POPULARITY
Carl Walz is an astronaut, a pioneer of space exploration, and a proud Clevelander! As an astronaut, Carl is a veteran of four spaceflights, logging a total of 231 days in outer space and performing three spacewalks during that time.A physicist by training, with degrees from Kent State and John Carroll University, Carl made his way to NASA via the Air Force, where he served as a flight test engineer and managed all engineering activities related to F-16 avionics and armaments.At NASA, he was a mission specialist on STS-51 in 1993, an orbiter flight engineer on STS-65 in 1994, a mission specialist on STS-79 in 1996, and ultimately served 196 days in space as a flight engineer on ISS Expedition Four from 2001 to 2002.His expansive career at NASA includes missions aboard the Space Shuttle and the International Space Station (ISS). Most notably, Carl served as a flight engineer for ISS Expedition Four, living and working in space for 196 consecutive days. Later, as Director for the Advanced Capabilities Division at NASA Headquarters, Carl led critical programs involving Human Research, Technology Development, and Lunar Robotic Exploration.To say this was an awesome conversation would be the understatement of Lay of The Land…Our conversation explored his rigorous journey to becoming an astronaut, the profound experience of living and working in space, the awe-inspiring perspective gained from orbit, and the unique challenges of transitioning back to life on Earth. We also discussed his role in shaping the future of private sector space exploration (Oceaneering, Orbital ATK), international collaboration in space missions, and even his time performing with the only astronaut band in history!00:00:00 - Introduction to Carl Walz and His Journey 00:05:39 - The Path to Becoming an Astronaut 00:07:49 - The Ohio Astronaut Legacy 00:10:07 - Experiences in Space Missions 00:12:37 - The Awe of Spacewalks 00:14:58 - Life on the International Space Station 00:17:33 - Scientific Experiments in Space 00:19:46 - Dealing with Adversity in Space 00:21:41 - The Fulfillment of Space Exploration 00:23:56 - Transitioning Back to Earth and the Private Sector 00:30:55 - Navigating the Challenges of Spacecraft Development 00:35:09 - The Evolution of Public-Private Partnerships in Space 00:38:36 - The Future of Space Exploration: Mars and Beyond 00:43:59 - Perspectives on Extraterrestrial Life and UFOs 00:45:40 - The Unique Experience of an Astronaut Band 00:50:38 - Hidden Gem-----LINKS:https://www.linkedin.com/in/carl-walz-21b4579/https://www.oceaneering.com/-----SPONSOR:Roundstone InsuranceRoundstone Insurance is proud to sponsor Lay of The Land. Founder and CEO, Michael Schroeder, has committed full-year support for the podcast, recognizing its alignment with the company's passion for entrepreneurship, innovation, and community leadership.Headquartered in Rocky River, Ohio, Roundstone was founded in 2005 with a vision to deliver better healthcare outcomes at a more affordable cost. To bring that vision to life, the company pioneered the group medical captive model — a self-funded health insurance solution that provides small and mid-sized businesses with greater control and significant savings.Over the past two decades, Roundstone has grown rapidly, creating nearly 200 jobs in Northeast Ohio. The company works closely with employers and benefits advisors to navigate the complexities of commercial health insurance and build custom plans that prioritize employee well-being over shareholder returns. By focusing on aligned incentives and better health outcomes, Roundstone is helping businesses save thousands in Per Employee Per Year healthcare costs.Roundstone Insurance — Built for entrepreneurs. Backed by innovation. Committed to Cleveland.-----Stay up to date by signing up for Lay of The Land's weekly newsletter — sign up here.Past guests include Justin Bibb (Mayor of Cleveland), Pat Conway (Great Lakes Brewing), Steve Potash (OverDrive), Umberto P. Fedeli (The Fedeli Group), Lila Mills (Signal Cleveland), Stewart Kohl (The Riverside Company), Mitch Kroll (Findaway — Acquired by Spotify), and over 200 other Cleveland Entrepreneurs.Connect with Jeffrey Stern on LinkedIn — https://www.linkedin.com/in/jeffreypstern/Follow Lay of The Land on X @podlayofthelandhttps://www.jeffreys.page/
Can AI compress the years long research time of a PhD into seconds? Research scientist Max Jaderberg explores how “AI analogs” simulate real-world lab work with staggering speed and scale, unlocking new insights on protein folding and drug discovery. Drawing on his experience working on Isomorphic Labs' and Google DeepMind's AlphaFold 3 — an AI model for predicting the structure of molecules — Jaderberg explains how this new technology frees up researchers' time and resources to better understand the real, messy world and tackle the next frontiers of science, medicine and more. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Can AI compress the yearslong research time of a PhD into seconds? Research scientist Max Jaderberg explores how “AI analogs” simulate real-world lab work with staggering speed and scale, unlocking new insights on protein folding and drug discovery. Drawing on his experience working on Isomorphic Labs' and Google DeepMind's AlphaFold 3 — an AI model for predicting the structure of molecules — Jaderberg explains how this new technology frees up researchers' time and resources to better understand the real, messy world and tackle the next frontiers of science, medicine and more.
