Instructional Video3:41
Fun Robotics

Neural Network in AI

Higher Ed
Present the concept of neural networks in the field of artificial intelligence
Instructional Video7:10
Curated Video

Describe computer programming : You Can Code! Part 1

Higher Ed
From the section: You can code!. This section will help you discover some interesting facts about coding. You can code!: You Can Code! Part 1 • Create a simple list with names and another with numbers • Explain the concept of indexing •...
Instructional Video11:43
Global Health with Greg Martin

AI and Health

Higher Ed
Artificial Intelligence is being used in healthcare in an array of clinical settings. This video explores AI and Health in terms of the application of machine learning to diagnostic problems and long term clinical decision making through...
Instructional Video2:49
Healthcare Triage

How Accurate are Mail-in DNA Tests?

Higher Ed
Mail-in DNA tests have been in the news recently. Test results can be over the map, with even identical twins getting some widely variable results. What's the deal with that?
Instructional Video3:04
Science360

Sustainable chemistry center works to transform electronics manufacturing

12th - Higher Ed
The changes brewing in this lab could make that smartphone you carry smarter, lighter and more sustainable. It's one of many devices getting an electronic makeover at the Center for Sustainable Materials Chemistry (CSMC). With support...
Instructional Video1:43
Science360

Listening to classical music while you sleep may improve test scores

12th - Higher Ed
Listening to classical music while you sleep may improve test scores. Baylor University researchers with funding from the National Science Foundation have discovered that college students who listened to classical music during a...
Podcast21:29
NASA

‎NASA in Silicon Valley: Stuart Rogers: NASA in Silicon Valley Podcast

Pre-K - Higher Ed
A conversation with Stuart Rogers, a NASA Aerospace Engineer in the Advanced Supercomputing Division at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Silicon Valley.
Instructional Video5:19
Science360

Biometrics - Science of Innovation

12th - Higher Ed
A method for capturing and analyzing the vein patterns in the white part of the eye to help identify people. Biometrics has potential applications for driver's licenses, passports or computer identification control. Provided by the...
Instructional Video16:14
The Wall Street Journal

Paging Dr. Machine

Higher Ed
Will artificial intelligence and machine learning reshape the way diagnostics and other medicine are conducted?
Instructional Video4:13
Science360

Fluorescent Foliage - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
The vascular system of a leaf provides its structure and delivers its nutrients. When you light up that vascular structure with some fluorescent dye and view it using time lapse photography, details begin to emerge that reveal nature's...
Instructional Video4:33
Curated Video

Using Angle Measurement to Design a Graphic Logo

K - 5th
In this video, Kathy uses her knowledge of angles to design a graphic logo for her skateboard. She decomposes the design into congruent triangles and attempts to copy and paste them, but struggles to align them perfectly. Through trial...
Instructional Video4:09
friEdTech

Google Drawing Tool with Layers

Higher Ed
We're so excited to tell you about a new Google Drawing tool with layers, called Canvas. It deserves a home in the Classroom and maybe in your life too!
Instructional Video4:43
Science360

Computer scientist Scott Aaronson researches quantum computers

12th - Higher Ed
Scott Aaronson is a computer scientist at MIT who studies computational limits and quantum computers. He has been awarded the 2012 Alan T. Waterman Award
Instructional Video3:45
Curated Video

RAM vs ROM: What Is The Difference Between Them?

Pre-K - Higher Ed
If you’re not an alien reading this from a galaxy far, far away, then you have probably heard these terms countless times—RAM and ROM. That being said, RAM is more commonly encountered by the common person. Yet a fair amount of the...
Instructional Video3:03
Science360

Engineering and Music: A Powerful Duet for Art and Science - Science Nation

12th - Higher Ed
University of Rochester electrical engineer Mark Bocko has combined his passion for music with his passion for engineering, devising a way to digitally reproduce music in files 1,000 times smaller than an mp3! But along with this new...
Instructional Video5:14
Science360

Computer scientist and Watson co-creator David Ferrucci - ScienceLives

12th - Higher Ed
When David Ferrucci was introduced to computer programming as a high school student questions flooded his mind … Where does it stop? What can I get the computer to do? "My mind immediately went to the idea of artificial intelligence ......
Instructional Video10:49
Product Design Online

Learn Fusion 360 in 30 Days - Day #29: Render a Product (Part 2 of 2)

Higher Ed
Note: Rendering in the Cloud is not available to those on the free Personal Use (Hobbyist) license. The Model workspace is now the Design Workspace.
Instructional Video4:17
Science360

Supercomputers Assist In Climate Forecasting - Innovators

12th - Higher Ed
Responding to the challenge of climate change requires understanding more about climate variability and the changes expected. Jim Kinter, director of the Center for Ocean-Land-Atmosphere Studies (COLA), explains how scientists there are...
Instructional Video12:37
Packt

Introduction to computer hardware and software : The Right PC for the Job

Higher Ed
From the section: Building a PC. Here, we select the right PC for the job. Not every Desktop PC does the same job. A tech should understand some of the more common systems and know the hardware requirements for those jobs.
Instructional Video13:30
Programming Electronics Academy

Tutorial 11: If Statement Conditionals: Arduino Course for Absolute Beginners (ReM)

Higher Ed
In the last lesson we learned about the "If statement". The "If statement" was the perfect choice for setting up instructions to run only when certain conditions are met. "If 30 seconds has passed - stop the heating element" or "If the...
Instructional Video5:01
National Institute of Standards and Technology

NIST Unscripted - Ray Simmonds

9th - 12th
NIST physicist Ray Simmonds discusses his work in quantum physics and NIST's efforts to create a quantum computer. He also describes a qubit and a quantum bus, along with explaining how he was inspired to become a scientist.
Instructional Video4:27
Science360

Science Behind The News: Quantum Computing

12th - Higher Ed
Imagine if engineers could build a computer to be millions of times faster than anything that exists today, yet so small it's microscopic. John Preskill, a theoretical physicist at the California Institute of Technology, explains the...
Instructional Video4:23
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Josh Burker - The Logo Turtle

Higher Ed
Josh Burker was privileged to spend some of his early years near his grandfather, who had a giant carriage shop with countless tools, many of which he taught Josh to safely use at a young age. By second grade he could be found in the...
Instructional Video2:11
Cerebellum

Space Facts II - Advances In Medical Imaging From Space

9th - 12th
Space Facts II puts viewers on the forefront of space exploration, examining its role on Earth in fighting forest fires, controlling diseases (such as diabetes), combating air pollution and mapping solar and lunar cycles. This video...