
Let's Talk Turkey!
03/10/2022 | 8 min
Turkey scientist Rich Buchholz of the University of Mississippi talks about the turkey on your plate and his own turkey research

Roman Sanitation Didn't Stop Roaming Parasites
03/10/2022 | 8 min
Cambridge's Piers Mitchell, author of the 2015 book Sanitation, Latrines and Intestinal Parasites in Past Populations, talks about the counterintuitive findings in his recent paper in the journal Parasitology titled "Human parasites in the Roman World: health consequences of conquering an empire."

Teaching Machines to Learn on Their Own
03/10/2022 | 6 min
talks with Scientific American tech editor Larry Greenemeier about the revolution underway in machine learning, in which the machine eventually programs itself

Nobel Prize Explainer: Autophagy
03/10/2022 | 8 min
The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine was awarded today to Yoshinori Ohsumi of Japan for his discoveries concerning autophagy. Following the announcement, journalist Lotta Fredholm spoke to Juleen Zierath, chair of the Nobel Committee for Physiology or Medicine, about the research.

Thule and the Apes of Earth
03/10/2022 | 8 min
As the New Horizons mission approached Ultima Thule, Rowan University paleontologist Kenneth Lacovara put our close-up study of the Kuiper Belt object into a deep-time perspective.



Revisionist History podcast