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This episode's guest is Professor Christopher Bellitto (Kean University). He is Professor of History at Kean University in New Jersey and a specialist in the Middle Ages, church history and reform. He serves as series Editor in Chief of Brill's Companions to the Christian Tradition and Academic Editor at Large for Paulist Press. His publications include Humility: The Secret History of a Lost Virtue (Georgetown University Press, 2023), Ageless Wisdom: Lifetime Lessons from the Bible (Paulist Press, 2016), and 101 Questions and Answers on Popes and the Papacy (Paulist Press, 2008).
Happy 2023 from everyone at the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition! In this episode, our Early Career Editor Kevin C. Klatt, PhD, RD chats with AJCN Editor in Chief, Christopher Duggan MD, MPH, and Academic Editor, Deirdre (DeeDee) Tobias, ScD, as they all reflect on the past year at AJCN and dive into some our top papers for the year.Find more about Drs. Duggan and Tobias, and all of our editors: https://academic.oup.com/ajcn/pages/meet_the_ajcn_editorsPapers discussed in this episode:A link to the top cited and top Altmetric papers at AJCN in 2022 can be found at the following link: https://tinyurl.com/4n4tpstb.Be sure to connect with us on twitter ( Dr. Tobias:@deirdre_tobias; AJCN: @AJCNutrition; Dr. Klatt: @kcklatt. Find all of the publications from the American Society for Nutrition (@nutritionorg; @jnutritionorg) at our website: https://nutrition.org/publications/.
Join Dr. Danielle Belardo and her expert of the week, obesity and nutritional epidemiologist Dr. Deirdre Tobias, for a masterclass on nutrition epidemiology and its impact on public health. Diedre opens up her nutrition epidemiology toolbox to explain the research and data supporting healthy dietary patterns and what nutrition tips you can implement in your own life. Danielle and Deirdre also bust the myth that whole grains and fruit are evil, so forget what you've read on social media! Whether or not you're in the medical field or just a hobbyist trying to learn to interpret science in a more robust way, this is the episode for you. Danielle and Deirdre discuss: The basics of nutritional epidemiology and role of a nutritional epidemiologist General healthy dietary patterns and the problems with a western diet The reasons whole grains and fruits have been demonized The table 1 method and how it can help you interpret scientific data Dr. Deirdre Tobias is an obesity and nutritional epidemiologist at the Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston. She received her doctorate and postdoctoral training at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Dr. Tobias was appointed as the Academic Editor for the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 2019. Her research focuses on the role of diet and lifestyle for obesity and its major chronic diseases, including gestational diabetes and type 2 diabetes, and has been published in leading peer-reviewed journals, including the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association. She is assistant professor and co-Instructor for Nutritional Epidemiology at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. For more information on the research Deirdre does at Harvard, visit www.hsph.harvard.edu/deirdre-tobias Thank you so much for taking the time to contribute to a generation that values fact over fiction! Be sure to rate, review, and follow on your favorite podcast app and let us know which not-so-wellness trend you'd like to hear debunked. Follow your host on Instagram @daniellebelardomd and the podcast @wellnessfactvsfiction. Follow Deirdre @deirdre_tobias. Thank you to our sponsors for making this episode possible. Check out these deals just for you: COZY EARTH - Go to cozyearth.com and enter WELLNESS at checkout to SAVE thirty-five Percent.
Happy New Year from everyone at the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition! In this episode, Dennis M. Bier MD Young Career Editor Kevin C. Klatt, PhD, RD sits down (literally, in person!) to talk with AJCN Editor in Chief, Christopher Duggan MD, MPH, and Academic Editor, Deirdre (DeeDee) Tobias, ScD, and reflect on 2021 at AJCN.Find more about Drs. Duggan and Tobias, and all of our editors.Papers discussed in this episode:Insect ProteinPURE Red MeatVegan Diets & ChildrenVitamin D & CovidCoffee, Genetics and CVDCarbohydrate-Insulin ModelBe sure to connect with us on twitter ( Dr. Tobias:@deirdre_tobias; AJCN: @AJCNutrition; Dr. Klatt: @kcklatt. Find all of the publications from the American Society for Nutrition (@nutritionorg; @jnutritionorg) at our website: https://nutrition.org/publications/.
