Instructional Video17:58
TED Talks

Sendhil Mullainathan: Solving social problems with a nudge

12th - Higher Ed
MacArthur winner Sendhil Mullainathan uses the lens of behavioral economics to study a tricky set of social problems -- those we know how to solve, but don't. We know how to reduce child deaths due to diarrhea, how to prevent...
Instructional Video5:44
SciShow

When Waking up After Decades Turned out to Be Temporary

12th - Higher Ed
Around 1917, an unknown illness dubbed "sleeping sickness" caused people to suffer severe sleepiness and delirium. Some even became paralyzed for decades until a temporary cure was discovered in the 1960s. The story of this illness is...
Instructional Video4:13
SciShow

The First Edible Bug Farm & The 9 Greatest Minds of 2014

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News gives you the latest developments from the world of science, including some bug-number-crunching behind America's first edible-insect farm, and a look at the discoveries that won the 2014 Kavli Prize.
Instructional Video4:35
SciShow

Optogenetics: Using Light to Control Your Brain

12th - Higher Ed
Optogenetics may allow us to use light like a remote control for our brains, and treat diseases like retinitis pigmentosa.
Instructional Video10:15
TED Talks

TED: How gratitude rewires your brain | Christina Costa

12th - Higher Ed
When a psychologist who studies well-being ends up with a brain tumor, what happens when she puts her own research into practice? Christina Costa goes beyond the "fight" narrative of cancer -- or any formidable personal journey -- to...
Instructional Video6:02
SciShow

3 Big Things We Learned About the Brain in 2019

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve learned a lot about how the human brain works, but there are still new discoveries and mysteries each year, and 2019 was no exception. We learned pretty big things, from internal compasses, to mysterious sniffers, to brain-washing...
Instructional Video15:52
TED Talks

Michael Dickinson: How a fly flies

12th - Higher Ed
An insect's ability to fly is one of the greatest feats of evolution. Michael Dickinson looks at how a fruit fly takes flight with such delicate wings, thanks to a clever flapping motion and flight muscles that are both powerful and...
Instructional Video13:59
TED Talks

David Pizarro: The strange politics of disgust

12th - Higher Ed
What does a disgusting image have to do with how you vote? Equipped with surveys and experiments, psychologist David Pizarro demonstrates a correlation between your sensitivity to disgusting cues -- a photo of feces, an unpleasant odor...
Instructional Video14:53
TED Talks

TED: A tale of mental illness -- from the inside | elyn Saks

12th - Higher Ed
Is it okay if I totally trash your office? It's a question elyn Saks once asked her doctor, and it wasn't a joke. A legal scholar, in 2007 Saks came forward with her own story of schizophrenia, controlled by drugs and therapy but...
Instructional Video4:12
SciShow

Why Don't You Notice Obvious Mistakes in Movies?

12th - Higher Ed
Whether it's a car in the background of Braveheart or the inconsistent cliff in Jurassic Park, movies tend to have mistakes. Why don't we notice them more often?
Instructional Video4:46
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: The surprising link between stress and memory - Elizabeth Cox

Pre-K - Higher Ed
You spend weeks studying for an important test. On the big day, you wait nervously as your teacher hands it out. You're working your way through, when you're asked to define "ataraxia." You know you've seen the word before, but your mind...
Instructional Video4:45
TED-Ed

TED-ED: What are mini brains? - Madeline Lancaster

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Shielded by our thick skulls and swaddled in layers of protective tissue, the human brain is extremely difficult to observe in action. Luckily, scientists can use brain organoids - pencil-eraser-sized masses of cells that function like...
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

New Genetic Clues to the Mystery of Your Giant Brain

12th - Higher Ed
Big-brained scientists have found the mechanism that may have allowed their brains (and all humans') to get so big.
Instructional Video8:18
SciShow

Sleep: Why We Need It and What Happens Without It

12th - Higher Ed
What happens when you don't sleep? And why do we need to do it anyways? Hank explains the science of sleep: the cause, the benefits, and who holds the record for going without it!
Instructional Video9:37
SciShow

Football Disease, Moon Base Dreams, and the Deepest Vents Ever!

12th - Higher Ed
Hank breaks the news to you about your brain on football, the reality behind the latest moon-base plan, and an epic win -- and fail -- in the animal kingdom.
Instructional Video4:20
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Why do some people snore so loudly? | Alayna Vaughan

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A leather mask that clamps the mouth shut. A cannonball sewn into a soldier's uniform. A machine that delivers sudden electrical pulses. These were all treatments for a problem that has haunted humanity for millennia: snoring. It might...
Instructional Video16:15
TED Talks

Kwabena Boahen: A computer that works like the brain

12th - Higher Ed
Researcher Kwabena Boahen is looking for ways to mimic the brain's supercomputing powers in silicon -- because the messy, redundant processes inside our heads actually make for a small, light, superfast computer.
Instructional Video5:03
TED-Ed

TED-ED: How does your body know what time it is? - Marco A. Sotomayor

Pre-K - Higher Ed
Being able to sense time helps us do everything from waking and sleeping to knowing precisely when to catch a ball that's hurtling towards us. And we owe all these abilities to an interconnected system of timekeepers in our brains. But...
Instructional Video5:15
SciShow

Old Pill, New Trick

12th - Higher Ed
One team of researchers may has found a promising lead in the fight to cure or prevent Alzheimer's. And another team is helping us understand how Hydras regrow their heads.
Instructional Video2:39
SciShow

Mind Reading

12th - Higher Ed
Hank describes some scientific advances in the field of mind reading.
Instructional Video4:23
SciShow

Why Is Everyone Having Vivid Dreams Right Now?

12th - Higher Ed
Vivid dreams have gotten pretty common during the Covid-19 pandemic and there’s a good psychological reason for that.
Instructional Video3:42
SciShow

Special Valentine Science!

12th - Higher Ed
Want to get your sweetheart something really special? Give them a mineral called fingerite, and then stare at them for a while! Find out why, in this Valentine's Day edition of SciShow News.
Instructional Video15:13
SciShow

SciShow Quiz Show: Bears, Beats, Battlestar Galactica?

12th - Higher Ed
Hank’s up to his old tricks again as he faces off against SciShow Senior Producer and Host Caitlin Hofmeister. Can she see through his lies and win her patron the prize?
Instructional Video18:41
TED Talks

TED: The social animal | David Brooks

12th - Higher Ed
Columnist David Brooks unpacks new insights into human nature from the cognitive sciences -- insights with massive implications for economics and politics as well as our own self-knowledge. In a talk full of humor, he shows how you can't...