Instructional Video8:57
Bozeman Science

Models

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIn this video Paul Andersen shows you how to develop and use models in a mini-lesson on Models. Two examples are included in the video and two additional examples are included in the linked thinking slides.
Instructional Video9:37
Bozeman Science

Modeling Phenomena

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewIn this video Paul Andersen shows you how to develop and use models in a mini-lesson on modeling phenomena. Two examples are included in the video and two additional examples are included in the linked thinking slides.
Instructional Video14:13
SciShow

AI Doesn't Need To Be Self-Aware To Be Dangerous

12th - Higher Ed
New ReviewArtificial Intelligence always takes over humanity in the movies when it gains consciousness. But even without getting into sentience, it's capable of influencing our lives in a lot of ways already. Hosted by: Stefan Chin (he/him)
Instructional Video12:09
TED Talks

AI won't plateau — if we give it time to think | Noam Brown

12th - Higher Ed
To get smarter, traditional AI models rely on exponential increases in the scale of data and computing power. Noam Brown, a leading research scientist at OpenAI, presents a potentially transformative shift in this paradigm. He reveals...
Instructional Video4:59
TED Talks

TED: A hospital in the cloud bringing health care anywhere in the world | Mohamed Aburawi

12th - Higher Ed
What if AI could help connect you with the right medical care, exactly when you need it? Health systems entrepreneur, surgeon and TED Fellow Mohamed Aburawi explores how his digital health platform, Speetar, uses AI to bridge the...
Instructional Video4:25
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Could AI predict the future? | Thomas Hofweber

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A couple has been considering getting engaged, but they’re worried about divorce statistics. An AI-based model was just released that can predict your likelihood of divorce with 95% accuracy. The only catch is the model doesn’t offer any...
Instructional Video12:23
TED Talks

TED: How aerosols brighten clouds — and cool the planet | Sarah J. Doherty

12th - Higher Ed
Here's a conundrum: the same aerosol pollutants that harm human health also help cool the climate, says atmospheric scientist Sarah J. Doherty. Is there a way to clean up the air without warming the planet? Exploring the unintended...
Instructional Video12:55
TED Talks

TED: How AI will step off the screen and into the real world | Daniela Rus

12th - Higher Ed
The convergence of AI and robotics will unlock a wonderful new world of possibilities in everyday life, says robotics and AI pioneer Daniela Rus. Diving into the way machines think, she reveals how "liquid networks" — a revolutionary...
Instructional Video10:46
SciShow

The Universe’s Second, Bigger Bang

12th - Higher Ed
In 2023, a team of researchers proposed that our universe experienced not one, but TWO Big Bangs about a month apart from one another. The first for the stuff described by our Standard Model of Particle Physics. And the second for that...
Instructional Video11:02
TED Talks

TED: How AI and democracy can fix each other | Divya Siddarth

12th - Higher Ed
We don't have to sacrifice our freedom for the sake of technological progress, says social technologist Divya Siddarth. She shares how a group of people helped retrain one of the world's most powerful AI models on a constitution they...
Instructional Video10:03
TED Talks

TED: How to live with economic doomsaying | Philipp Carlsson-Szlezak

12th - Higher Ed
Economic crises can and do happen. But for every true crisis, there are many false alarms, says economist Philipp Carlsson-Szlezak. He explains how to live with the media's pervasive economic doomsaying, why we should stop treating...
Instructional Video10:19
TED Talks

TED: AI is dangerous, but not for the reasons you think | Sasha Luccioni

12th - Higher Ed
AI won't kill us all — but that doesn't make it trustworthy. Instead of getting distracted by future existential risks, AI ethics researcher Sasha Luccioni thinks we need to focus on the technology's current negative impacts, like...
Instructional Video4:48
SciShow

How Do You Date a Star?

12th - Higher Ed
Figuring out the age of a blinking speck in the sky is a difficult feat, especially if considering how many types of stars there are. This is where a Hertzsprung-Russell meets a gyrochronologist.
Instructional Video4:46
SciShow

Great Minds: Conny Aerts, the Starquake Professor

12th - Higher Ed
While doing some light reading of data from a telescope, Conny Aerts made a breakthrough that allowed her to lead the charge in the field of asteroseismology and win her the 2022 Kavli Prize in Astrophysics.
Instructional Video6:49
SciShow

The Biggest Star In The Universe Is Too Small

12th - Higher Ed
R136a1 is the most massive star that astronomers have ever discovered. It's so massive you might think the laws of physics wouldn't allow it. But it turns out that its current mass estimate is actually so low that it threatens our...
Instructional Video13:32
PBS

Is The Wave Function The Building Block of Reality?

12th - Higher Ed
Objective Collapse Theories offer a explanation of quantum mechanics that is at once brand new and based in classical mechanics. In the world of quantum mechanics, it’s no big deal for particles to be in multiple different states at the...
Instructional Video13:30
PBS

What If Physics IS NOT Describing Reality?

12th - Higher Ed
Neils Bohr said, “It is wrong to think that the task of physics is to find out how Nature is. Physics concerns what we can say about Nature.” Well it turns out that if we pay attention to this subtle difference, some of the most...
Instructional Video6:10
TED Talks

TED: The AI-powered tools supercharging your imagination | Bilawal Sidhu

12th - Higher Ed
How is AI changing the nature of human imagination and creativity? Through a mind-bending tour of new techniques he's been tinkering with, creative technologist Bilawal Sidhu shows how anyone can use AI-powered tools -- like 3D scans...
Instructional Video3:58
SciShow

The 8 Smartest People of the Year: 2013's Nobel Winners

12th - Higher Ed
Hank profiles this year's Nobel laureates in science, whose achievements have helped us understand questions as small as how our cells transport materials, and as big as why matter exists at all.
Instructional Video5:44
SciShow

How Old Are You? Well, Your Liver Is 3

12th - Higher Ed
This week, a group of researchers use nuclear fallout to figure out how old liver cells are, while another gets one step closer to predicting volcanic eruptions.
Instructional Video5:56
SciShow

Wildfires Make Their Own Weather, Including...

12th - Higher Ed
Climate change is causing wildfire season to get worse every year. And our models of wildfires can't keep up with the things fires can do... like spawn devastating fire tornadoes.
Instructional Video5:35
SciShow

Why It's Good for COVID-19 Models to Be Wrong

12th - Higher Ed
As we react to the predictions that epidemiological models make, changing the ways we act and go about our lives, those estimates can appear totally off. But if a model’s predictions end up being wrong, that might mean it's done exactly...
Instructional Video6:14
SciShow

Earth Is Losing its Roots

12th - Higher Ed
Roots do more than hold plants in place -- they hold the planet in place. They're an important defense against drought and climate change, and of course, our actions are changing them.
Instructional Video14:03
TED Talks

TED: The urgent risks of runaway AI -- and what to do about them | Gary Marcus

12th - Higher Ed
Will truth and reason survive the evolution of artificial intelligence? AI researcher Gary Marcus says no, not if untrustworthy technology continues to be integrated into our lives at such dangerously high speeds. He advocates for an...