For episode 38, Dave and Mike are joined by Dr. Deirdre Tobias, an obesity and nutritional epidemiologist at the Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston. She received her doctorate and postdoctoral training at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. Her research focuses on the role of diet and lifestyle for obesity and its major chronic diseases, including gestational diabetes and type 2 diabetes, and has been published in leading peer-reviewed journals including the New England Journal of Medicine and Journal of the American Medical Association. She contributes to the development and analyses of healthful dietary patterns, metabolomics, and nutrition epidemiologic methods, and is co-Instructor of Nutritional Epidemiology at the Harvard.. Dr. Tobias was appointed the Academic Editor for the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition in 2019. The discussion in today's episode revolves around Dr. Tobias' work as an epidemiologist. We discuss the difficulties that can arise in nutritional epidemiology, and what makes a good epidemiological study. From there, we discuss further how to appraise studies as a clinician. She also brings forth her wealth of knowledge on risk reduction and management for diabetes, her thoughts on the GI Index and other confounding variables, and the role of ultra-processed foods in diet induced weight gain. We finish the discussion by talking about physical activity as an intervention to reduce the risk of developing gestational diabetes in pregnant populations. Find Dr. Tobias here: https://twitter.com/deirdre_tobias?lang=en https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/deirdre-tobias/ As per usual, for all other information and resources, be sure to visit us at www.thearme.ca , give our instagram page a follow @thearme.ca and we hope you enjoy today's episode!
Dr. Tobias is a nutrition and obesity epidemiologist at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, MA. She received doctoral and postdoctoral training from the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, under mentor Dr. Frank B. Hu. Dr. Tobias is co-Instructor of Nutrition Epidemiology with Dr. Walter Willett and faculty member at the Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health. Her epidemiologic research focuses on identifying lifestyle risk factors and underlying mechanisms related to obesity and its major chronic diseases, including type 2 diabetes and cancer. Dr. Tobias is currently the Academic Editor for the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Show notes at sigmanutrition.com/episode386
AI has, is, and will continue to facilitate the automation of work done by humans. Sometimes this may be an entire role. Other times it may automate a particular part of their role, scaling their effectiveness. Unless progress in AI inexplicably halts, the tasks done by humans vs. machines will continue to evolve. Today’s episode is a speculative conversation about what the future may hold. Co-Host of Squaring the Strange Podcast, Caricature Artist, and an Academic Editor, Celestia Ward joins us today! Kyle and Celestia discuss whether or not her jobs as a caricature artist or as an academic editor are under threat from AI automation. Mentions https://squaringthestrange.wordpress.com/ https://twitter.com/celestiaward The legendary Dr. Jorge Pérez and his work studying unicorns Supernormal stimulus International Society of Caricature Artists Two Heads Studios
Happy New Year from everyone at The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition! In this episode, Dennis M. Bier MD Young Career Editor Kevin C. Klatt, PhD, RD (virtually) sits down to talk with AJCN Editor-in-Chief, Christopher Duggan MD, MPH, and Academic Editor, Deirdre (DeeDee) Tobias, ScD, and reflect on the past year at AJCN. Stay tuned for Drs. Duggan and Tobias deep dive into some of the top Altmetric scoring papers from 2020! Find out more about Drs. Duggan and Tobias, and all of our editors. Be sure to connect with us on Twitter: Dr. Tobias, Dr. Klatt, and AJCN. Find all of the publications from the American Society for Nutrition (@nutritionorg; @jnutritionorg) at our website. Related Articles: Strengthening national nutrition research: rationale and options for a new coordinated federal research effort and authority Association of egg intake with blood lipids, cardiovascular disease, and mortality in 177,000 people in 50 countries A randomized crossover trial on the effect of plant-based compared with animal-based meat on trimethylamine-N-oxide and cardiovascular disease risk factors in generally healthy adults: Study With Appetizing Plantfood—Meat Eating Alternative Trial (SWAP-MEAT) Association between regional selenium status and reported outcome of COVID-19 cases in China
