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2014
2014x1
Emma Bryce: Should we eat bugs?
Episode overview
02, 2014
What's tasty, abundant and high in protein? Bugs! Although less common outside the tropics, entomophagy, the practice of eating bugs, was once extremely widespread throughout cultures. .. show full overview
2014x151
Should we eat bugs? - Emma Bryce
Episode overview
02, 2014
What's tasty, abundant and high in protein? Bugs! Although less common outside the tropics, entomophagy, the practice of eating bugs, was once extremely widespread throughout cultures. .. show full overview
2014x4
Kate Messner: How to build a fictional world
Episode overview
09, 2014
Why is J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy so compelling? How about The Matrix or Harry Potter? What makes these disparate worlds come alive are clear, consistent rules for how .. show full overview
2014x5
Rose Eveleth: The mystery of motion sickness
Episode overview
13, 2014
Although one third of the population suffers from motion sickness, scientists aren't exactly sure what causes it. Like the common cold, it's a seemingly simple problem that's still .. show full overview
2014x6
Jeff Dekofsky: The Infinite Hotel Paradox
Episode overview
16, 2014
The Infinite Hotel, a thought experiment created by German mathematician David Hilbert, is a hotel with an infinite number of rooms. Easy to comprehend, right? Wrong. What if it's .. show full overview
2014x9
Tucker Hiatt: How fast are you moving right now?
Episode overview
27, 2014
"How fast are you moving?" seems like an easy question, but it's actually quite complicated -- and perhaps best answered by another question: "Relative to what?" Even when you think .. show full overview
2014x12
Richard E. Cytowic: What percentage of your brain do you use?
Episode overview
30, 2014
Two thirds of the population believes a myth that has been propagated for over a century: that we use only 10% of our brains. Hardly! Our neuron-dense brains have evolved to use the .. show full overview
2014x19
Asaf Bar-Yosef: An athlete uses physics to shatter world records
Episode overview
18, 2014
When Dick Fosbury couldn't compete against the skilled high jumpers at his college, he tried jumping in a different way -- backwards. Fosbury improved his record immediately and .. show full overview
2014x21
Dennis Wildfogel: What is the universe made of?
Episode overview
25, 2014
The atoms around you have existed for billions of years -- and most originated in the flaming, gaseous core of a star. Dennis Wildfogel tells the captivating tale of these atoms' long .. show full overview
2014x149
What is the universe made of? - Dennis Wildfogel
Episode overview
25, 2014
The atoms around you have existed for billions of years -- and most originated in the flaming, gaseous core of a star. Dennis Wildfogel tells the captivating tale of these atoms' long .. show full overview
2014x22
Alex Gendler: Why do we cry? The three types of tears
Episode overview
26, 2014
Whether we cry during a sad movie, while chopping onions, or completely involuntarily, our eyes are constantly producing tears. Alex Gendler tracks a particularly watery day in the life .. show full overview
2014x27
Rose Eveleth: The science of spiciness
Episode overview
10, 2014
When you take a bite of a hot pepper, your body reacts as if your mouth is on fire -- because that's essentially what you've told your brain! Rose Eveleth details the science and history .. show full overview
2014x30
Emma Bryce: The case of the vanishing honeybees
Episode overview
18, 2014
In the past decade, the US honeybee population has been decreasing at an alarming and unprecedented rate. While this is obviously bad news for honeypots everywhere, bees also help feed .. show full overview
2014x31
John C. Moore and Eric Berlow: Dead stuff: The secret ingredient in our food chain
Episode overview
20, 2014
When you picture the lowest levels of the food chain, you might imagine herbivores happily munching on lush, living green plants. But this idyllic image leaves out a huge (and slightly .. show full overview
2014x36
Yannay Khaikin: How many ways can you arrange a deck of cards?
Episode overview
27, 2014
One deck. Fifty-two cards. How many arrangements? Let's put it this way: Any time you pick up a well shuffled deck, you are almost certainly holding an arrangement of cards that has .. show full overview
2014x35
Robert Lustig: Sugar: Hiding in plain sight
Episode overview
31, 2014
While sugar is easy to spot in candy, soft drinks and ice cream, it also hides out in foods you might not expect -- including peanut butter, pasta sauce and even bologna! Robert Lustig .. show full overview
2014x39
George Zaidan: Why is ketchup so hard to pour?
