Why squeezing a blueberry doesn’t get you blue juice, and a myth buster and a science editor walk into a bar
First up on the show this week, MythBusters’s Adam Savage chats with Science Editor-in-Chief Holden Thorp about the state of scholarly publishing, better ways to communicate science, plus a few myths Savage still wants to tackle.
Next on the show, making blueberries without blue pigments. Rox Middleton, a postdoctoral fellow at the Dresden University of Technology and honorary research associate at the University of Bristol, joins host Sarah Crespi to talk about how blueberries and other blue fruits owe their hue to a trick of the light caused by specialized wax on their surface.
In a sponsored segment from the Science/AAAS Custom Publishing Office, Erika Berg, director and senior editor of custom publishing, interviews professor Jim Wells about organoid therapies. This segment is sponsored by Cincinnati Children’s Hospital.
This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy.
About the Science Podcast
Authors: Sarah Crespi; Holden Thorp
Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.z7ye2st
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A risky clinical trial design, and attacks on machine learning
A freeze on prion research, and watching cement dry
Debating healthy obesity, delaying type 1 diabetes, and visiting bone rooms
Blood tests for Alzheimer’s disease, and what earthquakes on Mars reveal about the Red Planet’s core
Science after COVID-19, and a landslide that became a flood
Scientists’ role in the opioid crisis, 3D-printed candy proteins, and summer books
Preserving plastic art, and a gold standard for measuring extreme pressure
Does Botox combat depression, the fruit fly sex drive, and a series on race and science
Keeping ads out of dreams, and calculating the cost of climate displacement
Finding consciousness outside the brain, and using DNA to reunite families
Cicada citizen science, and expanding the genetic code
Cracking consciousness, and taking the temperature of urban heat islands
Ecstasy plus therapy for PTSD, and the effects of early childhood development programs on mothers
Cutting shipping air pollution may cause water pollution, and keeping air clean with lightning
Chernobyl’s ruins grow restless, and entangling macroscopic objects
Storing wind as gravity, and well-digging donkeys
Rebuilding Louisiana’s coast, and recycling plastic into fuel
Why muon magnetism matters, and a count of all the Tyrannosaurus rex that ever lived
Magnetar mysteries, and when humans got big brains
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