Podcast appearances and mentions of earl miller

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Best podcasts about earl miller

Latest podcast episodes about earl miller

Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit

United States v. Earl Miller

united states earl miller
Ear Hustle
What's Up, Michael Freeman?

Ear Hustle

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2024 53:42


A bucolic garden, six kinds of breakfast cereal, and around-the-clock bedside vigil: How one California prison is trying to mitigate the fears and unknowns of dying inside prison. Thanks to Joseph Bick, Michele DiThomas, Terrance Harris, Allan Hickman, Gerard Hite, Jerry Judson, Keith Knauf, Kenneth Langill, Jeff Maria, Earl Miller, Michael Powell, and Frederick Roberts for speaking to us for this episode. This episode was scored with music by Rhashiyd Zinnamon, Fernando Arruda, Antwan Williams, and Earlonne Woods. “Down The Hall” © 2022 Open Secret Music (ASCAP) – Administered by Bluewater Music Services Corp. Used By Permission. All Rights Reserved. Big thanks to Acting Warden Smith and Lt. Berry at San Quentin State Prison, and Acting Warden Hill and Lt. Newborg at the California Institution for Women for their support of the show. We're also grateful to Acting Warden Cueva and Lt. Gonzalez at the California Medical Facility for allowing our team to record inside the hospice. Support our team and get even more Ear Hustle by subscribing to Ear Hustle Plus today. Sign up at earhustlesq.com/plus or directly in Apple Podcasts. Ear Hustle is a proud member of Radiotopia, from PRX.

Valley Voices
Twelve Trips

Valley Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2023 9:02


This time on NEPM's Summer Shorts Podcast, Earl Miller leads us on a journey from “just a job” to “a career with heart”

twelve trips earl miller
Integrity Moments
Task Shifting

Integrity Moments

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2023 1:00


Multitasking is a badge of honor for many. But according to Earl Miller, a neuroscience professor at MIT, “You can't multitask.” Our brains are hard-wired to only do one cognitively demanding activity at a time.   In a Wall Street Journal article, Miller says what we actually are doing is task-shifting, jumping from one task to ... The post Task Shifting appeared first on Unconventional Business Network.

Inside the Industry Radio
AVN Expo, Day 4, January 7, 2023

Inside the Industry Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2023 35:47


In this episode, live from the AVN Expo in Las Vegas, host James Bartholet speaks with Earl Miller, Ginger Lynn, Christy Canyon, Sammi Parker, Nisa Nevers from loyalfans.com, Rachel Cavalli, Liv Revamped, and Lilly Bell.

las vegas ginger lynn avn expo christy canyon earl miller liv revamped james bartholet
Going Deeper Interviews
S1E49 - Going Deeper with Earl Miller

Going Deeper Interviews

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 23, 2022 38:05


Episode Notes Earl Miller is the first Director of the newly formed Community Responders for Equity, Safety, and Service. This is an important Amherst Town Department to complement the Amherst Police Department in providing safety for all Amherst residents. Earl is wonderful, we are lucky to have him! This podcast is powered by Pinecast.

One Family Church Sermons
MOTHER’S DAY GUEST SPEAKER LORETTA EARL-MILLER

One Family Church Sermons

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2021 30:43


Mountain Murders Podcast
David Earl Miller

Mountain Murders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2020 51:15


David Earl Miller was a drifter who dabbled in drugs and alcohol. In 1981, Miller was accused of brutally murdering a young woman named Lee Standifer in Knoxville, Tennessee. He was ultimately convicted and sentenced to die by electric chair for the horrific crime. Join Heather and Dylan as they discuss Miller's nightmarish childhood filled with all kinds of abuses and the road that ultimately led to the murder of an innocent person.

Here We Are
Cognition + Consciousness

Here We Are

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2020 68:45


Shane talks with Picower Professor of Neuroscience at M.I.T. about the pattern recognition computer and black box known as the human brain. Earl Miller has a PH.D. in Psychology and Neuroscience; he has 1 of the top 5 most cited papers in Neuroscience and is also a Professor in the Department of Brain & Cognitive Sciences at M.I.T.  What are meta-patterns? Is multi-tasking a myth, and what is the difference between low-order and high-order information?  Charity Of The Week - American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)www.aclu.org Please visit our sponsors The Great Courses www.thegreatcoursesplus.com/hereweare  Libro.fm is the first audiobook company to make it possible for you to buy audiobooks directly through your local bookstore. Offer code: hereweare for 3 months for the price of one. https://libro.fm/redeem/HEREWEARE  Outro Music "Landscape" by Tooth Lures A Fang Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Here We Are
Cognition + Consciousness

