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  Citing URL - http://www.in-cites.com/media/index.html

   
Podcasts The editorial features from Essential Science IndicatorsSM Web sites now offer occasional podcasts accompanying their comments/interviews. The podcasts listed alphabetically below, are available in several formats to listen to here—or download to your player.

There is also an RSS feed exclusively for the Podcasts. Right click the RSS button, copy the link location and paste that into your RSS reader. View our other RSS feeds.

   

Visit Podcasts at its new home on ScienceWatch.com for all new content and updates.


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mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Emerging Research Fronts feature:

   
Ibrahim Dincer, from the University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Professor Dincer discusses how the use of exergy combines the conservation of mass and conservation of energy principles together with the second law of thermodynamics for the design, analysis, and performance improvement of energy systems.

Read the complete Emerging Research Fronts comment, August 2007.
(Podcast added December 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Fast Moving Fronts feature:

   
Matias Zaldarriaga, Professor of Astronomy and Physics at Harvard University
In this podcast, he discusses 21 centimeter cosmology and the theoretical framework for a new frontier in observational cosmology.

Read the complete Fast Moving Fronts comment, November 2007.
(Podcast added December 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from Current Classics Scientist (Computer Science):

   
James Cleeman, Coordinator of the National Cholesterol Education Program at the National Heart, Lung & Blood Institute at NIH
He discusses his article entitled "Executive Summary of the Third Report of the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel on Detection, Evaluation, and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in Adults," (J. I. Cleeman, et al., JAMA-J AM MED ASSN, 285[19]: 2486-97, May 2001).

View Current Classics, October 2007.
(Podcast added October 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from Current Classics Scientist (Computer Science):

   
A podcast with Mark Newman, Professor of Physics at the University of Michigan
Here he discusses his 2003 SIAM Review paper entitled, "The structure and function of complex networks."

View Current Classics, October 2007.
(Podcast added October 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from Current Classics Scientist (Computer Science):

   
Barry L. Wanner, Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Purdue University
In this podcast, he discusses "One-step inactivation of chromosomal genes in Escherichia coli K-12 using PCR products", (Datsenko, KA;Wanner, BL, PROC NAT ACAD SCI USA, 97[12], 6640-45, JUN 2000).

View Current Classics, October 2007.
(Podcast added October 2007)

 
 

Jacques Banchereau
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from Current Classics Scientist (Immunology):

   
Jacques Banchereau talks about dendritic cells and the control of immunity
Jacques Banchereau is director of the Baylor Institute for Immunology Research in Dallas. Dr. Banchereau focuses his research on manipulating dendritic cells, often called the "sentinels" of the immune system.

View Current Classics, August 2007.
(Podcast added September 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from Current Classics Scientist (Computer Science):

   
Sudhir Kumar, professor of biology at ASU of Arizona State University
Sudhir Kumar is a renowned expert in the field of evolutionary bioinformatics. In this podcast, he talks about the development of Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA) software, which has made useful methods of comparative sequence analysis accessible to the scientific community.

View Current Classics, August 2007.
(Podcast added September 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's New Hot Papers feature:

   
David Stevenson is the Senior Lecturer in Atmospheric Modelling at The University of Edinburgh
In this podcast, he discusses the global distribution of tropospheric ozone and methane, and how sensitive these gases are to human influences.

Read David Stevenson's New Hot Paper comment from September 2007.
(Podcast added September 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Fast Moving Fronts feature:

   
George Kunos of NIAAA on the role of endocannabinoids in neuroendocrine regulation
George Kunos, director of NIAAA's Division of Intramural Clinical and Biological Research at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, MD, discusses how endocannabinoids interact with the hormone leptin.

Read the complete Emerging Research Front comment May 2007.
(Podcast added August 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from Current Classics Scientist (Neuroscience & Behavior):

   
Dennis Selkoe talks about the fundamental molecular mechanisms underlying Alzheimer’s disease
Dennis Selkoe is the Vincent and Stella Coates Professor of Neurologic Diseases at Harvard Medical School and Brigham & Women's Hospital in Boston. Here he discusses his career-long research studies on understanding Alzheimer's disease.

Read features from Dennis Selkoe:
Alzheimer's disease interview, and Current Classics Papers,
and
Fast Breaking Paper comment.
(Podcast added August 2007)

 

 


mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Fast Breaking Papers feature:

   
David Spergel talks about the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) satellite
David Spergel is a theoretical astrophysicist in the Dept. of Astrophysical Sciences at Princeton University. Here he discusses the implications for cosmology and how what has been learned from WMAP satellite data relates to other astronomical observations.

