Instructional Video10:58
TED Talks

The life-saving secrets in your baby's DNA | Robert C. Green

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWhat if we could get a heads-up about serious health issues before they begin, from the moment a baby is born? In this groundbreaking talk, medical geneticist and physician-scientist Robert C. Green shares how his team at the BabySeq...
Instructional Video4:38
TED Talks

The incredible secrets hidden in your immune system | Beck Brachman

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewYour immune system keeps a record of everything it’s ever fought, from the common cold to chronic disease. Neuroscientist and TED Fellow Beck Brachman explains how, by decoding this archive, scientists may be able to identify the root...
Instructional Video11:43
TED Talks

How AI could generate new life-forms | Eric Nguyen

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIf DNA is just a string of letters, could AI learn to read it … or even write it? Bioengineering researcher Eric Nguyen reveals how AI has upended the rules of biology, potentially creating a future where disease is cured with...
Instructional Video8:00
PBS

What Was The Earliest Surgery?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewWhen did practicing medicine - in its varied, complex forms (from sharing medicinal plants to the earliest surgeries) - become something that we actually started doing? While it’s a hard question to answer, it’s possible that our...
Instructional Video12:20
SciShow

The Human Genome Project Was a Failure

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewHosted by: Savannah Geary (they/them)
Instructional Video7:29
SciShow

Medicine Cabinets Shouldn't Exist

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewThe conditions in many medicine cabinets turn out to be detrimental for medicines—some worse than others. Hosted by: Hank Green (he/him)
Instructional Video4:35
SciShow

Can We Use Laughing Gas As An Antidepressant?

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewYou may have gotten a dose of laughing gas at the dentist at some point. But new research is suggesting that the same gas that helps you forget your toothache could be a future treatment for clinical depression. Hosted by: Stefan Chin
Instructional Video12:01
Crash Course

Viruses & Vaccines: How Do Vaccines Work?: Crash Course Biology 39

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewFrom the flu to COVID-19, viruses are a major threat in our everyday lives. In today’s episode of Crash Course Biology, we’ll learn why viruses are like genes in a box, and how they invade and spread between cells. We’ll also discover...
Instructional Video6:11
TED-Ed

One of the most controversial medical procedures in history | Jenell Johnson

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1935, researchers found that after removing the frontal lobes of two chimps, they no longer experienced frustration or anxiety. Neurologist Egas Moniz believed that replicating this in humans could cure mental illness— leading to one...
Instructional Video5:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do kidney transplants work? | Alexander H. Toledo

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1954, Joseph Murray attempted a type of kidney swap that no doctor had tried before. The surgery was a success, and the patient would go on to live with the transplanted organ thanks to one key factor: it came from his identical twin....
Instructional Video6:16
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The real reason polio is so dangerous | Dan Kwartler

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1952, polio was everywhere: killing or paralyzing roughly half a million people annually. Yet just 10 years later, paralytic polio cases in the US dropped by 96% and we were on track to get rid of polio for good. But in recent years,...
Instructional Video5:00
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: 3 reasons why medications are so expensive in the US | Kiah Williams

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A century after its discovery, insulin remain essential in treating diabetes, and has a relatively low production cost, with a vial generally costing less than $6 to make. But those in the US pay on average 10 times more than those in...
Instructional Video5:52
TED Talks

TED: A medical mythbuster's mission to improve health care | Joel Bervell

12th - Higher Ed
Joel Bervell was one of the only Black students in his medical school program. After noticing how misconceptions about race were embedded in health care, he turned to social media to raise awareness about the harmful impact of biases in...
Instructional Video2:52
MinuteEarth

Poop Transplants!

12th - Higher Ed
Poop Transplants!
Instructional Video11:40
TED Talks

TED: Quantum computers aren't what you think — they're cooler | Hartmut Neven

12th - Higher Ed
Quantum computers obtain superpowers by tapping into parallel universes, says Hartmut Neven, the founder and lead of Google Quantum AI. He explains how this emerging tech can far surpass traditional computers by relying on quantum...
Instructional Video5:08
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: How do doctors determine what stage of cancer you have? | Hyunsoo Joshua No and Trudy Wu

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Each year, approximately 20 million people receive a cancer diagnosis. At that time, a patient usually learns their cancer’s stage, which is typically a number ranging from one to four. While staging is designed, in part, to help...
Instructional Video5:12
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Can you transplant a head to another body? | Max G. Levy

Pre-K - Higher Ed
In 1970, neurosurgeon Robert White and his team carted two monkeys into an operating room to conduct an ambitious experiment. The objective was to connect the head of Monkey A to the body of Monkey B, in what he considered a whole-body...
Instructional Video9:02
TED Talks

TED: How you could see inside your body — with a micro-robot | Alex Luebke, Vivek Kumbhari

12th - Higher Ed
Would you swallow a micro-robot? In a gutsy demo, physician Vivek Kumbhari navigates Pillbot, a wireless, disposable robot swallowed onstage by engineer Alex Luebke, modeling how this technology can swiftly provide direct visualization...
Instructional Video9:32
TED Talks

TED: 12 predictions for the future of technology | Vinod Khosla

12th - Higher Ed
Techno-optimist Vinod Khosla believes in the world-changing power of "foolish ideas." He offers 12 bold predictions for the future of technology — from preventative medicine to car-free cities to planes that get us from New York to...
Instructional Video18:06
TED Talks

TED: My quest to cure prion disease — before it's too late | Sonia Vallabh

12th - Higher Ed
Biomedical researcher Sonia Vallabh's life was turned upside down when she learned she had the genetic mutation for a rare and fatal illness, prion disease, that could strike at any time. Thirteen years later, her search for a cure has...
Instructional Video9:33
SciShow

Why Do Antidepressants Cause Brain Zaps?

12th - Higher Ed
For some people who stop taking an SSRI or SNRI antidepressant, they can get a weird side effect called brain zaps. And even though we've known about them for decades, we still don't know exactly why brain zaps happen.
Instructional Video9:11
SciShow

Can You Make A Computer Out Of Food?

12th - Higher Ed
Could an edible computer be in your future? Researchers are currently working on several of the components you find in them, from batteries to circuit boards to logic gates.
Instructional Video5:57
SciShow

The Metal Claw Hiding in Your Food

12th - Higher Ed
Have you ever seen "calcium disodium EDTA" on an ingredients label and wondered what it's doing in your food? As it turns out, ethylenediamene triacetate is an important preservative that's helping to preserve your food. It's totally...
Instructional Video10:11
TED Talks

TED: The miracle of organ donation — and a breakthrough for the future | Abbas Ardehali

12th - Higher Ed
Organ transplants save lives, but they come with challenges: every minute a healthy donated organ is on ice increases risk. And even if things go perfectly, rejection of the organ is still possible. Cardiothoracic surgeon Abbas Ardehali...