WEBVTT 00:00:01.487 --> 00:00:03.656 Beau Lotto: So, this game is very simple. 00:00:03.656 --> 00:00:07.703 All you have to do is read what you see. Right? 00:00:07.703 --> 00:00:10.904 So, I'm going to count to you, so we don't all do it together. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:10.904 --> 00:00:13.403 Okay, one, two, three.Audience: Can you read this? NOTE Paragraph 00:00:13.403 --> 00:00:17.782 BL: Amazing. What about this one? One, two, three.Audience: You are not reading this. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:17.782 --> 00:00:23.098 BL: All right. One, two, three. (Laughter) 00:00:23.098 --> 00:00:27.895 If you were Portuguese, right? How about this one? One, two, three. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:27.895 --> 00:00:29.873 Audience: What are you reading? NOTE Paragraph 00:00:29.873 --> 00:00:33.331 BL: What are you reading? There are no words there. 00:00:33.331 --> 00:00:35.868 I said, read what you're seeing. Right? 00:00:35.868 --> 00:00:39.718 It literally says, "Wat ar ou rea in?" (Laughter) Right? 00:00:39.718 --> 00:00:43.546 That's what you should have said. Right? Why is this? NOTE Paragraph 00:00:43.546 --> 00:00:47.082 It's because perception is grounded in our experience. 00:00:47.082 --> 00:00:49.979 Right? The brain takes meaningless information 00:00:49.979 --> 00:00:52.938 and makes meaning out of it, which means we never see 00:00:52.938 --> 00:00:55.194 what's there, we never see information, 00:00:55.194 --> 00:00:58.469 we only ever see what was useful to see in the past. 00:00:58.469 --> 00:01:01.205 All right? Which means, when it comes to perception, 00:01:01.205 --> 00:01:08.000 we're all like this frog. 00:01:08.000 --> 00:01:08.912 (Laughter) 00:01:08.912 --> 00:01:12.307 Right? It's getting information. It's generating behavior 00:01:12.307 --> 00:01:16.775 that's useful. (Laughter) 00:01:16.775 --> 00:01:23.807 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:01:23.807 --> 00:01:29.789 (Video) Man: Ow! Ow! (Laughter) (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:01:29.789 --> 00:01:32.501 BL: And sometimes, when things don't go our way, 00:01:32.501 --> 00:01:34.760 we get a little bit annoyed, right? 00:01:34.760 --> 00:01:37.490 But we're talking about perception here, right? 00:01:37.490 --> 00:01:41.855 And perception underpins everything we think, we know, 00:01:41.855 --> 00:01:44.726 we believe, our hopes, our dreams, the clothes we wear, 00:01:44.726 --> 00:01:48.469 falling in love, everything begins with perception. 00:01:48.469 --> 00:01:51.414 Now if perception is grounded in our history, it means 00:01:51.414 --> 00:01:54.873 we're only ever responding according to what we've done before. 00:01:54.873 --> 00:01:57.949 But actually, it's a tremendous problem, 00:01:57.949 --> 00:02:01.566 because how can we ever see differently? NOTE Paragraph 00:02:01.566 --> 00:02:05.629 Now, I want to tell you a story about seeing differently, 00:02:05.629 --> 00:02:09.617 and all new perceptions begin in the same way. 00:02:09.617 --> 00:02:12.199 They begin with a question. 00:02:12.199 --> 00:02:15.437 The problem with questions is they create uncertainty. 00:02:15.437 --> 00:02:18.166 Now, uncertainty is a very bad thing. It's evolutionarily 00:02:18.166 --> 00:02:21.767 a bad thing. If you're not sure that's a predator, it's too late. 00:02:21.767 --> 00:02:23.127 Okay? (Laughter) 00:02:23.127 --> 00:02:26.287 Even seasickness is a consequence of uncertainty. 00:02:26.287 --> 00:02:28.539 Right? If you go down below on a boat, your inner ears 00:02:28.539 --> 00:02:30.715 are you telling you you're moving. Your eyes, because 00:02:30.715 --> 00:02:33.031 it's moving in register with the boat, say I'm standing still. 00:02:33.031 --> 00:02:37.686 Your brain cannot deal with the uncertainty of that information, and it gets ill. 00:02:37.686 --> 00:02:41.615 The question "why?" is one of the most dangerous things you can do, 00:02:41.615 --> 00:02:44.607 because it takes you into uncertainty. 