Here We Are

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2020 74:00


Shane talks with Picower Professor of Neuroscience at M.I.T. about the pattern recognition computer and black box known as the human brain. Earl Miller has a PH.D. in Psychology and Neuroscience; he has 1 of the top 5 most cited papers in Neuroscience and is also a Professor in the Department of Brain & Cognitive Sciences at M.I.T.  What are meta-patterns? Is multi-tasking a myth, and what is the difference between low-order and high-order information?  Charity Of The Week - American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)www.aclu.org Please visit our sponsors The Great Courses www.thegreatcoursesplus.com/hereweare  Libro.fm is the first audiobook company to make it possible for you to buy audiobooks directly through your local bookstore. Offer code: hereweare for 3 months for the price of one. https://libro.fm/redeem/HEREWEARE  Outro Music "Landscape" by Tooth Lures A Fang Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Comedy Trap House
From Old School To New School ft. Cam and Chaz Dad Earl Miller

Comedy Trap House

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2017 74:30


This week at the Comedy trap house Dormtainment is joined by Earl Miller(Cam and Chaz's Dad)to discuss growing up in the 60's, life in the bahamas, having your own busines, and much more. Please subscribe, rate, and review.   Donate to our podcast: https://www.patreon.com/Dormtainment Business Inquiry: thedtpodcast@gmail.com "Stella" Album : http://itunes.apple.com/album/id1300002644?ls=1&app=itunes  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Mindful Tech Coach
11: Review: Forest app for Android and Apple

Mindful Tech Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2017 9:00


Today I'm reviewing an app for Android and Apple devices called Forest, which is a great example of the growing range of apps that try to change your tech habits and give you more mindfulness and less screentime. On a related note, I was at the checkout line at the pharmacy the other day and I picked up this Time Magazine special edition about Mindfulness, and it has two good articles about digital distraction and mindfulness. The first one called "Devices Mess with Your Brain," by Markham Heid, quotes MIT neuroscience professor Earl Miller on what's called the "switch cost" to your brain of of changing your focus. And the second article, called "...So give yourself an I-Break" by Ellen Seidman, actually has a lot to do with our app review today. One of Seidman's recommendations is what she calls getting a "digital babysitter," and that's one way to describe what apps like Forest can do for you. As we talked about in my previous podcast episode, on unplugging from Facebook, unplugging from your your usual smartphone habits can take many forms, and if you want to design your own approach, that episode, plus the article 16 Steps to Turn Your Scattered Smartphone into a Mindfulness Machine, can help you use your existing apps and phone settings to help you unplug. But it can help to not reinvent the wheel, and instead have an app that is designed to help do the work of unplugging for you--and it does one of the fundamental things I recommend in the Mindfulness Machine article, which is to use your phone as a focus timer. But what is the Forest App exactly? At one level, it's a smartphone game. But unlike Angry Birds or Candy Crush, Forest a game you play by successfully staying off of your phone. And at another level it's a tool for timing and measuring your ability to stay off your phone for focused blocks of time. The app is called Forest because the game is to plant a virtual tree, that takes, for example, ten minutes to grow, and as long as you can stay off your phone long enough, the tree will finish growing and be added to your on-screen forest for today, but if you get back on your phone too fast, the tree withers and dies. Now to tell you a little more about what I like about this app, let me explain what you can do with it before, during, and after your focused unplugging time. Before you unplug, the app has a start screen with a button that will plant your tree, and that will start a timer, which you can set for anything from ten minutes to two hours. Next, during the unplugging,Once you plant the tree, the app moves to push you away from your phone. One of my favorite features is how, while the work timer counts down and the tree grows on-screen, the app also flashes messages to you on-screen, like "stop phubbing!" and " and go back to your work!" And in the paid version of the app, you can even write your own custom motivational messages to yell at yourself. The other important feature that Forest offers while you're focusing is audio to listen to while you're focusing. Fittingly for Forest app, it includes a rainforest sounds loop, and as you plan more trees, you can earn access to to additional ambient sounds like a Paris Café. And as someone who listens to a lot of music and podcasts on my phone too, I appreciated that I could also listen to audio on other apps while planting a tree, as long as I didn't exit the app to do so. And so as I'm sure you're guessing, the tree-planting countdown can end in one of two ways. Either you stay off your phone until the app tells you that your tree has finished growing,, or, you jump back on your phone too early, and your tree dies a tragic early death. Either way, the app will give you credit for the amount of time you stayed focused, and add the living or dead tree to your on-screen forest for the day. I also like how you can tag your focused time blocks with what you were doing, and you can then see graphs day-by-day of what you were focused on and for how long. And you also get points for how long you focused, which you can use to unlock audio tracks or more fun kinds of trees to plant. There are two other things the app lets you do when you've finished growing a tree: First you can share it on social media, although personally I couldn't get that feature to work because I kept fighting with my Android screen overlay settings. Second, the app also lets you set a timer between 1 and 60 minutes to take a break from focusing, which will let you do anything on your phone and then will buzz when the break is done. And one final cool thing that the Forest app does is it lets you donate to a real-world tree-planting nonprofit, which currently is listed as Trees for the Future, which is a group that works with farmers to plant trees in five countries in Africa. So, what's my overall review of the Forest app? I recommend it for anyone who wants to do more focused work and use your phone as a focus timer. The app has a lot of pluses. First, it's a well-designed app that helps make the abstract idea of focusing away from your phone into a fun game. It has some great features but it keeps things simple where it counts, and even the free version with ads is pretty good at not distracting you. Second, the fact that it has both a focus timer and a break timer works very well with time-management approaches I personally use like the Pomadoro Technique. And third, I also like that this app does so well, walking a very careful line between pulling you in and pushing you away. It's the same challenge that all of us, including me on my podcast, are trying to make work doing that jiu-jitsu of using our technology itself to teach us to unplug, has to strike that balance, and I love how well this app succeeds in doing that for me. My only potential minus for the ap is ideally I'd like more of a one-click way of re-upping my time and planting another tree from the "you're finished" page--what you have to do instead is press a back button, then on the free version, close a full-screen ad, and then you get back to the page to plant another tree and start the timer. But that's not a big deal and I really recommend trying this app on for size if you're looking for help staying off your phone while you're doing other things. I hope this review's been helpful. Ultimately for me it's always less about the exact tools you use, and more about what kinds of change they make possible in our lives. But the right tools can make a big difference, and I'm always looking to share them with my listeners and clients. So If there are any apps you'd recommend, let me know. As always, you can reach me on the contact page at mindfultechcoach.com. For more information about forest, go to the Forest app web page or the Apple and Android stores.   Copyright 2017 Mindful Tech Coach, all rights reserved.