Can AI compress the yearslong research time of a PhD into seconds? Research scientist Max Jaderberg explores how “AI analogs” simulate real-world lab work with staggering speed and scale, unlocking new insights on protein folding and drug discovery. Drawing on his experience working on Google DeepMind's AlphaFold 3 — an AI model for predicting the structure of molecules — Jaderberg explains how this new technology frees up researchers' time and resources to better understand the real, messy world and tackle the next frontiers of science, medicine and more.
Can AI compress the yearslong research time of a PhD into seconds? Research scientist Max Jaderberg explores how “AI analogs” simulate real-world lab work with staggering speed and scale, unlocking new insights on protein folding and drug discovery. Drawing on his experience working on Google DeepMind's AlphaFold 3 — an AI model for predicting the structure of molecules — Jaderberg explains how this new technology frees up researchers' time and resources to better understand the real, messy world and tackle the next frontiers of science, medicine and more.
In this episode, the first of a four-part series is presented. This episode covers the Nuremberg Trial (and Code), and human research ethics. In particular, the US human radiation experiments and the Guatemala STD studies are discussed.
Experiments should minimize risks to astronauts and benefit society
Get full access to Brownstone Insights at brownstone.substack.com/subscribe
Discusses ethical and policy considerations for xenotransplantation clinical trials.Our guest today is Karen Maschke, a Senior Research Scholar at The Hastings Center and editor of The Hastings Center's journal Ethics & Human Research. Her work focuses on ethical, regulatory, and policy issues associated with developing and using new biotechnologies.Additional resource:· The Hastings Center “Ethical and Policy Guidance for Translational Xenotransplantation Clinical Trials:” https://www.thehastingscenter.org/who-we-are/our-research/current-projects/ethical-and-policy-guidance-for-translational-xenotransplantation-clinical-trials/
In this podcast episode, Dr Sheena Fraser and Dr Siobhan Mccormack (aka Microbiome Medics) discuss the significant impact of antibiotics on the gut microbiome. They are joined by an expert in this area Dr Anastasia Theodosiou , who is both a Microbiome Scientist and a Registar in Microbiology & Infectious Disease.Dr Anastasia introduces her novel term Microbiotoxicity which can be used to explain and predict the effects of antibiotics on human microbiomes. The discussion also covers other drugs like proton pump inhibitors and selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) which can also perturb the gut microbiome. Listeners will gain insights into the recovery timeline of the gut microbiome after antibiotic exposure and the implications of gut microbiome disruptors like Caesarian section delivery and neonatal formula feeding on both gut health and other health outcomes across the lifespan . This episode highlights the importance considering the impact of medications on the gut microbiome and how we might start to bridge the gap between microbiome research and clinical practice.Dr Anastasia (Tash) Theodosiou is an MRC Clinical Research Training Fellow (University of Southampton) and an Infectious Diseases and Medical Microbiology Registrar. Her research involves the use of controlled human infection to study microbiome development in early life, including the world's first respiratory human challenge study in pregnancy.https://idiotspodcasting.buzzsprout.com/1782416/13193172-56-antibiotics-breastfeeding-and-infant-healthTheodosiou AA, Jones CE, Read RC, Bogaert D. Microbiotoxicity: antibiotic usage and its unintended harm to the microbiome. Curr Opin Infect Dis. 2023;36(5):371-378. doi:10.1097/QCO.0000000000000945 https://www.hellomicro.org/post/microbiome-microbiotoxicity https://www.nbmedical.com/blog/microbiotoxicityThis podcast is brought to you in collaboration with the British Society of Lifestyle Medicine.Disclaimer:The content in this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or qualified healthcare provider. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on this podcast.
