As part of the Imaging ONEWORLD series, the focus of these lectures is on microscopy and image analysis methods and how to apply these to your research. Almost all aspects of imaging such as sample preparation, labelling strategies, experimental workflows, ‘how-to’ image and analyse, as well as facilitating collaborations and inspiring new scientific ideas will be covered. Speakers will be available for questions and answers. The organisers, core facility staff from the University of Cambridge, Gurdon Institute, MRC-LMB and the ICR/Royal Marsden Trust are also able to continue the discussion and provide advice on your imaging projects.

Scientific Organisers


Africa Microscopy Initiative 

The African scientific community is a vital pillar in combating threats to global health, food security, and environmental conservation. Yet researchers throughout the continent are commonly overlooked by well-intentioned technology dissemination programs. This marginalizes a large and important proportion of the global scientific community, and it denies the world an opportunity to learn from, and work with, this vast scientific talent.  To remedy this glaring inequity necessitates significant and sustained scientific research investment. It also spotlights the need to pave the way for African scientists to easily tap into the many global scientific resources that are not currently accessible in an equitable way. This is especially the case when it comes to microscopy, a resource-intensive but highly scalable research method that can be adapted to study wide range of biological questions and length scales. 
The Africa Microscopy Initiative (AMI) is a multi-pronged, continent-wide undertaking aimed at directly addressing the inequitable access to advanced imaging techniques throughout Africa. It combines a centralized but open-access microscopy center, with multifaceted educational opportunities, and an instrument distribution program. Its vision is propelled by the recognition that effective capacity-building for microscopy in Africa hinges on the confluence of technology access, dissemination, and education. A multi-tiered approach to educational and instrument dissemination is strategically designed to create a deployable, critical mass of microscopy instruments and trainers who will empower African scientists.