation | The Enterprise Sessions with Luke Cox

    FEB 4

    From Acoustic Levitation to Biotech Automation | The Enterprise Sessions with Luke Cox

    Join Professor Michele Barbour for an energising and deeply insightful conversation with Dr Luke Cox, CEO of Impulsonics, a University of Bristol spin‑out transforming how cell handling and automation are done in biotechnology.  What begins as an exploration of Luke’s journey from engineering undergraduate to PhD researcher becomes an exhilarating story of invention, grit, and entrepreneurial drive. From early work in acoustic levitation to co‑developing a novel “impulse control” technology, Luke unpacks how a speculative research project evolved into a breakthrough method for moving millions of cells simultaneously — enabling automation where traditional tools have long failed.  Discover how Luke navigated the risks, setbacks, and thrill of taking on the role of CEO while spinning out a deep‑tech company; how customer discovery reshaped their market focus; and why Impulsonics’ modular, ultrasound‑based approach could unlock scalable personalised medicine, reduced lab waste, and new possibilities in drug discovery.  This is a candid discussion about ambition, risk engineering, accidental luck, and finding the “beachhead market” that biologists have needed for decades — all told with Luke’s characteristic insight, humility, and humour.  In this episode  From engineering undergrad to PhD researcher: discovering acoustic levitation The origins of “impulse control” and its biocompatible applications Why automation in biotechnology breaks down — and how Impulsonics bridges the gap Building prototypes, identifying markets and finding early‑stage grant funding Becoming CEO: translating between tech, biology, and business How automation could enable precision functional medicine The role of AI: hype, data quality, and industry realities Storytelling, improv theatre, and becoming unafraid to ask “stupid questions” Advice for early‑career researchers and aspiring entrepreneurs   🌐 About the Enterprise Sessions  The Enterprise Sessions bring together founders and researchers to share candid insights on spin-outs, start-ups, raising capital, and translating research into real-world impact. Our goal? To inform, inspire, and challenge myths about research commercialisation.  👍 Like, Share, Subscribe  If you enjoyed this episode, please like and share! Explore more at University of Bristol Enterprise Sessions and subscribe to our YouTube channel for future episodes.  Connect with our Guests:  Dr Luke Cox – LinkedIn Prof Michele Barbour – LinkedIn  Chapters  0:00 – Introductions 0:34 – From engineering student to acoustic levitation researcher  3:20 – How ultrasound manipulates millions of cells   5:25 – Exploring the potential of ultrasound and technology   9:00 – How the culture of innovation in Bristol inspired Luke 13:08 – Creating a product useful for the target audience  18:22 – Finding direction through the ICURe programme  22:47 – How cell passaging became the perfect first market — and how Impulsonics automates it  27:10 – Leadership, learning to translate across disciplines, and choosing not to bring in an external CEO  32:29 – Navigating grants, investors, risk engineering, relationships, and the realities of building hardware and biology together  42:28 – How Impulsonics’ technology could enable patient‑specific drug testing and more sustainable labs  46:19 – The founder mindset 51:45 – Advice for early‑career researchers

    1h 5m

Ratings & Reviews

4.5
out of 5
8 Ratings

About

ResearchPod science podcasts connect the research community to a global audience of peers and the public, raising visibility and impact. www.researchpod.org. All content is shared under the Creative Commons CCBY-NC-ND 4.0 licence. For further information, email contact@researchpod.org