00:02:44.607 --> 00:02:47.486 And yet, the irony is, the only way we can ever 00:02:47.486 --> 00:02:51.022 do anything new is to step into that space. 00:02:51.022 --> 00:02:54.246 So how can we ever do anything new? Well fortunately, 00:02:54.246 --> 00:02:57.830 evolution has given us an answer, right? 00:02:57.830 --> 00:03:01.425 And it enables us to address even the most difficult 00:03:01.425 --> 00:03:06.104 of questions. The best questions are the ones that create the most uncertainty. 00:03:06.104 --> 00:03:10.060 They're the ones that question the things we think to be true already. Right? 00:03:10.060 --> 00:03:12.049 It's easy to ask questions about how did life begin, 00:03:12.049 --> 00:03:15.357 or what extends beyond the universe, but to question what you think to be true already 00:03:15.357 --> 00:03:18.358 is really stepping into that space. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:18.358 --> 00:03:23.168 So what is evolution's answer to the problem of uncertainty? 00:03:23.168 --> 00:03:24.941 It's play. 00:03:24.941 --> 00:03:29.134 Now play is not simply a process. Experts in play will tell you 00:03:29.134 --> 00:03:31.749 that actually it's a way of being. 00:03:31.749 --> 00:03:34.640 Play is one of the only human endeavors where uncertainty 00:03:34.640 --> 00:03:38.966 is actually celebrated. Uncertainty is what makes play fun. 00:03:38.966 --> 00:03:43.241 Right? It's adaptable to change. Right? It opens possibility, 00:03:43.241 --> 00:03:47.350 and it's cooperative. It's actually how we do our social bonding, 00:03:47.350 --> 00:03:49.076 and it's intrinsically motivated. What that means 00:03:49.076 --> 00:03:53.682 is that we play to play. Play is its own reward. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:53.682 --> 00:03:57.573 Now if you look at these five ways of being, 00:03:57.573 --> 00:04:00.294 these are the exact same ways of being you need 00:04:00.294 --> 00:04:02.330 in order to be a good scientist. 00:04:02.330 --> 00:04:05.357 Science is not defined by the method section of a paper. 00:04:05.357 --> 00:04:08.497 It's actually a way of being, which is here, and this is true 00:04:08.497 --> 00:04:11.150 for anything that is creative. 00:04:11.150 --> 00:04:15.353 So if you add rules to play, you have a game. 00:04:15.353 --> 00:04:18.143 That's actually what an experiment is. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:18.143 --> 00:04:20.062 So armed with these two ideas, 00:04:20.062 --> 00:04:24.384 that science is a way of being and experiments are play, 00:04:24.384 --> 00:04:27.837 we asked, can anyone become a scientist? 00:04:27.837 --> 00:04:31.337 And who better to ask than 25 eight- to 10-year-old children? 00:04:31.337 --> 00:04:34.844 Because they're experts in play. So I took my bee arena 00:04:34.844 --> 00:04:38.391 down to a small school in Devon, and the aim of this 00:04:38.391 --> 00:04:42.635 was to not just get the kids to see science differently, 00:04:42.635 --> 00:04:47.233 but, through the process of science, to see themselves differently. Right? NOTE Paragraph 00:04:47.233 --> 00:04:50.641 The first step was to ask a question. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:50.641 --> 00:04:53.521 Now, I should say that we didn't get funding for this study 00:04:53.521 --> 00:04:56.851 because the scientists said small children couldn't make 00:04:56.851 --> 00:05:01.153 a useful contribution to science, and the teachers said kids couldn't do it. 00:05:01.153 --> 00:05:04.887 So we did it anyway. Right? Of course. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:04.887 --> 00:05:07.706 So, here are some of the questions. I put them in small print 00:05:07.706 --> 00:05:12.146 so you wouldn't bother reading it. Point is that five of the questions that the kids came up with 00:05:12.146 --> 00:05:16.764 were actually the basis of science publication the last five to 15 years. Right? 