Instructional Video4:47
SciShow

How the Electricity in Our Bodies Could Fight Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
One potential avenue for cancer treatment uses electricity not from any outside machine, but from within our own bodies.
Instructional Video5:13
SciShow

10-Year Cancer Remission Thanks to T Cell Therapy | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Some researchers trained the immune systems of leukemia patients to help keep them in remission. And other researchers found that it's possible to help African clawed frogs regrow lost limbs, an ability they normally lose once they hit...
Instructional Video4:59
SciShow

Preventing Cancer? Scientists Try Combining Three Strategies

12th - Higher Ed
What Do Exercise, Omega-3s, and Vitamin D Have in Common? Cancer. In a study published this week in the journal Frontiers in Aging, researchers propose a combination of simple strategies to help prevent the development of invasive...
Instructional Video4:57
SciShow

This Jawless Fish Could Help Treat Brain Diseases

12th - Higher Ed
You might expect to find these fish at the core of an ancient, distant asteroid, but we find them instead on Earth. That doesn’t mean they aren’t special, though. In fact, their immune systems may be the key to unlocking a new treatment...
Instructional Video6:54
TED Talks

TED: The incredible cancer-detecting potential of photoacoustic imaging | Lei Li

12th - Higher Ed
Could we use the energy from light and sound to detect disease? TED Fellow Lei Li shares the exciting promise of photoacoustic imaging: an affordable, painless and accurate method of converting light into sound in order to create...
Instructional Video5:25
SciShow

Seeing Like Mantis Shrimp to Spot Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
Mantis shrimp might as well be super heroes, and one of their powers might given us insight on how to spot cancer.
Instructional Video4:10
SciShow

Precision Medicine and the Science of Clumsy Robots

12th - Higher Ed
Today on SciShow News we talk about a new research effort that is aiming to revolutionize how we treat disease. We also discuss the video where Boston Dynamics shows off it's new version of the Atlas robot by using a hockey stick to mess...
Instructional Video12:24
SciShow

5 Scientists with Ideas That Nobody Believed ... Who Were Right

12th - Higher Ed
People have struggled to understand some hypotheses scientists had, which are correct but were disclaimed back then. So here’s the 5 scientists and their ideas that nobody believed. Chapters 0:00 0:07 0:15 0:23 0:30 0:38
Instructional Video17:32
TED Talks

Paola Antonelli: Design and the Elastic Mind

12th - Higher Ed
MOMA design curator Paola Antonelli previews the groundbreaking show Design and the Elastic Mind -- full of products and designs that reflect the way we think now.
Instructional Video3:27
SciShow

Cannibalism, Zombies & Suicidal Cells: The Latest In Cancer Research

12th - Higher Ed
Hank shares some developments in cancer research, from new insights into the behavior of zombie cancer cells, to a new method that uses nanotechnology to kill cancer from within.
Instructional Video24:21
TED Talks

TED: What AI is -- and isn't | Sebastian Thrun and Chris Anderson

12th - Higher Ed
Educator and entrepreneur Sebastian Thrun wants us to use AI to free humanity of repetitive work and unleash our creativity. In an inspiring, informative conversation with TED Curator Chris Anderson, Thrun discusses the progress of deep...
Instructional Video13:32
TED Talks

TED: What we can do to die well | Timothy Ihrig

12th - Higher Ed
The healthcare industry in America is so focused on pathology, surgery and pharmacology -- on what doctors "do" to patients -- that it often overlooks the values of the human beings it's supposed to care for. Palliative care physician...
Instructional Video10:34
TED Talks

TED: A video game to cope with grief | Amy Green

12th - Higher Ed
When Amy Green's young son was diagnosed with a rare brain tumor, she made up a bedtime story for his siblings to teach them about cancer. What resulted was a video game, "That Dragon, Cancer," which takes players on a journey they can't...
Instructional Video9:35
Bozeman Science

Thinking in Causation - Level 6 - Causation and Correlation

12th - Higher Ed
In this video Paul Andersen shows conceptual thinking in a mini-lesson on causation and correlation. TERMS: Relationships - interconnection between parts of a system - Causal - cause-and-effect relationships - Correlational - a mutual...
Instructional Video6:05
SciShow

Are Antioxidants Actually Good for Anything?

12th - Higher Ed
There's evidence that antioxidant-rich diets have health benefits in humans, but the antioxidant chemicals and enzymes seem to be only part of the puzzle.
Instructional Video15:20
TED Talks

TED: Is there a link between cancer and heart disease? | Nicholas Leeper

12th - Higher Ed
Does the key to stopping cancer lie in the heart? Cardiologist Nicholas Leeper digs into emerging scientific research on the link between the world's two leading causes of death, heart disease and cancer, sharing how their biological...
Instructional Video3:19
SciShow

Angelina Jolie & Breast Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
What would you do if you found out that cancer could be lurking in your genes? More people are getting news like that these days as more kinds of cancer are being linked to specific genes and genetic tests let doctors screen your...
Instructional Video8:59
SciShow

Richard Feynman, The Great Explainer: Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
Like SciShow? Help support us, and also get things to put on your walls, cover your torso, or hold your liquids! Chapters View all GREAT EXPLAINERS 0:26 QUANTUM MECHANICS 2:54 THEORETICAL PHYSICS 3:04 PRANKING OTHER PHYSICISTS 3:55...
Instructional Video16:50
TED Talks

TED: How we can use light to see deep inside our bodies and brains | Mary Lou Jepsen

12th - Higher Ed
In a series of mind-bending demos, inventor Mary Lou Jepsen shows how we can use red light to see and potentially stimulate what's inside our bodies and brains. Taking us to the edge of optical physics, Jepsen unveils new technologies...
Instructional Video6:13
TED Talks

Nina Tandon: Could tissue engineering mean personalized medicine?

12th - Higher Ed
Each of our bodies is utterly unique, which is a lovely thought until it comes to treating an illness -- when every body reacts differently, often unpredictably, to standard treatment. Tissue engineer Nina Tandon talks about a possible...
Instructional Video5:13
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: History's deadliest colors - J. V. Maranto

Pre-K - Higher Ed
When radium was first discovered, its luminous green color inspired people to add it into beauty products and jewelry. It wasn't until much later that we realized that radium's harmful effects outweighed its visual benefits....
Instructional Video2:08
SciShow

What Causes Sunburns?

12th - Higher Ed
Why does too much sun turn some people's skin all red and shiny? Quick Questions explains!
Instructional Video4:56
SciShow

Sugar, Worms, and Space

12th - Higher Ed
In this week's news, Hank explains how earthworms are doing nanotechnology for us, Americans will soon be eating genetically modified salmon, the Russians are going back to space, and another reason to drink less soda.
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

The Tiny Fish That's Changing Modern Medicine

12th - Higher Ed
The little fish Danio rerio holds secrets to understanding how vertebrates develop, how diseases like cancer work, and how we might one day learn how to regenerate human heart tissue.