Martin Koltz - he is originally from Northern Illinois, and went to the University of Illinois initially to study engineering but ended up in Aviation Human Factors. He went on to get a Masters in Human Factors from Cal State Long Beach. While he was there, he had some incredible opportunities in the Aviation industry, including some time spent at SpaceX. After he graduated, his family moved from LA to Colorado, where he stumbled into the consumer products space and started working with Charter Communications as their first dedicated UX researcher. Over the course of 5 years, he helped scale the research team from 1 to 15. Currently, Martin is working as Director of UX research at Toptal, where he started as their first research hire and has since grown into a team of 5.
They don't horse around when it comes to collecting data? Dr. Pebbles Turbeville Executive Director, explains how the Horses and Human Research Foundation helps other organizations with funding and research. Listen to Pebble's tell her story and explain how you can earn grant funds for your organization through HHRF.
Nonhuman Animals Containing Human Cells: Ethics and Oversight Karen Maschke, PhD, Research Scholar at The Hastings Center Website | Twitter @hastingscenter This presentation focuses on ethical and oversight issues as they relate to the insertion of human cells into nonhuman animals, e.g., “chimeric research.” Abstract Research involving the insertion of human cells into nonhuman animals at various stage of development – referred to here as chimeric research – has helped scientists learn how human cells behave in a living environment. Advances in human stem cell science and gene editing are enabling scientists to more extensively and precisely insert human cells into nonhuman animals at any stage of development. Scientists have conducted in vitro experiments with chimeric embryos and in vivo studies that create chimeric animals. The goals of these studies include developing more accurate models of human diseases, creating inexpensive sources of human eggs and embryos for research, and developing sources of tissues and organs suitable for transplantation into humans. Yet concerns have been raised that by biologically altering nonhuman animals with human cells – particularly at an early stage of the chimeric animal's development – scientists may end up changing them in morally relevant ways, especially if the chimeric animals exhibit “humanlike” behaviors or capacities that they previously lacked. An NIH-funded interdisciplinary research project of The Hastings Center and Case Western Reserve University examined the ethical, oversight, and policy issues regarding research that involves the transfer of human embryonic or induced pluripotent cells, or cells derived directly from them, into nonhuman animals or nonhuman animal embryos. This presentation highlights three of the project's recommendations: scientists, journalists, bioethicists and others writing about chimeric research should use precise and accessible language that clarifies rather than obscures the ethical issues at stake; animal welfare is a primary ethical issue and should be a focus of ethical and policy analysis as well as the governance of oversight of chimeric research; and enhanced communication between institutional committees involved in oversight of chimeric research is needed, as well as a mechanism for a national discussion amongst those in oversight of these studies. Related links: Clarifying the Ethics and Oversight of Chimeric Research, Josephine Johnston, Insoo Hyun, Carolyn P. Neuhaus, Karen J. Maschke, et. al., 2022 Composite Animals: Then and Now, Amy Hinterberger, 2022 Human, Nonhuman, and Chimeric Research: Considering Old Issues with New Research, Jeff Sebo, Brendan Parent, 2022 Threats to Benefits: Assessing Knowledge Production in Nonhuman Models of Human Neuropsychiatric Disorders, Carolyn P. Neuhaus, 2022 Moral Status and the Oversight of Research Involving Chimeric Animals, Patricia Marshall, Kaitlynn P. Craig, Insoo Hyun, 2022 A Conversation with Chimeric Animal Researchers, Kaitlynn P. Craig, 2022 How Chimeric Animal Research Impacts Animal Welfare: A Conversation with Animal Welfare Experts, Kaitlynn P. Craig, 2022 Speaker Bio Karen J. Maschke, PhD is a Research Scholar at The Hastings Center and the editor of the Center's journal, Ethics & Human Research. As a researcher with training in political science and bioethics, she focuses on policy and ethical issues related to the introduction, use, regulation, and oversight of new biomedical technologies. She recently completed two projects: the NIH-funded