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PhDrinking
by PhDrinkingPodcast by PhDrinking
Copyright: All rights reserved
Episodes
Fake Brews
43m · Published
Our brains are great at soaking up all sorts of information, but less good at updating that information. This can become a problem when it comes to the insidious nature of fake news. Thankfully, Nikita Salovich is on the case, studying how we cope with fake news.
PS- early in the episode, Nikita says Chicago is the capital of Illinois as an example of a false fact. In this case, we're using fact to mean a statement that can be proven true or false.
Suggested Reading:
NPR politics podcast on spotting misinformation: https://www.npr.org/2019/11/27/783293679/how-to-spot-misinformation
NYT article on why people fall for fake news: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/19/opinion/sunday/fake-news.html
Nikita's lab published an article about why we can't ignore fake news: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/327479180_Can't_We_Just_Disregard_Fake_News_The_Consequences_of_Exposure_to_Inaccurate_Information
Follow Nikita: @psylovich, salovich.com
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
Drinking Fast and Slow
40m · Published
Guys, it finally happened. My longest time friend in grad school and thrice-weekly lifting partner finally joined me on the pod to talk research! So enjoy this episode where Ben Reuveni and I talk about memory, learning, and the joys/headaches of data exploration.
Ben's lab profile: http://reberlab.psych.northwestern.edu/people/ben-reuveni/
Research papers in the Reber lab: http://reberlab.psych.northwestern.edu/research/selected-publications-and-reprints/
Thinking Fast and Slow:
wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thinking,_Fast_and_Slow
Follow Ben Reuveni: kraken_the_scottie (instagram), [email protected]
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
How we hear, with beer
39m · Published
Have you ever returned home after a loud concert, only to notice everything sounds muffled and a bit more quiet? In those moments, I usually think of my mom chastising me by saying that I can't recover lost hearing. But thanks to Amrita's research, there's a chance we may be able to recover our hearing after all!
Suggested Reading:
Article Amrita wrote about her research: https://indscicomm.blog/2018/05/01/music-in-the-time-of-hearing-loss/
Funding organization's description of research: https://hearinghealthfoundation.org/blogs/tag/cell+regeneration
Amrita's advisor's talk about regeneration: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8-7MMkqY7iE
Follow Amrita Anand: @amritallsmiles
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
Ales and Astrocytes
36m · Published
Just in time for the annual Society for Neuroscience meeting here in Chicago! In this conversation with Alie Caldwell, we talk about her dissertation research, her scicomm efforts, and just geek out about the brain in general.
Suggested Reading:
The roles of glia in CNS development: https://science.sciencemag.org/content/362/6411/181/tab-pdf
Astrocytes in development and disease: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27381164
What even are astrocytes? (Video): https://youtu.be/Utaeaz-tD5s
Follow Alie Caldwell: @alie_astrocyte(Twitter), https://www.youtube.com/user/neurotransmissions (YouTube), www.alieastrocyte.com
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
The Cancer Cocktail
33m · Published
I know that everyone jokes that if you're a biology PhD, you must be studying cancer. But sometimes, that's actually true! I had the pleasure to chat with Keighley about her work with cancer stem cells, specifically in breast cance.r
Suggested Reading:
Breast cancer overview: https://www.healthline.com/health/triple-negative-breast-cancer-recurrence
What you should know about triple-negative breast cancer: https://www.mdanderson.org/publications/cancerwise/triple-negative-breast-cancer-5-things-you-should-know.h00-158986656.html
Lab website: sites.baylor.edu/taubelab
Follow Keighley Reisenauer: @ScienceKeighley (Twitter), @scientifikeighley (Instagram), sites.baylor.edu/kreisenauer
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
Getting Tanked
38m · Published
It was a happy accident that I found Hannah Groch-Begley though an old college friend. Her historical research on the changing roles of women in the British Empire during WW1 covered much more than anything I've seen in a textbook. I'm sure you'll enjoy the conversation as much as I did.
Suggested Reading:
12 Things you didn't know about WW1: https://www.iwm.org.uk/history/12-things-you-didnt-know-about-women-in-the-first-world-war
Changing gender roles in WW1: https://www.bl.uk/world-war-one/articles/changing-lives-gender-expectations
Follow Hannah Groch-Begley: @grouchybagels
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
Emotional Meades
27m · Published
It's not often that I get to chat with a fellow psychology grad student about their research! For this episode, I spoke with Jennifer about how emotions affect decision-making, particularly when it comes to mood disorders
Suggested Reading:
Recent publication about arousal and impulsivity: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30259983
Lab website: CALM Program
Jennifer's blog: http://voicingvulnerability.blogspot.com/
Follow Jennifer Pearlstein: @jenpearlstein, [email protected]
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
Graphene Guinness
39m · Published
We often hear about research that requires intensely specialized equipment- from the large hadron collider to PCR machines. But imagine of you could conduct your research by just using a household appliance. Well Matthew is one of the lucky few who can conduct his research on graphene with the help of a typical blender!
Suggested Reading:
General piece on graphene: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/12/22/material-question
Scientific American's overview of the graphene made in a blender: https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-to-make-graphene-in-your-kitchen-blender/
Potential applications of graphene: https://www.graphene.manchester.ac.uk/learn/applications/
Follow Matthew: @MatSciMatt
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
Forensic Gin-etics
30m · Published
**Head's up, we had some technical difficulties when recording this episode. There was a break in our audio that we filled with some pleasant elevator music (courtesy The Mini Vandals) before continuing the conversation. Sorry about that!**
Have you ever wondered if DNA is the only way to identify a unique person? What if we could use the microbiome on a person's skin? Allie Sherier's research focuses on just that question!
Suggested Reading:
Scientific article on the skin microbiome and forensics: https://www.fsigenetics.com/article/S1872-4973(18)30373-9/abstract
Editorial on human identification using the skin microbiome: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/1751-7915.12699
General piece on forensic genetics: https://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/forensics-dna-fingerprinting-and-codis-736
Follow Allie: @alliesherier @UNTCHI_RDU
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
Juiced Journalism
35m · Published
The landscape of journalism is changing rapidly. With established newspapers going out of business and the rise of online publication, working as a journalist today is very different than even 20 years ago. Nick Hagar studies these trends and researches how the world of journalism is continuing to evolve.
Suggested Reading:
A great recent rundown of labor issues in freelance journalism: https://newrepublic.com/article/153744/gig-economy
A general source of news industry and research coverage: https://www.niemanlab.org/
An in-depth piece of research on how new technologies affect journalists: https://www.cjr.org/tow_center_reports/the_traffic_factories_metrics_at_chartbeat_gawker_media_and_the_new_york_times.php
Follow Nick: @nickhagar
Follow me: [email protected], @PhDrinking, @SadieWit, www.facebook.com/PhDrinking/
Thanks to www.bensound.com/ for the intro/outro
Thanks to @TylerDamme for audio editing
PhDrinking has 92 episodes in total of explicit content. Total playtime is 56:36:50. The language of the podcast is English. This podcast has been added on November 27th 2022. It might contain more episodes than the ones shown here. It was last updated on April 6th, 2024 22:43.
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