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Pint of Science: My Body 🧠🔬
Seeing Inside Ourselves: From Microscopic Worlds to Mental Health
Join us for an evening exploring the science of My Body — from the hidden beauty of cells under the microscope to the complex psychological factors that shape our relationship with food, weight, and wellbeing.
This event brings together two researchers working to better understand the human body in very different — but equally fascinating — ways.
🔬 Seeing the Invisible: Imaging the Hidden World Inside Us
Ever wondered what your body looks like at the microscopic level? This talk explores how cuttin…
Seeing Inside Ourselves: From Microscopic Worlds to Mental Health
Join us for an evening exploring the science of My Body — from the hidden beauty of cells under the microscope to the complex psychological factors that shape our relationship with food, weight, and wellbeing.
This event brings together two researchers working to better understand the human body in very different — but equally fascinating — ways.
🔬 Seeing the Invisible: Imaging the Hidden World Inside Us
Ever wondered what your body looks like at the microscopic level? This talk explores how cuttin…
Why people with eating disorders miss out on the treatment that works
Leah Brennan
(Leah Brennan is a clinical psychologist and Professor researching eating disorders, body image, and weight. She’s passionate about making effective treatment more accessible, especially in real-world and rural settings.)
Why do people with eating disorders miss out on effective care? We bust myths about who is affected, what treatment works, and why access is harder than it should be.
Tiny Things, Big Science: Exploring the Unseen
Cameron Nowell
(Cameron heads the microscopy facility at the Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, helping researchers explore the unseen world inside cells and tissues. He started out as a microbiologist, stumbled into microscopy, fell in love with it, and never looked back — and now he enjoys showing how images can make science clear, beautiful, and fun.)
Cancer cells, honey bees, fluorescent neurons, drug‑treated tissues — they all hide remarkable stories when viewed up close. Come explore the tiny details that reveal how surprising, beautiful, and informative the microscopic world can be.
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