Season 2018
Season 2018
Season 2018
Season 2018
- Air date:2018-01-09
- User score:0.0
- Number of episodes:26
List of Episodes
Air date: 2018-01-09
Runtime: min
Mathematician Richard Schwartz talks about why he's attracted to the hidden depths of simple problems.
Air date: 2018-01-18
Runtime: min
Ed Boyden of MIT’s Media Lab, the inventor of expansion microscopy, explains how the technique could illuminate deep mysteries about how the brain works and improve cancer diagnosis, among many other advances.
Air date: 2018-01-30
Runtime: min
Neuroscientist Erich Jarvis discusses how the brain circuitry for vocal learning in songbirds and humans evolved from systems for controlling body movements and why so few species have this ability.
Air date: 2018-02-14
Runtime: min
Goldman explains how “smarticles” work together to demonstrate collective behavior.
Air date: 2018-02-27
Runtime: min
Barbara Engelhardt, a computer scientist at Princeton University, explains why traditional machine-learning techniques have often fallen short for genomic analysis, and how researchers are overcoming that challenge.
Air date: 2018-03-19
Runtime: min
Günter Ziegler describes one of the most famous and beautiful proofs in "Proofs From THE BOOK," a book he co-authored with Martin Aigner.
Air date: 2018-04-11
Runtime: min
Donald Richards discusses the statistical rule-of-thumb he wishes everyone knew.
Air date: 2018-05-24
Runtime: min
Michela Massimi argues that the philosophy of science doesn’t have to be useful to scientists for it to be useful to humanity.
Air date: 2018-06-11
Runtime: min
Lisa Manning, a physicist at Syracuse University, describes how the physics of glassy materials helps to explain how some organs assume their correct shape during embryonic development.
Air date: 2018-06-19
Runtime: min
Carina Curto, a mathematician at Pennsylvania State University, explains how her background in theoretical physics helps her tackle daunting problems in theoretical neuroscience.
Air date: 2018-07-02
Runtime: min
Jessica Whited is a biologist who studies limb regeneration at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Here, she explains how genomic information for the salamander called an axolotl will help us understand the potential for regrowing limbs in humans and other animals.
Air date: 2018-07-21
Runtime: min
Cohl Furey explains what octonions are and what they might have to do with particle physics.
Air date: 2018-08-01
Runtime: min
The mathematician Alessio Figalli is rarely in one place for very long. But his work has established the stability of everything from crystals to weather fronts by using concepts derived from Napoleonic fortifications.
Air date: 2018-08-02
Runtime: min
Birkar discusses the need for originality in mathematics and in life.
Air date: 2018-08-03
Runtime: min
Akshay Venkatesh on his mathematical working style, which took him many years to discover.
Air date: 2018-08-04
Runtime: min
Constantinos Daskalakis on why he studies the interface between theoretical computer science and human behavior.
Air date: 2018-08-06
Runtime: min
Mathematicians Caucher Birkar, Alessio Figalli, Peter Scholze and Akshay Venkatesh have been awarded the Fields Medal. Computer scientist Constantinos Daskalakis won the Nevanlinna Prize.
Air date: 2018-08-28
Runtime: min
Rosaly Lopes explains why it’s worth exploring the huge variety of volcanoes on other worlds.
Air date: 2018-10-11
Runtime: min
Tomas Bohr explains the significance of the double-slit experiment in exposing the weirdness of the quantum world.
Air date: 2018-10-15
Runtime: min
Stem cell researcher Renee Reijo Pera of Montana State University explains how the timing of developmental events in the early embryo can subtly affect health many years later.
Air date: 2018-10-24
Runtime: min
Just as mathematics transformed physics from a philosophy into a science, data and computation are transforming science today, says Mario Jurić. He’s leading the push to get astronomy ready for the torrents of data that are about to flow. Mario Jurić explains how the nature of what it means to be an astronomer is changing.
Air date: 2018-11-13
Runtime: min
Valeria Pettorino discusses the prospects of learning about dark energy with the Euclid satellite.
Air date: 2018-11-14
Runtime: min
In the latest campaign to reconcile Einstein’s theory of gravity with quantum mechanics, many physicists are studying how a higher dimensional space that includes gravity arises like a hologram from a lower dimensional particle theory.
Air date: 2018-11-27
Runtime: min
The Stanford mathematician Tadashi Tokieda demonstrates one of his physics “toys”: the curious higher and lower notes you hear when tapping a coffee mug with a spoon.
Air date: 2018-12-05
Runtime: min
The University of Cambridge astrophysicist, Astronomer Royal and popular author discusses how our society can benefit from science while avoiding potential pitfalls.
Air date: 2018-12-20
Runtime: min
How do extraordinarily complex emergent phenomena — like ants assembling themselves into living bridges, or tiny water and air molecules forming into swirling hurricanes — spontaneously arise from systems of much simpler elements? The answer often depends on a transition in the interplay between the elements that resembles a phase change.
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