00:05:16.764 --> 00:05:19.424 So they were asking questions that were significant 00:05:19.424 --> 00:05:21.554 to expert scientists. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:21.554 --> 00:05:25.688 Now here, I want to share the stage with someone quite special. Right? 00:05:25.688 --> 00:05:28.300 She was one of the young people who was involved in this study, 00:05:28.300 --> 00:05:30.634 and she's now one of the youngest published scientists 00:05:30.634 --> 00:05:34.517 in the world. Right? She will now, once she comes onto stage, 00:05:34.517 --> 00:05:38.215 will be the youngest person to ever speak at TED. Right? 00:05:38.215 --> 00:05:41.090 Now, science and asking questions is about courage. 00:05:41.090 --> 00:05:44.290 Now she is the personification of courage, because she's 00:05:44.290 --> 00:05:45.677 going to stand up here and talk to you all. 00:05:45.677 --> 00:05:50.931 So Amy, would you please come up? (Applause) 00:05:50.931 --> 00:05:58.116 (Applause) 00:05:58.116 --> 00:06:00.635 So Amy's going to help me tell the story of what we call 00:06:00.635 --> 00:06:03.301 the Blackawton Bees Project, and first she's going to tell you 00:06:03.301 --> 00:06:05.846 the question that they came up with. So go ahead, Amy. NOTE Paragraph 00:06:05.846 --> 00:06:07.565 Amy O'Toole: Thank you, Beau. We thought 00:06:07.565 --> 00:06:10.966 that it was easy to see the link between humans and apes 00:06:10.966 --> 00:06:13.990 in the way that we think, because we look alike. 00:06:13.990 --> 00:06:16.679 But we wondered if there's a possible link 00:06:16.679 --> 00:06:21.383 with other animals. It'd be amazing if humans and bees 00:06:21.383 --> 00:06:25.496 thought similar, since they seem so different from us. 00:06:25.496 --> 00:06:28.549 So we asked if humans and bees might solve 00:06:28.549 --> 00:06:30.956 complex problems in the same way. 00:06:30.956 --> 00:06:34.243 Really, we wanted to know if bees can also adapt 00:06:34.243 --> 00:06:37.950 themselves to new situations using previously learned rules 00:06:37.950 --> 00:06:42.164 and conditions. So what if bees can think like us? 00:06:42.164 --> 00:06:44.716 Well, it'd be amazing, since we're talking about an insect 00:06:44.716 --> 00:06:47.241 with only one million brain cells. 00:06:47.241 --> 00:06:49.383 But it actually makes a lot of sense they should, 00:06:49.383 --> 00:06:52.660 because bees, like us, can recognize a good flower 00:06:52.660 --> 00:06:56.273 regardless of the time of day, the light, the weather, 00:06:56.273 --> 00:07:02.015 or from any angle they approach it from. (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:07:02.015 --> 00:07:05.797 BL: So the next step was to design an experiment, 00:07:05.797 --> 00:07:09.099 which is a game. So the kids went off and they designed 00:07:09.099 --> 00:07:12.400 this experiment, and so -- well, game -- and so, 00:07:12.400 --> 00:07:13.866 Amy, can you tell us what the game was, 00:07:13.866 --> 00:07:16.009 and the puzzle that you set the bees? NOTE Paragraph 00:07:16.009 --> 00:07:19.032 AO: The puzzle we came up with was an if-then rule. 00:07:19.032 --> 00:07:22.677 We asked the bees to learn not just to go to a certain color, 00:07:22.677 --> 00:07:25.345 but to a certain color flower only 00:07:25.345 --> 00:07:26.977 when it's in a certain pattern. 00:07:26.977 --> 00:07:30.236 They were only rewarded if they went to the yellow flowers 00:07:30.236 --> 00:07:33.296 if the yellow flowers were surrounded by the blue, 00:07:33.296 --> 00:07:36.564 or if the blue flowers were surrounded by the yellow. 00:07:36.564 --> 00:07:39.149 Now there's a number of different rules the bees can learn 00:07:39.149 --> 00:07:42.574 to solve this puzzle. The interesting question is, which? 