Synopsis
Leading science journalists provide a daily minute commentary on some of the most interesting developments in the world of science. For a full-length, weekly podcast you can subscribe to Science Talk: The Podcast of Scientific American . To view all of our archived podcasts please go to www.scientificamerican.com/podcast
Episodes
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The Strange and Beautiful Science Of Our Lives
05/01/2024 Duration: 14minNell Greenfieldboyce discusses her new book Transient and Strange, the intimacy of the essays and the science that inspired them.
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The Surprising Health Benefits of Dog Ownership
03/01/2024 Duration: 11minDogs are good for you, science says
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Podcasts of the Year: Cleo, the Mysterious Math Menace
29/12/2023 Duration: 12minIn 2013 a new user named Cleo took an online math forum by storm with unproved answers. Today she’s an urban legend. But who was she? 2023 editor's pick.
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Podcasts of the Year: Talking to Animals using Artificial Intelligence
27/12/2023 Duration: 10minAdvanced sensors and artificial intelligence could have us at the brink of interspecies communication
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How to Avoid Holiday Hangovers
22/12/2023 Duration: 08minThe holidays are a time for indulgence, but there are ways to drink alcohol without suffering the painful effects.
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Podcasts of the Year: What Better Gift for the Holidays Than a Monstrous Mystery?
20/12/2023 Duration: 10minWe’re looking back at 2023 for our favorite podcast shows and one about the largest bird to ever fly the skies just flew to the top of the list.
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Are Orca Whales Friends or Foes?
18/12/2023 Duration: 14minThe stories we tell about orcas might say more about us than about them
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Turns Out Undersea Kelp Forests Are Crucial to Salmon
15/12/2023 Duration: 08minThe beloved fish that feed orcas and humans depend on kelp forests’ unique habitat.
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Researchers Just Created the World's First Permafrost Atlas of the Entire Arctic
13/12/2023 Duration: 07minThe Arctic Permafrost Atlas, which took years to create, is both beautiful and sobering, given the pace of climate change.
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A New Type of Heart Disease is on the Rise
11/12/2023 Duration: 07minProblems with the heart, kidneys and metabolic health are all connected
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AI Can Now Read Your Cat's Pain
08/12/2023 Duration: 08minThanks to researchers, new AI tech is delving into feline feelings to see when cats could need medical help.
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These Researchers Put Sperm Through a Kind of 'Hunger Games'
06/12/2023 Duration: 06minThe research focused on figuring out what enables certain sperm to gain some competitive advantage over millions of others fighting for the same prize.
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Is Too Little Play Hurting Our Kids?
04/12/2023 Duration: 14minA long-term decline in unsupervised activity may be contributing to mental health declines in children and adolescents.
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How Misinformation Spreads through Conflict
01/12/2023 Duration: 24minThree experts break down how misinformation and propaganda spread through conflict and how to debunk it yourself.
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Why Childhood Vaccination Rates Are Falling
29/11/2023 Duration: 08minFewer kids got their routine childhood vaccines since before the pandemic. Are lack of access and a loss of trust in science to blame?
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Climate Adaptation Can Backfire If We Aren't Careful
27/11/2023 Duration: 11minThe choices we make in how we adapt to climate change can sometimes come back to bite us
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The Members of This Reservation Learned They Live with Nuclear Weapons. Can Their Reality Ever Be the Same?
24/11/2023 Duration: 14minThe Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara peoples are learning more about the missiles siloed on their lands, and that knowledge has put the preservation of their culture and heritage in even starker relief.
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What Would It Mean to 'Absorb' a Nuclear Attack?
22/11/2023 Duration: 19minThe missiles on the Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota make it a potential target for a nuclear attack. And that doesn’t come close to describing what the reality would be for those on the ground.
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If You Had a Nuclear Weapon in Your Neighborhood, Would You Want to Know about It?
20/11/2023 Duration: 16minThe Fort Berthold Reservation in North Dakota has had nuclear missile silos on its land for decades. Now the U.S. government wants to take the old weapons out and replace them with new ones, and it’s unclear how many living there know about that. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Just One U.S. Reservation Hosts Nuclear Weapons. This Is The Story of How That Came to Be
17/11/2023 Duration: 17min15 nuclear missiles deployed in underground concrete silos across the Fort Berthold reservation in North Dakota. It took displacement and flood to get them there.