project, “Actionable Ethics Oversight for Human-Animal Chimera Research” (co-Principal Investigator) and the NSF-funded project, “Public Deliberation on Gene Editing in the Wild” (co-Investigator). She is currently the lead co-Principal Investigator of the NIH-funded project, “Informing Ethical Translation of Xenotransplantation Clinical Trials.” She is interviewed frequently by the media, appearing in AP, New York Times, Wall Street Journal, NPR, Washington Post, Kaiser Health, STAT News, Reuters, and Bloomberg Law. Her recent book (co-authored with Michael K. Gusmano), is Debating Modern Medical Technologies: The Politics of Safety, Effectiveness, and Patient Access (Praeger, 2018). GES Colloquium (GES 591-002) is jointly taught by Drs. Jen Baltzegar and Dawn Rodriguez-Ward, who you may contact with any class-specific questions. Colloquium will generally be live-streamed via Zoom, with monthly in-person meetings in the 1911 Building, room 129. Please subscribe to the GES newsletter and Twitter for updates . Genetic Engineering and Society Center GES Colloquium - Tuesdays 12-1PM (via Zoom) NC State University | http://go.ncsu.edu/ges-colloquium GES Mediasite - See videos, full abstracts, speaker bios, and slides https://go.ncsu.edu/ges-mediasite Twitter - https://twitter.com/GESCenterNCSU GES Center - Integrating scientific knowledge & diverse public values in shaping the futures of biotechnology. Find out more at https://ges-center-lectures-ncsu.pinecast.co
Melissa Rose is a committed investigative partner to individuals who have chronic or autoimmune conditions.As a result of her own journey with Multiple Sclerosis, diagnosis and recovery, she provides empathetic, highly personalized care. Her goal is to support, educate and empower individuals to become well again. She has been working in the autoimmune community as a Practitioner, advocate, speaker and educator since 2017 and has extensive experience with rare autoimmune conditions.As a AFMC Board Certified Functional Medicine Practitioner, Melissa is a sought-after clinician. She is skilled in a variety of cutting-edge progressive testing. She uses symptoms, test results, and personal/family history to get to the root of the disease process for her clients. As a team, she and the client work synergistically to create a plan addressing imbalance in the body. She provides innovative care, coaching, education and encouragement, throughout their journey. Her goal for each client is sustainable wellness.Her education includes the School of Applied Functional Medicine, Institute of Integrative Nutrition, Functional Nutrition Lab, with certifications from American Association of Drugless Practitioners, Human Research and Biomedical Research Investigators and Key Personnel from Weill Cornell Medical College.
On future missions, astronauts may encounter at least three different gravity fields: weightlessness while traveling in space, the gravity of another planet or moon, and Earth's gravity once they return home.
In this episode exploring the effect of allelic variation of APOE, we review abstracts from large human GWAS studies all the way down to new mouse models expressing the human ApoE proteins. There are some particularly interesting abstracts on protection from cognitive decline despite having a risk allele for Alzheimer's disease. These are great studies to open the door for future research in this field! Sections in this episode: Human Research (2:58) Mice Research (15:53) -------------------------------------------------------------- To find the numbered bibliography with all the papers covered in this episode, click here, or use the link below:https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Zu-9jzn_gIpIeUMPBGmZh39jwYXwGv_l/view?usp=sharingTo access the folder with ALL our bibliographies, follow this link (it will be updated as we publish episodes and process bibliographies), or use the link below:https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1bzSzkY9ZHzzY8Xhzt0HZfZhRG1Gq_Si-?usp=sharingYou can also find all of our bibliographies on our website: www.amindr.com. --------------------------------------------------------------Follow-up on social media for more updates!Twitter: @AMiNDR_podcastInstagram: @AMiNDR.podcastFacebook: AMiNDR Youtube: AMiNDR PodcastLinkedIn: AMiNDR PodcastEmail: amindrpodcast@gmail.com -------------------------------------------------------------- Please help us spread the word about AMiNDR to your friends, colleagues, and networks! And if you could leave us a rating and/or review on your streaming app of choice (Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you listen to