00:07:42.574 --> 00:07:45.354 What was really exciting about this project was we, 00:07:45.354 --> 00:07:47.697 and Beau, had no idea whether it would work. 00:07:47.697 --> 00:07:50.151 It was completely new, and no one had done it before, 00:07:50.151 --> 00:07:53.874 including adults. (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:07:53.874 --> 00:07:57.338 BL: Including the teachers, and that was really hard for the teachers. 00:07:57.338 --> 00:08:00.242 It's easy for a scientist to go in and not have a clue what he's doing, 00:08:00.242 --> 00:08:02.786 because that's what we do in the lab, but for a teacher 00:08:02.786 --> 00:08:04.411 not to know what's going to happen at the end of the day -- 00:08:04.411 --> 00:08:07.010 so much of the credit goes to Dave Strudwick, who was 00:08:07.010 --> 00:08:09.219 the collaborator on this project. Okay? 00:08:09.219 --> 00:08:11.951 So I'm not going to go through the whole details of the study 00:08:11.951 --> 00:08:14.589 because actually you can read about it, but the next step 00:08:14.589 --> 00:08:18.234 is observation. So here are some of the students 00:08:18.234 --> 00:08:21.002 doing the observations. They're recording the data 00:08:21.002 --> 00:08:26.046 of where the bees fly. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:26.046 --> 00:08:28.069 (Video) Dave Strudwick: So what we're going to do —Student: 5C. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:28.069 --> 00:08:32.059 Dave Strudwick: Is she still going up here?Student: Yeah. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:32.059 --> 00:08:35.656 Dave Strudwick: So you keep track of each.Student: Henry, can you help me here? NOTE Paragraph 00:08:35.656 --> 00:08:38.560 BL: "Can you help me, Henry?" What good scientist says that, right? NOTE Paragraph 00:08:38.560 --> 00:08:43.270 Student: There's two up there. 00:08:43.270 --> 00:08:46.144 And three in here. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:46.144 --> 00:08:48.419 BL: Right? So we've got our observations. We've got our data. 00:08:48.419 --> 00:08:52.192 They do the simple mathematics, averaging, etc., etc. 00:08:52.192 --> 00:08:54.123 And now we want to share. That's the next step. 00:08:54.123 --> 00:08:55.731 So we're going to write this up and try to submit this 00:08:55.731 --> 00:08:58.587 for publication. Right? So we have to write it up. 00:08:58.587 --> 00:09:03.100 So we go, of course, to the pub. All right? (Laughter) 00:09:03.100 --> 00:09:05.384 The one on the left is mine, okay? (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:09:05.384 --> 00:09:07.470 Now, I tell them, a paper has four different sections: 00:09:07.470 --> 00:09:10.277 an introduction, a methods, a results, a discussion. 00:09:10.277 --> 00:09:12.881 The introduction says, what's the question and why? 00:09:12.881 --> 00:09:16.000 Methods, what did you do? Results, what was the observation? 00:09:16.000 --> 00:09:18.143 And the discussion is, who cares? Right? 00:09:18.143 --> 00:09:20.602 That's a science paper, basically. (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:09:20.602 --> 00:09:25.131 So the kids give me the words, right? I put it into a narrative, 00:09:25.131 --> 00:09:28.378 which means that this paper is written in kidspeak. 00:09:28.378 --> 00:09:30.906 It's not written by me. It's written by Amy 00:09:30.906 --> 00:09:34.226 and the other students in the class. As a consequence, 00:09:34.226 --> 00:09:40.243 this science paper begins, "Once upon a time ... " (Laughter) 00:09:40.243 --> 00:09:45.555 The results section, it says: "Training phase, the puzzle ... duh duh duuuuuhhh." Right? (Laughter) 00:09:45.555 --> 00:09:47.751 And the methods, it says, "Then we put the bees 00:09:47.751 --> 00:09:51.068 into the fridge (and made bee pie)," smiley face. Right? (Laughter) 00:09:51.068 --> 00:09:54.901 This is a science paper. We're going to try to get it published. 