On this week's episode, we have the opportunity to sit down with Dr. Mark Ward and talk about his latest book, Bibliology for Beginners: What Does the Bible Say about the Bible? Ward is a prolific author who holds a Ph.D. in New Testament Interpretation from Bob Jones Seminary. He's an Academic Editor at Lexham Press, the editor of the Bible Study Magazine and the proprietor for byfaithweunderstand.com. To buy his books, go to: Authorized: The Use and Misuse of the King James Bible (Logos) Bibliology for Beginners (Amazon) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/logos-daily/support
Ellen Idler, PhD is the Samuel Candler Dobbs Professor of Sociology, and Director of Emory's Religion and Public Health Collaborative, with additional Emory appointments at the Rollins School of Public Health, the Center for Ethics, and the Graduate Division of Religion. She earned her PhD from Yale University and held a fellowship at Union Theological Seminary in New York. Dr. Idler is a Fellow and past Chair of the Behavioral and Social Sciences Section of the Gerontological Society of America. She served as Chair of the American Sociological Association's Section on Aging and the Life Course and received its 2021 Matilda White Riley Distinguished Scholar Award. She studies the influence of attitudes, beliefs, and social connections on health, including the effect of self-ratings of health on mortality and disability, and the impact of religious participation on health and the timing of death among the elderly. Her research papers have been cited over 20,000 times and she received Emory's Millipub Award in 2011 for an article with 1000+ citations. She is an Academic Editor for PLoS One and serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Gerontology: Social Sciences; Innovation in Aging; and Palliative and Social Care. In this conversation we talk about the effects of religion on physical, emotional and mental health. How does this work? What components of religion practice have the biggest impact? What do studies show on individual and community levels? What are the trends we have seen with generations? Tune in to learn more!Religion as a Social Determinant ofPublic Health BookReligion & Public Health CollaborativeArticleThis podcast is brought to you by Emory Lifestyle Medicine & Wellness. To learn more about our work, please visithttps://bit.ly/EmoryLM
EPISODE #467 THE BOOK OF ENOCH Richard welcomes a scholar of the Ancient and Biblical World to discuss the Book of Enoch and it's detailed account of The Watchers and the Nephilim. Guest: Dr. Michael S. Heiser received his Ph.D. in Hebrew Bible and ancient Semitic Languages from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. He is currently Academic Editor for Logos Bible Software, a company that creates ancient language research software and digital resources for studying the ancient and biblical world. Mike is a member of the Society of Biblical Literature, the Institute for Biblical Research, the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies, the American Academy of Religion, and the Evangelical Theological Society. In 2005, Mike was named by Fate Magazine as one of the 100 Most Influential People in Ufology. Book: A Companion to the Book of Enoch: A Reader's Commentary Vol. 1 The Book of Watchers. BECOME A PREMIUM SUBSCRIBER FOR LESS THAN $2 PER MONTH If you're a fan of this podcast, I hope you'll consider becoming a Premium Subscriber. For just $1.99 per month, subscribers to my Conspiracy Unlimited Plus gain access to two exclusive, commercial-free episodes per month. They also gain access to my back catalog of episodes. The most recent 30 episodes of Conspiracy Unlimited will remain available for free. Stream all episodes and Premium content on your mobile device by getting the FREE Conspiracy Unlimited APP for both IOS and Android devices... Available at the App Store and Google Play. To become a subscriber CLICK HERE or go to www.conspiracyunlimitedpodcast.com and click on GET ACCESS TO PREMIUM EPISODES. SUPPORT OUR SPONSORS!!! C60EVO.COM The Secret is out about this powerful anti-oxidant. The Purest C60 available is ESS60. Buy Direct from the SourceUse the Code RS1SPEC for special discount. Life Change and Formula 13 Teas All Organic, No Caffeine, Non GMO! More Energy! Order now, use the code 'unlimited' and ALL your purchases ships for free! Strange Planet's Fullscript Dispensary- an online service offering hundreds of professional supplement brands, personal care items, essential oils, pet care products and much more. Nature Grade, Science Made!
