]Researchers are testing HIV drugs and monoclonal antibodies against long-lasting COVID-19, and what it takes to turn a symbiotic friend into an organelle
First up on the show this week, clinical trials of new and old treatments for Long Covid. Producer Meagan Cantwell is joined by Staff Writer Jennifer Couzin-Frankel and some of her sources to discuss the difficulties of studying and treating this debilitating disease.
People in this segment:
· Michael Peluso
· Sara Cherry
· Shelley Hayden
Next: Move over mitochondria, a new organelle called the nitroplast is here. Host Sarah Crespi talks with Tyler Coale, a postdoctoral scholar in the University of California, Santa Cruz’s Ocean Sciences Department, about what exactly makes an organelle an organelle and why it would be nice to have inhouse nitrogen fixing in your cells.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy.
About the Science Podcast
Authors: Sarah Crespi; Meagan Cantwell; Jennifer Couzin-Frankel
Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.zof5fvk
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Cooling Earth with asteroid dust, and 3 billion missing birds
Studying human health at 5100 meters, and playing hide and seek with rats
Searching for a lost Maya city, and measuring the information density of language
Where our microbiome came from, and how our farming and hunting ancestors transformed the world
Promising approaches in suicide prevention, and how to retreat from climate change
One million ways to sex a chicken egg, and how plastic finds its way to Arctic ice
Next-generation cellphone signals could interfere with weather forecasts, and monitoring smoke from wildfires to model nuclear winter
Earthquakes caused by too much water extraction, and a dog cancer that has lived for millennia
Breeding better bees, and training artificial intelligence on emotional imagery
Can we inherit trauma from our ancestors, and the secret to dark liquid dances
The point of pointing, and using seabirds to track ocean health
Converting carbon dioxide into gasoline, and ‘autofocal’ glasses with lenses that change shape on the fly
Creating chimeras for organ transplants and how bats switch between their eyes and ears on the wing
The why of puppy dog eyes, and measuring honesty on a global scale
Better hurricane forecasts and spotting salts on Jupiter’s moon Europa
The limits on human endurance, and a new type of LED
Grad schools dropping the GRE requirement and AIs play capture the flag
New targets for the world’s biggest atom smasher and wood designed to cool buildings
Nonstick chemicals that stick around and detecting ear infections with smartphones
Probing the secrets of the feline mind and how Uber and Lyft may be making traffic worse
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