the podcast), that would be greatly appreciated! It helps us a lot and we thank you in advance for leaving a review! Don't forget to subscribe to hear about new episodes as they come out too. Thank you to our sponsor, the Canadian Consortium of Neurodegeneration in Aging, or CCNA, for their financial support of this podcast. This helps us to stay on the air and bring you high quality episodes. You can find out more about the CCNA on their website: https://ccna-ccnv.ca/. Our team of volunteers works tirelessly each month to bring you every episode of AMiNDR. This episode was scripted and hosted by Cassi Friday, edited by Michelle Grover, and reviewed by Sarah Louadi and Ellen Koch. The bibliography was created by Anjana Rajendran and the wordcloud was created by Lara Onbasi (www.wordart.com). Big thanks to the sorting team for taking on the enormous task of sorting all of the Alzheimer's Disease papers into episodes each month. For July 2022, the sorters were Sarah Louadi, Eden Dubchak, Ben Cornish, Ellen Koch, Dana Clausen, Christy Yu, and Elyn Rowe. Also, props to our management team, which includes Sarah Louadi, Ellen Koch, Naila Kuhlmann, Elyn Rowe, Anusha Kamesh, and Lara Onbasi for keeping everything running smoothly.Our music is from "Journey of a Neurotransmitter" by musician and fellow neuroscientist Anusha Kamesh; you can find the original piece and her other music on soundcloud under Anusha Kamesh or on her YouTube channel, AKMusic. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCMH7chrAdtCUZuGia16FR4w -------------------------------------------------------------- If you are interested in joining the team, send us your CV by email. We are specifically looking for help with sorting abstracts by topic, abstract summaries and hosting, audio editing, creating bibliographies, and outreach/marketing. However, if you are interested in helping in other ways, don't hesitate to apply anyways. --------------------------------------------------------------*About AMiNDR: * Learn more about this project and the team behind it by listening to our first episode: "Welcome to AMiNDR!"
In this episode of Longevity by Design, our hosts, Dr. Gil Blander and Ashley Reaver, MS, RD, CSSD, are joined by Dr. Krista Varady, Professor of Nutrition at the University of Illinois, Chicago. Research on intermittent fasting is largely conducted in cellular and animal models. Dr. Krista Varady is one of few scientists to conduct intermittent fasting clinical trials in humans. Tune in as Dr. Krista Varady discusses the latest science in the field. For science-backed ways to live a healthier, longer life, download InsideTracker's Top 5 biomarkers for longevity eBook at insidetracker.com/podcast
***Join THC+ for full uninterrupted 2 hour episodes, a dedicated Plus RRS feed, lifetime forum access, merch discounts, & other bonuses like free downloads of THC music.*** See detailed sign up options down below. About Today's Guest: Sharav was born in Romania during World War II. A child survivor of the Holocaust, which claimed her father's life, she left a Ukrainian detention camp at the age of 3 and was cared for by relatives while her mother settled in the United States. When she was 8, Sharav and her mother were reunited in New York City, where she lives today. After her teenage son died of a reaction to clozapine, which he had been prescribed for schizoaffective disorder, Vera became a medical activist. She founded the Alliance for Human Research Protection, which focuses mainly on the biomedical industry, particularly in matters of patient consent and children. THC Links: Website Proper MeetUps Calendar THC T-shirts & Merch Store Leave a voicemail for the Joint Session Bonus Shows Leave us an iTunes review THC Communities: Telegram Subreddit THC Plus Sign-Up Options: Subscribe via our website for a full-featured experience: thehighersidechats.com/plus-membership Subscribe via Patreon, including the full Plus archive, a dedicated RSS feed, & payment through Paypal. To get a year of THC+ by cash, check, or money order please mail the payment in the amount of $96 to: Greg Carlwood PO Box: 153291 San Diego, CA 92195 Cryptocurrency If you'd like to pay the $96 for a year of THC+ via popular Cryptocurrencies, transfer funds and then send an email to support@thehighersidechats.comwith transaction info and your desired username/password. Please give up to 48 hours to complete. Bitcoin: 1AdauF2Mb7rzkkoXUExq142xfwKC6pS7N1 Ethereum: 0xd6E9232b3FceBe165F39ACfA4843F49e7D3c31d5 Litecoin: LQy7GvD5Euc1efnsfQaAX2RJHgBeoDZJ95 Ripple: rnWLvhCmBWpeFv9HMbZEjsRqpasN8928w3
What you believe in becomes your nex purchase...