this episode, Dr Thomas Hemingway goes into both the history of artificial sweeteners as well as the science behind them to help us to understand the background and potential effects they may have upon us so we can make the most educated choices in this often biased and somewhat controversial subject area.Sugar, surculose, splenda, stevia, sweet and low, honey, agave... The list goes on, how do you know which ones to use and which ones to skip?First, we will explore the common artificial ones as well as the natural ones to help you make the most educated choices with respect to this interesting topic.Here's more you'll learn:The truth behind the sweetener studies you hear about Is cancer REALLY linked to these sweets?Are sugar free options better?How you can change your taste budsLearn more about Thomas Hemingway, MD and upcoming episodes, tips, tricks and more here: www.modernmedicinemovement.comAsk to join his FREE Private Facebook health Group entitled:Modern Medicine Movement Health and Wellness Grouphttps://www.facebook.com/groups/2543880582493990/?ref=shareAlthough Dr. Thomas Hemingway is a physician, he is not to replace your primary care physician. This podcast is not to be construed as medical advice by Dr. Thomas Hemingway or the guests comments as they are opinion only and not medical advice. Please consult your physician should you have any medical questions or before trying any new practice. Saccharin and Cocaine study mentioned in podcast:PLoS One. 2007; 2(8): e698.Published online 2007 Aug 1. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0000698PMCID: PMC1931610PMID: 17668074Intense Sweetness Surpasses Cocaine RewardMagalie Lenoir,# Fuschia Serre,# Lauriane Cantin, and Serge H. Ahmed *Bernhard Baune, Academic Editor
In this radical episode, we talk about the dark and mysterious fungi found growing in extreme environments like the Chernobyl reactor no.4. We are pleased to have one of the few scientist who study such fungi— Ekaterina Dadachova—with us on the show. In this episode, you will learn more about relationships between fungi and radiation, melanin as a functional molecule, and the implication of these discoveries for space exploration. .Ekaterina Dadachova received her Bachelor in Chemistry and PhD in Physical Chemistry degrees from Moscow State University in Moscow, Russia. She did her postdoctoral studies in radiopharmaceutical chemistry at the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organization (ANSTO) in Sydney, Australia, followed by a stint as a Visiting Associate at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the USA. .She subsequently held a Professorship in Radiology, Microbiology and Immunology at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York. .At the end of 2016 she joined the University of Saskatchewan for Nuclear Innovation, is the Chair in Radiopharmacy and a Professor at the College of Pharmacy and Nutrition. Her laboratory has pioneered radioimmunotherapy of infections including fungal and bacterial infections and HIV. Kate has recently been awarded several Canadian grants to treat osteosarcoma and blastomycosis in dogs with radioimmunotherapy. Her other research interests are radioimmunotherapy of melanoma and pancreatic cancer as well as melanin-based radioprotectors. .Her melanin-based research is currently funded by the Canadian Space Agency. .Kate's research has been funded by NIH, US Department of Energy (DOE), US Department of Defense (DOD), the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation as well as private industries. She has over 150 published peer-reviewed articles, 11 book chapters, and has 6 US patents. She received several awards such as Philips Young Investigator Award, Young Professionals Award, Mary Kay Ash Research Award, Top 10 researchers at Einstein in 2013, and 2017 Burroughs Welcome Travel Award. She is an Academic Editor for Public Library of Science, and for the Scientific Reports Journal.
Our guest today is a single mom of four kids, a PhD in Genetics and is now pursuing academic editing full time. Isabel Torres is an inspiring mom in STEM. She runs an editing consultancy and a fantastic blog called prettysmartscience.com where she shares resources and highlights women in STEM. From finding her unique path in cell biology to being a stay at home mom & being a fulltime Science communicator Isabel has evolved a lot in STEM. Let’s talk to Isabel to learn more about her fabulous STEM story. Links: www.mothersinscience.com www.instagram.com/prettysmartscience Support us on Patreon https://www.patreon.com/Herstemstory
Kriben Govender (Honours Degree in Food Science and Technology) has a mind-blowing conversation with Dr Laszlo Boros from The Deuterium Depletion Centre on the dangers of excess deuterium and strategies to naturally deplete deuterium from your body for optimal health. We discuss the impact of deuterium on our mitochondria, gut and microbiome. Bio: Dr Boros holds a Doctor of Medicine (M.D.) degree from the Albert Szent-Györgyi School of Medicine, Szeged, Hungary. Dr Boros is currently a Professor of Pediatrics, Endocrinology and Metabolism at the UCLA School of Medicine, an investigator at the UCLA Clinical & Translational Science (CTSI) and the Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institutes, and he is also the Chief Scientific Advisor of SiDMAP, LLC. Dr Boros studies functional biochemistry for drug testing that involves library screening, lead optimization and in vitro and in vivo phenotype profiling. The core technology involves studying natural and disease/drug-induced variations in stable non-radiating harmless isotope variations via cross-talk among metabolites in living systems with 13C-glucose as the labelling substrate. Dr Boros is the co-inventor of the targeted 13C tracer fate association study (TTFAS) platform to study deuterium as an oncoisotope and its depletion by mitochondrial matrix water exchanges to prevent oncoisotopic cell transformation by deuterium. Dr Boros trained as house staff in his medical school in gastroenterology after receiving a research