37 min listen
Chemistry, Computers, and Humans
ratings:
Length:
33 minutes
Released:
Mar 15, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
Visit https://www.thermofisher.com/chemistry-podcast/ to access the extended video version of this episode and the guest content sheet, which contains links to recent publications and additional content recommendations for our guest. You can also access the extended video version of this episode via our YouTube channel to hear, and see, more of the conversation!Visit https://thermofisher.com/bctl to register for your free Bringing Chemistry to Life T-shirt. This started with a TV in the background showing Brazil playing Croatia in the World Cup quarter-finals, and ended with Brazil’s surprising defeat, to the dismay of our guest, Brazil-born Gabe Gomes. In the middle, the most approachable conversation you’ll ever hear about computational chemistry.Gabe tries to solve real world problems using computers and it’s almost a paradox that such an extroverted, fun guy, in love with music and speaking so much about people, ends up investing his life in machine learning algorithms. Yet it takes courage, creativity, and daring to go in new directions and seek the next big problem at the interface of scientific disciplines.Chemistry is a complex multivariate problem and resolving this complexity is the key to the fundamental understanding we need to advance the discipline. Gabe is a wonderful chaperone in our journey to discover how automation and optimization can be used not to replace chemists, but to free them to apply their skills where in matters most. Gabe is the living demonstration that computers and humans can be part of the same discourse.
Released:
Mar 15, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (49)
Stronger magnets, stronger science: This conversation with Dr. Loren Andreas, from the Max Planck Institute, delves into the growing use of NMR to study condensed systems and to complement X-ray crystallography in illuminating our understanding of structural biology. Paolo and Loren also talk about the expat experience and how science is truly an international field of study. by Bringing Chemistry to Life