00:09:54.901 --> 00:09:57.735 So here's the title page. We have a number of authors there. 00:09:57.735 --> 00:10:00.586 All the ones in bold are eight to 10 years old. 00:10:00.586 --> 00:10:02.636 The first author is Blackawton Primary School, because 00:10:02.636 --> 00:10:05.882 if it were ever referenced, it would be "Blackawton et al," 00:10:05.882 --> 00:10:08.939 and not one individual. So we submit it to a public access journal, 00:10:08.939 --> 00:10:12.271 and it says this. It said many things, but it said this. 00:10:12.271 --> 00:10:16.190 "I'm afraid the paper fails our initial quality control checks in several different ways." (Laughter) 00:10:16.190 --> 00:10:18.750 In other words, it starts off "once upon a time," 00:10:18.750 --> 00:10:21.276 the figures are in crayon, etc. (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:10:21.276 --> 00:10:25.629 So we said, we'll get it reviewed. So I sent it to Dale Purves, 00:10:25.629 --> 00:10:29.162 who is at the National Academy of Science, one of the leading neuroscientists in the world, 00:10:29.162 --> 00:10:32.611 and he says, "This is the most original science paper I have ever read" — (Laughter) — 00:10:32.611 --> 00:10:34.708 "and it certainly deserves wide exposure." 00:10:34.708 --> 00:10:38.979 Larry Maloney, expert in vision, says, "The paper is magnificent. 00:10:38.979 --> 00:10:42.345 The work would be publishable if done by adults." NOTE Paragraph 00:10:42.345 --> 00:10:44.324 So what did we do? We send it back to the editor. 00:10:44.324 --> 00:10:45.913 They say no. 00:10:45.913 --> 00:10:48.367 So we asked Larry and Natalie Hempel to write 00:10:48.367 --> 00:10:52.374 a commentary situating the findings for scientists, right, 00:10:52.374 --> 00:10:56.502 putting in the references, and we submit it to Biology Letters. 00:10:56.502 --> 00:10:59.829 And there, it was reviewed by five independent referees, 00:10:59.829 --> 00:11:04.250 and it was published. Okay? (Applause) 00:11:04.250 --> 00:11:10.250 (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:11:10.250 --> 00:11:13.271 It took four months to do the science, 00:11:13.271 --> 00:11:16.499 two years to get it published. (Laughter) 00:11:16.499 --> 00:11:21.334 Typical science, actually, right? So this makes Amy and 00:11:21.334 --> 00:11:23.767 her friends the youngest published scientists in the world. 00:11:23.767 --> 00:11:25.783 What was the feedback like? 00:11:25.783 --> 00:11:28.668 Well, it was published two days before Christmas, 00:11:28.668 --> 00:11:32.671 downloaded 30,000 times in the first day, right? 00:11:32.671 --> 00:11:36.711 It was the Editors' Choice in Science, which is a top science magazine. 00:11:36.711 --> 00:11:39.253 It's forever freely accessible by Biology Letters. 00:11:39.253 --> 00:11:42.933 It's the only paper that will ever be freely accessible by this journal. 00:11:42.933 --> 00:11:45.632 Last year, it was the second-most downloaded paper 00:11:45.632 --> 00:11:49.736 by Biology Letters, and the feedback from not just scientists 00:11:49.736 --> 00:11:52.284 and teachers but the public as well. 00:11:52.284 --> 00:11:54.056 And I'll just read one. NOTE Paragraph 00:11:54.056 --> 00:11:56.546 "I have read 'Blackawton Bees' recently. I don't have 00:11:56.546 --> 00:11:58.859 words to explain exactly how I am feeling right now. 00:11:58.859 --> 00:12:01.338 What you guys have done is real, true and amazing. 00:12:01.338 --> 00:12:04.447 Curiosity, interest, innocence and zeal are the most basic 00:12:04.447 --> 00:12:06.171 and most important things to do science. 00:12:06.171 --> 00:12:08.649 Who else can have these qualities more than children? 00:12:08.649 --> 00:12:12.190 Please congratulate your children's team from my side." NOTE Paragraph 00:12:12.190 --> 00:12:15.573 So I'd like to conclude with a physical metaphor. 