training fellowship from the Hungarian Academy of Sciences. Dr Boros was a Visiting Scholar at the Essen School of Medicine in Germany and also worked as a Research Scientist at the Ohio State University, Department of Surgery, in the historic Zollinger-Ellison laboratory. Dr. Boros is the recipient of the C. Williams Hall Outstanding Publication Award from the Academy of Surgical Research of the United States (1997), the Richard E. Weitzman Memorial Research Award from the University of California (2001), the Excellence in Clinical Research Award from the General Clinical Research Center at the Harbor-UCLA Medical Center (2004) and Public Health Impact Investigator Award of the United States Food and Drug Administration (2011). Dr Boros serves as an associate editor for the journals Metabolic Therapeutics, Pancreas and Metabolomics and member of the Presidential Subcommittee for Hungarian Science Abroad, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Section of Medical Sciences (V). Dr Boros is an Academic Editor of Medicine®, a high impact weekly periodical publishing clinical and translational research papers worldwide. Topics discussed: What is Deuterium? The significant of deuterium in biological systems The detrimental effects of excess deuterium Mitochondria and Mitochondrial nanomotors Structural impact of deuterium on DNA and Proteins What are Peroxisomes? Melatonin activation What is Metabolic Water and how is produced daily Dr Gabor Somlyai - Cancer models and treatment with deuterium depleted water What's the normal levels of deuterium in drinking water? Where does deuterium come from? Deuterium levels of drinking water 20,000 years ago Optimal deuterium level of drinking water What has the deuterium level increased in modern times The impact of climate change on deuterium levels Processed foods and deuterium Deuterium and chronic diseases Carbohydrate, Fat Metabolism and Deuterium content Grass Fed Ketogenic Diet/ Natural Ketogenic and Deuterium Depletion Photosynthesis a Deuterium Depletion process in plants Fruits, Fructose, HFCS, and Deuterium Gut Microbiome and deuterium depletion Prokaryotes (yeasts) and deuterium depletion Deuterium and Cancer formation The upper threshold for deuterium The lower threshold for deuterium Breathing and deuterium depletion The importance of red Light on Mitochondrial function Light, Sleep, Melatonin and Deuterium Depletion Breast cancer may be likelier to spread to bone with nighttime dim-light exposure https://www.endocrine.org/news-room/2019/endo-2019---breast-cancer-may-be-likelier-to-spread-to-bone-with-nighttime-dim-light-exposure?fbclid=IwAR1zaWrkQJiY-KI68qUa7mxKHnPisuRf9CL-qElRP5ykeSTT1z4PduTaqlU What is Deuterium Depleted Water? When to drink Deuterium Depleted Water? Type 1 diabetes mellitus successfully managed with the paleolithic ketogenic diet http://www.ijcasereportsandimages.com/archive/2014/010-2014-ijcri/CR-10435-10-2014-clemens/ijcri-1043510201435-toth-full-text.php?fbclid=IwAR1JDl8_s3XZ11Q7TpePCSIuT80-DKDeW206k1sICaFs7dp3IyQNrIZZrm4 The danger of Australian drinking water Producing your own deuterium depleted water https://www.ddcenters.com/ Dr Boros’s top tip for health Brought to you by: Nourishme Organics your Mito Health Store Shop Mito Health- 10% off using code: boros https://www.nourishmeorganics.com.au/collections/light-and-emf-management Allele Deuterium Testing Deuterium testing 10% off using code: deuterium https://www.allele.com.au/collections/frontpage/products/deuterium-explorer Connect with Dr Laszlo Boros Website- https://www.ddcenters.com/ Connect with Kriben Govender: Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/kribengee/ Instagram- https://www.instagram.com/kribengovender/ Youtube- https://www.youtube.com/c/Nourishmeorganics?sub_confirmation=1 Gut Health Gurus Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/nourishmeorganics/ Mito Wellness Support Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/347845406055631/ Download links If you enjoyed this episode and would like to show your support: 1) Please subscribe on Itunes and leave a positive review Instructions: - Click this link https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/gut-health-gurus-podcast/id1433882512?mt=2 - Click "View in Itunes" button on the left-hand side - This will open the Itunes app - Click the "Subscribe" button - Click on "Ratings and Reviews" tab - Click on "Write a Review" button Non-Itunes users can leave a Google Review here: http://bit.ly/nourishmeorganics 2) Subscribe, like and leave a positive comment on Youtube https://www.youtube.com/c/Nourishmeorganics?sub_confirmation=1 3) Share your favourite episode on Facebook, Instagram, and Stories 4) Let your friends and family know about this Podcast by email, text, messenger etc 5) Support us on Patreon for as little as $5 per month and get same day, early access to our latest podcasts (typically around 4 to 6 weeks earlier than the general public) https://www.patreon.com/nourishmeorganics Thank you so much for your support. 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August is flashback month, as we move back in time to present you recordings from the event we hosted back in May, Raw Talk Live. This week’s instalment presents the first of two panel discussions, and explores public engagement in science. We hear from an array of speakers, diving into the personal and the political dimensions of this theme. Joining us is Dr. Mehrdad Hariri, CEO and Founder of the Canadian Science Policy Centre; Doina Oncel, the CEO and Founder of hEr VOLUTION; Dan Weaver, PhD Candidate at the Department of Physics, University of Toronto; Connie Putterman, a long-time parent advocate in the autism research world, and now a Masters candidate in the Translational Research Program, University of Toronto; and our moderator Tetyana Pekar, Founder and Academic Editor at Pekar Editing. Of course, you will also be hearing from your trusty hosts Jabir and Alex, as they reflect on the discussion, and the experience of organizing a live-podcasting event. Until next time, keep it raw!
