Social Cues in the Brain - by Scientific American
SUBSCRIBE to our channel: http://goo.gl/aLpxX __ Reading the emotions of others is essential for even the most basic social skills. Here's how our brain ...
Scientific American
Coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 is spreading. Science uses this one number to figure out just how fast.
COVID-19. SARS. MERS. Ebola... whenever there's a new outbreak, scientists rush to calculate a number called the R0, or R-naught. Why? It's been a critical ...
Scientific American
Scientific American: As Trump Touts Dangerous Cures, Here’s What We Know About COVID-19 Drug Tests
President Trump dangerously suggested injecting disinfectants could help patients sick with the coronavirus, then said he was being “sarcastic.” But his remarks ...
Democracy Now!
Gravitational Waves, Theoretical Alien Antenna, Europa and More: 60-Second Science Podcasts
Listen to the experts discuss the use and misuse of science in the courtroom to interpret forensic science, how ancient dental plaque can be used to understand ...
Scientific American
What Happens to Your Body after You Die? - Instant Egghead #65
Whatever your beliefs, most people seem to agree that the body left behind when we depart this mortal coil is just a heap of bones and flesh. But what happens ...
Scientific American
Why Do Paper Cuts Hurt So Much? - Instant Egghead #25
Some of the most infuriating and stabbing pain is caused by nothing but a thin sheet of paper. Scientific American editor Ferris Jabr explains why the page of a ...
Scientific American
Brain Parasite Makes Mice Fearless - by Scientific American
Protozoan parasite Toxoplasma gondii rendered mice unafraid of cat odor, even after the infection cleared, according to a study published in PLoS ONE.
Scientific American
New York City's Hidden Surveillance Network Part 1- by Scientific American
SUBSCRIBE to our channel: http://goo.gl/aLpxX __ The terrorist attacks of September 11th drastically changed the security strategy in Lower Manhattan.
Scientific American
How to Find a Meteorite in Your Own Backyard
The Earth is peppered by meteorites all the time. This is how you can find one on your own.
Scientific American
What Is Vertigo? - Instant Egghead #67
Is the world spinning, and you don't know why? Scientific American MIND editor Ingrid Wickelgren explains how your inner ear can throw you off balance.
Scientific American
Scientific American Frontiers S06E04 Creatures of the Deep
Shark Trackers; Hidden Depths; Shell Game; Spineless But Smart; Whale Warning.
Devin Watson
Scientific American FINALLY Questions 5g Safety
Derrick Broze breaks down recent reports on the safety of 5g, including a post from Scientific American. Sources: https://wp.me/paT9J6-2Cx Support the Future of ...
The Conscious Resistance
Jellies from Another World - by Scientific American
SUBSCRIBE to our channel: http://goo.gl/aLpxX __ Stunning footage of comb jellies captured at the New England Aquarium in Boston. You'll never think ill of ...
Scientific American
Working Gears Evolved in Plant-Hopping Insect - by Scientific American
A study in the journal Science reveals that a juvenile form of the insect Issus Coleoptratus evolved gears to help with jumping. This is the first time working gears ...
Scientific American
Asthma Preventing Microbes, Pollinator Plant Preference, and More: 60 Second Science Podcasts
Listen and learn about the microbes that may lower children's risk of having asthma, why an early flower bloom might be a sign of low biodiversity, how ...
Scientific American
Scientific American's top feature stories of 2018
Scientific American editors discuss the stories they consider to be most important or interesting in 2018.
Scientific American
What Is a Genetically Modified Food? - Instant Egghead #45
Genetically modified foods have been demonized in recent years by health advocates and environmentalists alike. If we look at the history of food cultivation, ...
Scientific American
Scientists reconstruct giant sauropod dinosaur - by Scientific American
A new exhibit at the American Museum of Natural History features a 60-foot model of the dinosaur named Mamenchisaurus. The model reveals what we know ...
Scientific American
Scientific American Editor Censored By Fox News
Scientific American editor Michael Moyer went on Fox & Friends this morning to discuss "Tech trends for the next decade and beyond," which producers told him ...
Secular Talk
"Scientific American" Revista - El Multiverso
William Lane Craig discute un reciente artículo sobre el multiverso publicado en la revista "Scientific American". Transcripción del video: Carmen Fernández: ...
ReasonableFaithOrg
Inside the Race to Blast COVID-19 Off the Surfaces of New York City
Turning from bedbugs and carpet-eating moths to COVID-19, cleaners in New York City have joined the Coronavirus fight. Please visit our website to discover ...