YOUR LIFE NOW show with Coach Rea Wilke
Are you a Multitasking master or a Switch Tasking want to be

YOUR LIFE NOW show with Coach Rea Wilke

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2016 33:00


Are you a good multitasker? How many things do you think you can do successfully at the sometime? What happened when we try to multitask? Our brain simply can’t do it. Research shows that we are not the multitaskers we think we are. When you try to multitask, you simply become less efficient and more distracted. You error rates goes up 50% and it takes you twice long to do the same task Dr. Earl Miller, an expert on divided attention and a neuroscientist at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, states that our brains are “not wired to multitask well… when people think they’re multitasking, they’re actually just switching from one task to another very rapidly. And every time they do, there’s a cognitive cost. Earl Miller’s research team at MIT has concluded that: Multitasking floods the brain with cortisol, a stress hormone, it uses up glucose (brain fuel) faster, exhausting and confusing our minds, it leads to scrambled thoughts and inefficiency, it makes it difficult to filter out irrelevant information and as you jump from task to task your IQ actually is reduced by 10 points, known as the “switch cost”. Learn to stay focused and avoid Multitasking all together. The good news is you can learn to focus on every task using Brain Sync’s tool. Brainwave technology by Kelly Howell has been very effective tools for me and I hope it will work for you as well. Do your reasech, and be the judge of that. Just 30 minutes a day will bring outstanding results. Disclosure: Please note I am an affiliate of Brain Sync & I will earn a commission if you decide to make a purchase. However, I highly recommend Brain Sync, the leader in Brainwaves technology and therapy. 

Rob Kall Futurehealth Radio Show
Earl Miller top down Bottom Up brain processes

Rob Kall Futurehealth Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2010 63:33


Earl Miller is the Picower professor of Neuroscience at MIT. His paper, ' -An Integrative Theory of Prefrontal Cortex Function' -, has been designated a Current Classic as among the most cited papers in Neuroscience and Behavior. He use fMRI and implanted microelectrodes in humans and monkeys.--We talked about top down and bottom up brain functions and how they apply to brain dysfunction and optimal fuctioning.