August is flashback month, as we move back in time to present you recordings from the event we hosted back in May, Raw Talk Live. This week’s instalment presents the first of two panel discussions, and explores public engagement in science. We hear from an array of speakers, diving into the personal and the political dimensions of this theme. Joining us is Dr. Mehrdad Hariri, CEO and Founder of the Canadian Science Policy Centre; Doina Oncel, the CEO and Founder of hEr VOLUTION; Dan Weaver, PhD Candidate at the Department of Physics, University of Toronto; Connie Putterman, a long-time parent advocate in the autism research world, and now a Masters candidate in the Translational Research Program, University of Toronto; and our moderator Tetyana Pekar, Founder and Academic Editor at Pekar Editing. Of course, you will also be hearing from your trusty hosts Jabir and Alex, as they reflect on the discussion, and the experience of organizing a live-podcasting event. Until next time, keep it raw!
To kick off Season 2, Ivan and Liz talk with Guillaume Lobet, Assistant Professor at the Forschungszentrum Jülich and the Université Catholique de Louvain. He was also a graduate student at UCL and took three postdoctoral positions in Germany and Belgium before returning and starting his faculty position in 2016. His work focuses on development of image analysis and phenotyping tools to help researchers improve their scientific workflow. He won the Plant Cell Teaching Tools in Plant Biology competition in 2015 and is an Academic Editor at Plant Direct. ----- Read more about this episode: https://plantae.org/taproot-s2e1-phenotyping-roots-without-pulling-up-your-own-with-guillaume-lobet/ ----- ----- SHOW NOTES ----- Root system markup language: toward a unified root architecture description language, Lobet et al. 2015 http://www.plantphysiol.org/content/167/3/617 https://figshare.com/ Guillaume’s personal webpage http://www.guillaumelobet.be// Recent eLIFE community essay about “mandatory” research training abroad https://elifesciences.org/articles/30183 Find us on Twitter @guillaumelobet @ehaswell @baxtertwi @taprootpodcast
Join Angel & Alan as they welcome the man who helped bring the truth to the lies of Zecharia Sitchin himself. That's right we're talking about Mr. Mike Heiser himself! He will join us during the 2nd hour for the whole hour none stop! About Dr. Michael S. Heiser: Mike Heiser earned an M.A. (1998) and Ph.D. (2004) in Hebrew Bible and Ancient Semitic Languages from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His dissertation was entitled, "The Divine Council in Late Canonical and Non-Canonical Second Temple Jewish Literature" (English translation: the dissertation dealt with the presence of a pantheon in the Hebrew Bible and the binitarian nature of ancient Israelite religion and Judaism, a backdrop for the the belief in the deity of Christ in the New Testament). Before going to the UW-Madison, Mike also earned an M.A. in Ancient History from the University of Pennsylvania (1992; major fields, Ancient Syria-Palestine and Egyptology). Mike can do translation work in roughly a dozen ancient languages, among them Biblical Hebrew, Biblical Greek, Aramaic, Syriac, Egyptian hieroglyphs, Phoenician, Moabite, and Ugaritic cuneiform. He has also studied Akkadian and Sumerian independently. Mike has taught over two dozen courses over the span of 15 years of undergraduate teaching. He is currently the Academic Editor at Logos Bible Software in Bellingham, WA. In 2007 the Pacific Northwest region of the Society of Biblical Literature awarded Mike its Regional Scholar award. You can learn more about Dr. Heiser by visiting his homepage or viewing his resume/CV. Mike is probably best known to those interested in the ancient astronaut subject through his many appearances on Coast to Coast AM. He has also spoken a several conferences. Some of his presentations are available on DVD on the site.