Episode overview
08, 2014
Ever go to pour ketchup on your fries...and nothing comes out? Or the opposite happens, and your plate is suddenly swimming in a sea of red? George Zaidan describes the physics behind .. show full overview
2014x47
Alex Gendler: How tsunamis work
Episode overview
24, 2014
The immense swell of a tsunami can grow up to 100 feet, hitting speeds over 500 mph -- a treacherous combination for anyone or anything in its path. Alex Gendler details the causes of .. show full overview
2014x50
Alex Rosenthal and George Zaidan: The case of the missing fractals
Episode overview
29, 2014
A bump on the head, a mysterious femme fatale and a strange encounter on a windswept peak all add up to a heck of a night for Manny Brot, Private Eye. Watch as he tries his hand at .. show full overview
2014x51
Andrew Pontzen and Tom Whyntie: The fundamentals of space-time: Part 2
Episode overview
01, 2014
Light always travels at a speed of 299,792,458 meters per second. But if you're in motion too, you're going to perceive it as traveling even faster -- which isn't possible! In this .. show full overview
2014x54
Dawn Maslar: The science of attraction
Episode overview
08, 2014
Romantic chemistry is all about warm, gooey feelings that gush from the deepest depths of the heart...right? Not quite. Actually, the real boss behind attraction is your brain, which .. show full overview
2014x56
Colm Kelleher: The science of symmetry
Episode overview
13, 2014
When you hear the word symmetry, you might think generally of triangles, butterflies, or even ballerinas. But defined scientifically, symmetry is "a transformation that leaves an object .. show full overview
2014x59
Edmond Hui: How the heart actually pumps blood
Episode overview
20, 2014
For most of history, scientists weren't quite sure why our hearts were beating or even what purpose they served. Eventually, we realized that these thumping organs serve the vital task .. show full overview
2014x63
Karen D. Davis: How does your brain respond to pain?
Episode overview
02, 2014
Everyone experiences pain -- but why do some people react to the same painful stimulus in different ways? And what exactly is pain, anyway? Karen D. Davis walks you through your brain on .. show full overview
2014x65
Damon Brown: How to choose your news
Episode overview
05, 2014
With the advent of the Internet and social media, news is distributed at an incredible rate by an unprecedented number of different media outlets. How do we choose which news to consume? .. show full overview
2014x67
Why do honeybees love hexagons? - Zack Patterson and Andy Peterson
Episode overview
10, 2014
Honeybees are some of nature's finest mathematicians. Not only can they calculate angles and comprehend the roundness of the earth, these smart insects build and live in one of the most .. show full overview
2014x66
How to speak monkey: The language of cotton-top tamarins - Anne Savage
Episode overview
26, 2014
The cotton-top tamarin is a very vocal monkey -- the species communicates using a sophisticated language of 38 distinct and grammatically structured calls! Anne Savage teaches a few of .. show full overview
2014x79
Deborah Gordon: Inside the ant colony
Episode overview
08, 2014
Ants have one of the most complex social organizations in the animal kingdom; they live in structured colonies that contain different types of members who perform specific roles. Sound .. show full overview
2014x80
Claudia Aguirre: What makes tattoos permanent?
Episode overview
10, 2014
The earliest recorded tattoo was found on a Peruvian mummy in 6,000 BC. That's some old ink! And considering humans lose roughly 40,000 skin cells per hour, how do these markings last? .. show full overview
2014x83
Lieven Scheire: How quantum mechanics explains global warming
Episode overview
17, 2014
You've probably heard that carbon dioxide is warming the Earth. But how exactly is it doing it? Lieven Scheire uses a rainbow, a light bulb and a bit of quantum physics to describe the .. show full overview
2014x94
Nathan S. Jacobs: How optical illusions trick your brain
Episode overview
12, 2014
Optical illusions are images that seem to trick our minds into seeing something different from what they actually are. But how do they work? Nathan S. Jacobs walks us through a few .. show full overview
2014x95
James Zucker: How do you know you exist?
Episode overview
14, 2014
How do you know you're real? Is existence all just a big dream? Has some mad scientist duped us into simply believing that we exist? James Zucker investigates all of these questions (and .. show full overview
2014x98
Josh Samani: What can Schrödinger's cat teach us about quantum mechanics?
Episode overview
21, 2014
The classical physics that we encounter in our everyday, macroscopic world is very different from the quantum physics that governs systems on a much smaller scale (like atoms). One great .. show full overview
2014x100
Sam Kean: What happens when you remove the hippocampus?
