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快橙vp2023

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We’re all affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, and that includes Big Picture Science. But if, in this distressing situation you can help out, we hope you’ll do so by clicking the “Support the Show” button below. That will allow us to continue bringing you new episodes, and to spotlight the science of the pandemic as well as all that’s new and notable in other research areas.

Oh, and if you’re already a regular donor, we hope you’ll consider giving a bit more in these trying times.

Thanks!
The Big Picture Science team

快橙vp2023

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Jul 27, 2023

快橙vp2023

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Think you’re some kind of expert? Join the club. It’s one thing to question authority; another to offer up your untrained self as its replacement. Rebellion may be a cherished expression of American individualism, but, from sidelining Dr. Fauci to hiding public health data, find out what we lose when we silence health experts and “go with our gut” during a pandemic. Plus, from ancestors to algorithms: how we’ve replaced credentialed experts with sketchy web sites and social media posts.

Guests:

  • Charles Piller – Investigative reporter for Science magazine
  • Alison Galvani – Epidemiologist and Director of the Center for Infectious Disease Modeling and Analysis, at Yale University 
  • Tom Nichols – Professor, international affairs, U.S. Naval War College, and author of “The Death of Expertise: The Campaign Against Established Knowledge and Why it Matters”
  • Alex Bentley – Anthropologist, University of Tennessee and author of “The Acceleration of Cultural Change: From Ancestors to Algorithms”

Descripción en español.

Segments:
Part 1: Assailing Expertise
Part 2: Assuming Expertise
Part 3: Assessing Expertise

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Jul 20, 2023
Something in the Air
Notice anything different?
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Inhale. Now exhale. Notice anything different? Our response to the virus is changing the air in unexpected ways. A pandemic-driven pause on travel has produced clear skies and a world-wide air quality experiment. And a new study reveals that hundreds of tons of microplastics are raining down on us each day. 

But we can improve the quality of the breaths we do take; engineers have devised a high-tech mask that may kill coronavirus on contact. Plus, although you do it 25,000 times a day, you may not be breathing properly. Nose-breathing vs mouth breathing: getting the ins-and-outs of respiration.

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  • Janice Brahney - Environmental biogeochemist at Utah State University
  • Sally Ng - Atmospheric scientist, chemical engineer at Georgia Tech.
  • Chandan Sen - Professor, department of surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine.
  • James Nestor - Author of “Breath: The New Science of a Lost Art.”

Descripción en español.

Segments:
Part 1: PanDownload:2021-1-24 · v1.4.3 更新时间: 2021-09-16 更新内容: 优化软件界面 新增离线下载 新增我的分享 添加提示音效 支持提取下载链接 支持文件复制和移动操作 支持自定义aria2配置
Part 2: Sally Ng / Pandemic Skies
Part 3: Chandan Sen / Covi-cidal Masks
Part 4: James Nestor / How to Breathe

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Jul 13, 2023
COVID Curiosities
Transmission surprises
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Some dogs and cats have become sick with COVID. But it’s not just domestic critters that are vulnerable: zoo animals have fallen ill too. There’s more strange news about the pandemic, for example scientists who track the coronavirus in our sewage, and computer models that show that flushing the toilet can launch persistent, pathogenic plumes into the room. And scientists have warned the WHO that infectious virus remains airborne. Also, how a shortage of glass vials could delay the deployment of a vaccine.

Guests:

  • Yvette Johnson-Walker - Epidemiologist at the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine, and affiliate faculty with the University of Illinois Chicago School of Public Health.
  • Rolf Halden - Professor and Director of the Biodesign Center for Environmental Health Engineering at Arizona State University.
  • Bryan Bzdek - Chemist, School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, U.K.
  • Megan Molteni - Staff writer, “Wired.”

Descripción en español

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Part 1: Yvette Johnson-Walker / Pets and COVID
Part 2: Rolf Halden / Sewage COVID
Part 3: ytb官网下载
Part 4: Megan Molteni / Vaccine Glass

Creative Brains
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Creative Brains
Uniquely human.
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(repeat)  Your cat is smart, but its ability to choreograph a ballet or write computer code isn’t great.  A lot of animals are industrious and clever, but humans are the only animal that is uniquely ingenious and creative. 

Neuroscientist David Eagleman and composer Anthony Brandt discuss how human creativity has reshaped the world. Find out what is going on in your brain when you write a novel, paint a watercolor, or build a whatchamacallit in your garage.

But is ins加速器app claim on creativity destined to be short-lived?  Why both Eagleman and Brandt are prepared to step aside when artificial intelligence can do their jobs.

Guests:

  • Anthony Brandt – Professor of Composition and Theory, Rice University, and co-author of “PandaVPN:2021-5-26 · 这个熊猫加速器,是用于外网游戏的工具,并不能用于浏览国外网站或是登录国外的社交媒体。 盗版PandaVPN(5) https://pandafan.pub/ 该产品蹭熊猫的IP,同时我伊收到用户反馈该产品无法使用!”
  • David Eagleman – Neuroscientist, Stanford University, and co-author, “The Runaway Species: How Human Creativity Remakes the World.”

Segments:
Part 1: panda 加速器 ios
Part 2: The Biology of Creativity
Part 3: Artificial Creativity

Descripción en español

originally aired February 5, 2018

Animals Like Us
Jun 29, 2023
Animals Like Us
Universal emotions?
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Laughing rats, sorrowful elephants, joyful chimpanzees.  The more carefully we observe, and the more we learn about animals, the closer their emotional lives appear to resemble our own.  Most would agree that we should minimize the physical suffering of animals, but should we give equal consideration to their emotional stress?  Bioethicist Peter Singer weighs in. Meanwhile, captivity that may be ethical: How human-elephant teamwork in Asia may help protect an endangered species.

Guests:

  • Frans de Waal - Primatologist and biologist at Emory University; author of “Mama’s Last Hug: Animal Emotions and What They Tell Us About Ourselves.”  Watch the video of Mama and Jan Van Hooff.
  • Peter Singer – Philosopher, professor of bioethics at Princeton University.
  • Jacob Shell - Professor of geography at Temple University, and author of “Giants of the Monsoon Forest: Living and Working with Elephants.”
  • ins加速器app - Executive director of the Nonhuman Rights Project

Segments:
Part 1: 百度网盘神器Pandownload已倒 替伋者ShengDownload走红:前两天百度网盘不限速神器Pandownload作者被抓,这个软件很快就不能用了,这对非会员来说很难受,因为这个软件真的太好用了。Pandownload刚倒,马上就有了替伋者ShengDownload。
Part 2: Peter Singer / Animal Rights
Part 3: Jacob Shell / Worker Elephants
Part 4: Kevin Schneider / Happy the Elephant

Descripción en español.

originally aired June 24, 2023

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Radioactive Bookkeeping of Carbon Emissions

A new sampling method uses carbon-14 to single out which carbon dioxide molecules in the atmosphere derive from fossil fuels. The method could help track emissions goals for climate mitigation.

The latest article for EOS by BiPiSci's Sarah Derouin

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A new international collaboration found that dry inland waters—no matter where they were located—contributed significant global carbon dioxide emissions.

The latest article for EOS by BiPiSci's Sarah Derouin

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Seth ShostakSeth Shostak Host and Producer, 熊猫加速器vip永久免费下载
Senior Astronomer, SETI Institute
 
蚂蚁加速appMolly Bentley Executive Producer and Co-Host, Big Picture Science  
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