Read David Spergel's Fast Breaking Paper comment from April 2004.
(Podcast added August 2007)

 

 

Brian Byrne
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Fast Moving Fronts feature:

   
University of New England's Brian Byrne talks about behavioral genetics
Brian Byrne, Research Professor of Psychology at the University of New England in Armidale, Australia, discusses how genetic and environmental influences on processes important for learning to read and spell are already at work in children prior to the start of formal schooling.

Read the complete Fast Moving Fronts comment, July 2007.

 

 

Hiroki Kato
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Fast Breaking Papers feature:

   
Hiroki Kato demonstrates the functional role of RIG-I and MDA5 as RNA virus sensors
Hiroki Kato of the Akira Lab at Osaka University discusses the functional role of two RNA helicases, RIG-I and MDA5 as RNA virus sensors.

Read the complete Fast Breaking Paper comment, April 2007.

 

 

Wolfram Schultz
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's New Hot Papers feature:

   
Wolfram Schultz from Cambridge investigates how the brain processes reward function
Prof. Wolfram Schultz of the Department of Physiology, Development & Neuroscience at the University of Cambridge, discusses the neuromechanisms involved in going after a reward and how the brain processes reward function.

Read the complete New Hot Paper comment, May 2007.

 

 

Adam Kuper
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Emerging Research Fronts feature:

   
Adam Kuper on indigenous people and political successes
Adam Kuper, Professor of Anthropology at Brunel University, discusses the ideology of the indigenous peoples’ movement, a global social movement that has booked remarkable political successes in the past decade.

Read the complete Emerging Research Fronts comment, April 2007.

 

 

Inge Fomsgaard
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Fast Moving Fronts feature:

   
University of Aarhus' Inge Fomsgaard protecting plants
Inge Fomsgaard, Professor of Agricultural Sciences at the University of Aarhus, discusses the possible exploitation of natural defense chemicals for protecting agricultural plants against weeds, insects, pathogens, and other pests.

Read the complete Fast Moving Fronts comment, March 2007.

 

 

Bruce Russett
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic of Armed Conflict

   
Bruce Russett, our top Armed Conflict researcher, on the democratization process
In this audio commentary, Yale University's Dr. Bruce Russett talks about ways in which to promote democracy in peaceful manner.

Read the complete interview, December 2006.

 

 

Peter Cox
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic of Global Warming:

   
The University of Exeter’s Peter Cox on humanity’s role in climate change
ESI Editor Jennifer Minnick talks with Professor Peter Cox of the University of Exeter about the research that stemmed from his 2000 Nature paper, "Acceleration of global warming due to carbon-cycle feedbacks in a coupled climate model."

Read the complete interview, January 2007.

 

 

Ralph Hingson
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's New Hot Papers feature:

   
Ralph Hingson from the NIH talks about early alcohol abuse intervention
Ralph Hingson, Director of the Division of Epidemiology and Prevention Research of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism at NIH, discusses several interventions that can reduce college drinking and related harm.

Read the complete New Hot Paper comment, January 2007.

 

 

Isaac Bentwich
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's New Hot Papers feature:

   
Isaac Bentwich from Rosetta Genomics on microRNAs
Isaac Bentwich, founder of Rosetta Genomics, Ltd., discusses the therapeutic potential of human microRNAs.

Read the complete New Hot Paper comment, November 2006.

 

 

Mohamed El Naschie
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's New Hot Papers feature:

   
University of Frankfurt's Mohamed El Naschie
University of Frankfurt's Mohamed El Naschie talks about the potentially positive social and political effects of new research across various disciplines.

Read the complete New Hot Paper comment, November 2006.

 

 

William E. Evans
mp3 | wma

  Podcast from the ESI Special Topic's Fast Moving Fronts feature:

   
St. Jude Children's' William Evans on childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia
Dr. William E. Evans of St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital in Memphis, talks about the collaborative effort his hospital has undertaken with Erasmus MC Sophia Children’s Hospital in Rotterdam to identify gene expression patterns in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) that are different in drug-sensitive and drug-resistant cancers.

Read the complete Fast Moving Fronts comment, September 2006.

 

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