Scientific American
Meditation Enhances Attention - Scientific American
Neuroscientists have discovered a specific example of how meditating can give you the ability to notice things that non-meditators can't: When you're ...
60SecondScience
Superconductor Makes Magnet Levitate - by Scientific American
SUBSCRIBE to our channel: http://goo.gl/aLpxX Magnets naturally levitate above superconductors. The magnet's magnetic field can't penetrate the ...
Scientific American
What Is the Ames Illusion? - Instant Egghead #23
In 1934, ophthalmologist Adelbert Ames, Jr. devised a room that pushes the boundaries of human perception. Visit a virtual version of the now famous Ames ...
Scientific American
Is Our Universe a Hologram? - Instant Egghead #63
We take for granted that we exist as 3D beings in a 3D universe, but physicists suggest that our world is just the projection of a reality written in 2D. Scientific ...
Scientific American
Scientific American presents Neil deGrasse Tyson
Tyson is an astrophysicist at the American Museum of Natural History and the host of StarTalk on National Geographic Channel. He talks about the show and ...
Scientific American
Scientific American Editor's Career Soared with Hubble
Mariette DiChristina, Scientific American's Editor-in-Chief, has a special place in her heart for the Hubble Space Telescope.
Scientific American
Learning in the Digital Age (Part 4) - Scientific American | Macmillan Science & Education
What's driving the digital revolution in education? And will it be a boon for students, helping the U.S. stay competitive in a global economy, as advocates say?
Scientific American
Scientific American Debunks Modern Cosmology, Astrophysics [GLOBEBUSTERS]
Cosmology Has Some Big Problems https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/cosmology-has-some-big-problems/ GLOBEBUSTERS source file here, ...
7th Day Truth Seeker
Scientific American Frontiers S05E01 Life’s Big Questions
How Did the Universe Begin? Where Did Life Come From? How Did the Earth Get Animals? Are We Alone? Will the Robots Take Over?
Devin Watson
This researcher created an algorithm that removes the water from underwater images
Why do all the pictures you take underwater look blandly blue-green? The answer has to do with how light travels through water. Derya Akkaynak, an ...
Scientific American
Scientific American Frontiers S11E09 Flying Free
Devin Watson
Virus vs. Superbug--Fight! - Instant Egghead #38
We typically think of viruses as harmful. After all, they cause epidemics like influenza, smallpox and AIDS. But bacteriophages, the viruses that kill bacteria, may ...
Scientific American
I am a Scientific American
SimpleBox joined forces with Nature Publishing Group to provide graphics and finishing edits for the magazine Scientific American. The in-house team at SA ...
SIMPLEBOX
Tackling China’s Devastating Yellow River Floods
After learning how the waterway transports a billion tons of sediment into the sea each year, scientists built a tool that may help predict the inundations that ...
Scientific American
Why Stress Is Good for You - Instant Egghead #40
Stress. It makes us sweat, gives us headaches and is blamed for all sorts of medical maladies. But did you know that stress, in small measure, can actually help ...
Scientific American
The Mind-Blowing Mathematics of Sunflowers - Instant Egghead #59
Why do the number of spirals in a sunflower match up with the integers 34, 55, 89 and 144 -- numbers found in the famous Fibonacci Sequence? Scientific ...
Scientific American
On its 30th Birthday, the Hubble Telescope has a simple wish for the world
I have seen 160000 sunrises and sunsets, more than anyone could hope for. Circling hundreds of miles above the surface of our big blue marble for 30 years, ...
Scientific American
Werner Herzog on the 'Cave of Forgotten Dreams' - by Scientific American
Legendary director Werner Herzog (Grizzly Man, Rescue Dawn) talks about his latest film 'Cave of Forgotten Dreams'. Herzog's first foray into 3-D, the movie ...
Scientific American
Cicadas: Making Sense of the 17-Year Emergence - by Scientific American
SUBSCRIBE to our channel: http://goo.gl/aLpxX In this video, we break down the complex science of periodical cicadas, one of nature's most intriguing creatures ...
Scientific American
What is the smart grid? - by Scientific American
Whether we want it or not, the "smart grid" is on its way. In this animated guide we show you the essential features. -- SUBSCRIBE to our channel: ...
Scientific American
Learning in the Digital Age (Part 2) - Scientific American | Macmillan Science & Education
What's driving the digital revolution in education? And will it be a boon for students, helping the U.S. stay competitive in a global economy, as advocates say?
Scientific American