On this week’s show: Compassion fatigue will strike most who care for lab animals, but addressing it is challenging. Also, overturning ideas about ocean circulation
First up this week: uncovering compassion fatigue in those who work with research animals—from cage cleaners to heads of entire animal facilities. Host Sarah Crespi and Online News Editor David Grimm discuss how to recognize the anxiety and depression that can be associated with this work and what some institutions are doing to help.
Featured in this segment:
Next up on the show, a segment from the annual meeting of AAAS (which publishes Science) on overturning assumptions in ocean circulation. Physical oceanographer Susan Lozier, dean of the College of Sciences at the Georgia Institute of Technology, talks with producer Kevin McLean about the limitations of the ocean conveyor belt model, and how new tools have been giving us a much more accurate view of how water moves around the world.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy.
About the Science Podcast
[Image: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio; Music: Jeffrey Cook]
[alt: Global sea surface currents and temperature with podcast symbol overlay]
Authors: Sarah Crespi; Kevin McLean; David Grimm
Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.adh4938
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What we can learn from a mass of black hole mergers, and ecological insights from 30 years of Arctic animal movements
Taking the politicians out of tough policy decisions; the late, great works of Charles Turner; and the science of cooking
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Visiting a once-watery asteroid, and how buzzing the tongue can treat tinnitus
FDA clinical trial protection failures, and an AI that can beat curling’s top players
How Neanderthals got human Y chromosomes, and the earliest human footprints in Arabia
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Alien hunters get a funding boost, and checking on the link between chromosome ‘caps’ and aging
Fighting Europe’s second wave of COVID-19, and making democracy work for poor people
Arctic sea ice under attack, and ancient records that can predict the future effects of climate change
Wildlife behavior during a global lockdown, and electric mud microbes
A call for quick coronavirus testing, and building bonds with sports
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How Hiroshima survivors helped form radiation safety rules, and a path to stop plastic pollution
Reopening schools during the COVID-19 pandemic, and taking the heat out of crude oil separation
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