00:12:15.573 --> 00:12:18.541 Can I do it on you? (Laughter) 00:12:18.541 --> 00:12:21.634 Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, come on. Yeah yeah. Okay. 00:12:21.634 --> 00:12:26.811 Now, science is about taking risks, so this is an incredible risk, right? (Laughter) 00:12:26.811 --> 00:12:32.909 For me, not for him. Right? Because we've only done this once before. (Laughter) 00:12:32.909 --> 00:12:34.485 And you like technology, right? NOTE Paragraph 00:12:34.485 --> 00:12:36.661 Shimon Schocken: Right, but I like myself. NOTE Paragraph 00:12:36.661 --> 00:12:39.612 BL: This is the epitome of technology. Right. Okay. 00:12:39.612 --> 00:12:43.220 Now ... (Laughter) 00:12:43.220 --> 00:12:46.100 Okay. (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:12:46.100 --> 00:12:50.184 Now, we're going to do a little demonstration, right? 00:12:50.184 --> 00:12:54.203 You have to close your eyes, and you have to point 00:12:54.203 --> 00:12:57.360 where you hear me clapping. All right? NOTE Paragraph 00:12:57.360 --> 00:13:01.758 (Clapping) NOTE Paragraph 00:13:01.758 --> 00:13:04.902 (Clapping) NOTE Paragraph 00:13:04.902 --> 00:13:07.805 Okay, how about if everyone over there shouts. One, two, three? NOTE Paragraph 00:13:07.805 --> 00:13:10.706 Audience: (Shouts) 00:13:10.706 --> 00:13:15.152 (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:13:15.152 --> 00:13:18.323 (Shouts) (Laughter) NOTE Paragraph 00:13:18.323 --> 00:13:21.964 Brilliant. Now, open your eyes. We'll do it one more time. 00:13:21.964 --> 00:13:24.766 Everyone over there shout. (Shouts) 00:13:24.766 --> 00:13:30.698 Where's the sound coming from? (Laughter) (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:13:30.698 --> 00:13:34.928 Thank you very much. (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:13:34.928 --> 00:13:38.641 What's the point? The point is what science does for us. 00:13:38.641 --> 00:13:41.047 Right? We normally walk through life responding, 00:13:41.047 --> 00:13:43.259 but if we ever want to do anything different, we have to 00:13:43.259 --> 00:13:45.948 step into uncertainty. When he opened his eyes, 00:13:45.948 --> 00:13:48.330 he was able to see the world in a new way. 00:13:48.330 --> 00:13:51.498 That's what science offers us. It offers the possibility 00:13:51.498 --> 00:13:55.514 to step on uncertainty through the process of play, right? NOTE Paragraph 00:13:55.514 --> 00:13:58.538 Now, true science education I think should be about 00:13:58.538 --> 00:14:01.937 giving people a voice and enabling to express that voice, 00:14:01.937 --> 00:14:06.306 so I've asked Amy to be the last voice in this short story. 00:14:06.306 --> 00:14:09.411 So, Amy? NOTE Paragraph 00:14:09.411 --> 00:14:11.964 AO: This project was really exciting for me, 00:14:11.964 --> 00:14:14.635 because it brought the process of discovery to life, 00:14:14.635 --> 00:14:17.546 and it showed me that anyone, and I mean anyone, 00:14:17.546 --> 00:14:20.299 has the potential to discover something new, 00:14:20.299 --> 00:14:24.371 and that a small question can lead into a big discovery. 00:14:24.371 --> 00:14:27.023 Changing the way a person thinks about something 00:14:27.023 --> 00:14:30.735 can be easy or hard. It all depends on the way the person 00:14:30.735 --> 00:14:32.223 feels about change. 00:14:32.223 --> 00:14:34.675 But changing the way I thought about science was 00:14:34.675 --> 00:14:36.950 surprisingly easy. Once we played the games 00:14:36.950 --> 00:14:39.368 and then started to think about the puzzle, 00:14:39.368 --> 00:14:43.225 I then realized that science isn't just a boring subject, 00:14:43.225 --> 00:14:46.419 and that anyone can discover something new. 00:14:46.419 --> 00:14:49.619 You just need an opportunity. My opportunity came 00:14:49.619 --> 00:14:52.255 in the form of Beau, and the Blackawton Bee Project. NOTE Paragraph 00:14:52.255 --> 00:14:56.616 Thank you.BL: Thank you very much. (Applause) NOTE Paragraph 00:14:56.616 --> 00:15:04.363 (Applause)