We have a new podcast! It's called Universe Of Art, and it features conversations with artists who use science to bring their creations to the next level. Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A See-Through Squid Success Story
Adult octopuses have about 500 million neurons, which is about as many neurons as a dog. Typically, more neurons means a more intelligent and complex creature. But it’s a bit more complicated than that. Unlike dogs, or even humans, octopuses’ neurons aren’t concentrated in their brains—they’re spread out through their bodies and into their arms and suckers, more like a “distributed” mind. (Scientists still haven’t quite figured out exactly why this is.)
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg, in terms of unanswered cephalopod questions. Now, researchers have successfully bred a line of albino squid that were first engineered using CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing technology, creating a see-through squid.
Their unique transparency allows scientists to more easily study their neural structure, and a whole lot more.
SciFri experiences manager Diana Plasker talks with Joshua Rosenthal, senior scientist at the University of Chicago’s Marine Biological Laboratory, based in Woods Hole, Massachusetts, about this see-through squid success story.
When Eye-Grabbing Results Just Don’t Pan OutYou know the feeling — you see a headline in the paper or get an alert on your phone about a big scientific breakthrough that has the potential to really change things. But then, not much happens, or that news turns out to be much less significant than the headlines made it seem.
Journalists are partially to blame for this phenomenon. But another guilty culprit is also the scientific journals, and the researchers who try to make their own work seem more significant than the data really supports in order to get published.
Armin Alaedini, an assistant professor of medical sciences at Columbia University Medical Center in New York, recently co-authored a commentary on this topic published in The American Journal of Medicine. He joins Ira and Ivan Oransky — co-founder of Retraction Watch and a medical journalism professor and Distinguished Writer In Residence at New York University — to talk about the tangled world of scientific publishing and the factors that drive inflated claims in publications.
How Art Can Help Treat Dementia And Trauma
We might intrinsically know that engaging with and making art is good for us in some way. But now, scientists have much more evidence to support this, thanks in part to a relatively new field called neuroaesthetics, which studies the effects that artistic experiences have on the brain.
A new book called Your Brain On Art: How The Arts Transform Us, dives into that research, and it turns out the benefits of the arts go far beyond elevating everyday life; they’re now being used as part of healthcare treatments to address conditions like dementia and trauma.
Universe of Art host D. Peterschmidt sits down with the authors of the book, Susan Magsamen, executive director of the International Arts + Mind Lab at the Pederson Brain Science Institute at Johns Hopkins University, and Ivy Ross, vice president of design for hardware products at Google, to talk about what we can learn from neuroaesthetic studies, the benefits of a daily arts practice, and the kinds of art they both like making.
Testing Mars Rovers In Utah’s Red Desert
Take a 20-minute drive down Cow Dung Road, outside of Hanksville, Utah, and you’ll stumble across the Mars Desert Research Station. This cluster of white buildings—webbed together by a series of covered walkways—looks a little alien, as does the red, desolate landscape that surrounds it.
“The ground has this crust that you puncture through, and it makes you feel like your footprints are going to be there for a thousand years,” said Sam Craven, a senior leading the Brigham Young University team here for the University Rover Challenge. “Very bleak and dry, but very beautiful also.”
This remote chunk of Utah is a Mars analogue, one of roughly a dozen locations on Earth researchers use to test equipment, train astronauts and search for clues to inform the search for life on other planets. While deployed at the station, visiting scientists live in total isolation and don mock space suits before they venture outside.
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Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.
683: To Get Ready For Mars, NASA Studies How The Body Changes In Space
682: Science Journalism Is Shrinking–Along With Public Trust In Science
680: (Part 2) Endangered Species Act At 50: Orchids And Red Wolves
679: (Part 1) Endangered Species Act at 50: Hawaiian Land Snails
681: Solar Activity Flares Up In 2024 | Underground Hydrogen Reserves And Clean Energy
678: SciFri Reads ‘The Alchemy Of Us’
677: SciFri Reads ‘The Kaiju Preservation Society’
676: Star Trek’s Science Advisor Reveals The Real Astrophysics On Screen
675: A Mathematician Asks ‘Is Math Real?’
674: Unmasking Owls’ Mysteries | Why It Feels So Good To Eat Chocolate
673: SciFri Reads ‘The Best American Science and Nature Writing 2023’
672: The Unseen World Of Seaweeds | Should 'Dark Fungi' Species Get Names?
672: How 'Panda Diplomacy' Led To Conservation Success
671: Music’s Emotional Power Can Shape Memories—And Your Perception Of Time
670: Top Science News Stories of 2023 | Solar Panels In Historic Cape Cod
669: Pennsylvania Drug Laws May Limit Syringe Services | These Romance Novels Represent Black Women In Science
668: Flame Retardant From Cocoa Pod Husks | The Oozy Physics Of Oobleck
667: The Military’s Carbon Footprint Is A Hidden Cost Of Defense
666: High Energy Cosmic Ray Detected | These Penguins Are The Masters Of Microsleeping
665: COP28 Climate Conference Ends | Why Are Some People Affected By Seasonal Affective Disorder?
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