Episode overview
26, 2014
When Henry Molaison (now widely known as H.M.) cracked his skull in an accident, he began blacking out and having seizures. In an attempt to cure him, daredevil surgeon Dr. William .. show full overview
2014x102
Elizabeth Hellmuth Margulis: Why we love repetition in music
Episode overview
02, 2014
How many times does the chorus repeat in your favorite song? How many times have you listened to that chorus? Repetition in music isn't just a feature of Western pop songs, either; it's .. show full overview
2014x104
Why do we pass gas? - Purna Kashyap
Episode overview
08, 2014
Flatulence is a daily phenomenon. In fact, most human beings pass gas 10-20 times a day (yes, that includes you). Where does your bodily gas come from? Purna Kashyap takes us on a .. show full overview
2014x105
The chemistry of cold packs - John Pollard
Episode overview
11, 2014
If you stick water in the freezer, it will take a few hours to freeze into ice. How is it, then, that cold packs go from room temperature to near freezing in mere seconds? John Pollard .. show full overview
2014x107
Chad Orzel: What is the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle?
Episode overview
16, 2014
The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle states that you can never simultaneously know the exact position and the exact speed of an object. Why not? Because everything in the universe .. show full overview
2014x114
Courtney Stephens: A brief history of melancholy
Episode overview
02, 2014
If you are a living, breathing human being, chances are you have felt sad at least a few times in your life. But what exactly is melancholy, and what (if anything) should we do about it? .. show full overview
2014x115
How do vitamins work? - Ginnie Trinh Nguyen
Episode overview
06, 2014
Vitamins are the building blocks that keep our bodies running; they help build muscle and bone, capture energy, heal wounds and more. But if our body doesn’t create vitamins, how do they .. show full overview
2014x118
Alex Gendler: History vs. Christopher Columbus
Episode overview
13, 2014
Many people in the United States and Latin America have grown up celebrating the anniversary of Christopher Columbus's voyage. But was he an intrepid explorer who brought two worlds .. show full overview
2014x119
Chad Orzel: Schrödinger's cat: A thought experiment in quantum mechanics
Episode overview
14, 2014
Austrian physicist Erwin Schrödinger, one of the founders of quantum mechanics, posed this famous question: If you put a cat in a sealed box with a device that has a 50% chance of .. show full overview
2014x121
John Varney: A different way to visualize rhythm
Episode overview
20, 2014
In standard notation, rhythm is indicated on a musical bar line. But there are other ways to visualize rhythm that can be more intuitive. John Varney describes the 'wheel method' of .. show full overview
2014x124
Jeff Dekofsky: Is math discovered or invented?
Episode overview
27, 2014
Would mathematics exist if people didn't? Did we create mathematical concepts to help us understand the world around us, or is math the native language of the universe itself? Jeff .. show full overview
2014x127
Noah Zandan: The language of lying
Episode overview
03, 2014
We hear anywhere from 10 to 200 lies a day. And although we've spent much of our history coming up with ways to detect these lies by tracking physiological changes in their tellers, .. show full overview
2014x130
Sarthak Sinha: How a wound heals itself
Episode overview
10, 2014
Our skin is the largest organ in our bodies, with a surface area of about 20 square feet in adults. When we are cut or wounded, our skin begins to repair itself through a complex, .. show full overview
2014x138
Michael Mauser: What are those floaty things in your eye?
Episode overview
01, 2014
Sometimes, against a uniform, bright background such as a clear sky or a blank computer screen, you might see things floating across your field of vision. What are these moving objects, .. show full overview
2014x143
Randall Hayes: At what moment are you dead?
Episode overview
11, 2014
For as far back as we can trace our existence, humans have been fascinated with death and resurrection. But is resurrection really possible? And what is the actual difference between a .. show full overview
2014x147
Anthony Hazard: The Atlantic slave trade: What too few textbooks told you
Episode overview
22, 2014
Slavery has occurred in many forms throughout the world, but the Atlantic slave trade -- which forcibly brought more than 10 million Africans to the Americas -- stands out for both its .. show full overview
2014x148
What is a gift economy? - Alex Gendler
Episode overview
23, 2014
What if, this holiday season, instead of saying "thank you" to your aunt for her gift of a knitted sweater, the polite response expected from you was to show up at her house in a week .. show full overview

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