The RSB Show 2-14-22 - Ottawa update, Health Canada censorship, Vera Sharav, Alliance for Human Research Protection, Dr. Carrie Madej, Truth in Medicine, COVID revelations
How would you feel if you signed up to be part of a medical test group, hoping to get better, only to find out that instead of trying to cure your illness, they simply wanted to observe you suffering from it? You would be pretty dismayed am sure. You would also probably develop an extremely deep-seated distrust of medical professionals. Today on The Secret Sits, we are going to discuss this exact situation, which took place during the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, I'm John Dodson, welcome to The Secret Sits.Don't forget to leave us a Rating and Review on Apple Podcast.Support the showhttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSitsSend show suggestions to:TheSecretSitsPodcast@gmail.comFollow us on our social media at:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwnfvpNBYTo9BP1sVuFsfGQTheSecretSitsPodcast (@secretsitspod) / Twitterhttps://www.instagram.com/thesecretsitspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/TheSecretSitsPodcasthttps://www.tiktok.com/@thesecretsitspodcast?lang=enYou can find our podcast on:Apple PodcastsStitcherSpotifyBuzzsprout.comGoodpodsGoogle PodcastsAmazon MusiciHeart RadioPandoraPodcast AddictPodchaserPocket CastsDeezerListen NotesPlayer FMPodcast IndexOvercastCastroCastboxPodfriend#TuskegeeSyphilisExperiment #Tuskegee #Syphilis #MaconCounty #Alabama #Sharecropping #PeterBuxton #TheTuskegeeInstitute #EuniceRivers #TheDrum #CDC #NAACP #BillClinton #LegacyMuseum #Discrimination #HumanResearch #PodcastSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSits)
How would you feel if you signed up to be part of a medical test group, hoping to get better, only to find out that instead of trying to cure your illness, they simply wanted to observe you suffering from it? You would be pretty dismayed am sure. You would also probably develop an extremely deep-seated distrust of medical professionals. Today on The Secret Sits, we are going to discuss this exact situation, which took place during the Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment, I'm John Dodson, welcome to The Secret Sits.Don't forget to leave us a Rating and Review on Apple Podcast.Support the showhttps://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSitsSend show suggestions to:TheSecretSitsPodcast@gmail.comFollow us on our social media at:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwnfvpNBYTo9BP1sVuFsfGQTheSecretSitsPodcast (@secretsitspod) / Twitterhttps://www.instagram.com/thesecretsitspodcast/https://www.facebook.com/TheSecretSitsPodcasthttps://www.tiktok.com/@thesecretsitspodcast?lang=enYou can find our podcast on:Apple PodcastsStitcherSpotifyBuzzsprout.comGoodpodsGoogle PodcastsAmazon MusiciHeart RadioPandoraPodcast AddictPodchaserPocket CastsDeezerListen NotesPlayer FMPodcast IndexOvercastCastroCastboxPodfriend#TuskegeeSyphilisExperiment #Tuskegee #Syphilis #MaconCounty #Alabama #Sharecropping #PeterBuxton #TheTuskegeeInstitute #EuniceRivers #TheDrum #CDC #NAACP #BillClinton #LegacyMuseum #Discrimination #HumanResearch #PodcastSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSecretSits)
Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Equipoise in Research—Integrating Ethics and Science in Human Research with Alex John London, PhD Related Content: Equipoise in Research—Integrating Ethics and Science in Human Research
This week we have the wonder woman of mental health, Milly Bannister - who is the Founder and CEO of ALLKND (Australia's leading provider of digital, subsidised mental health first aid education for youth). As part of ALLKND, Milly is the Founder and Director of GRLKND, a not-for-profit organisation connecting female-identifying youth to mental wellness resources. Milly is an Australian-born lifestyle journalist, creative director, mentor and self-made girl-boss. Milly has been a part of the Kelvin Grove State College's 'Way beyond today' Entrepreneurship panel discussion, talking to year 10 students about all things entrepreneurship. Alignment with Impact Boom and their Impact Enterprise Accelerator experience with Griffith University ! For the rest of the year, working alongside talented entrepreneurs and industry mentors. She's somewhat of a communications expert and a virtual BFF to a 160k+ community, backed by a BA in Journalism+Media/Comms, a Diploma in Positive Psychology and certification in Human Research and Suicide Prevention.She's currently an ambassador for Modibodi, Ella Bache, MG Motors and has worked with the likes of BMW, Sony, Olay, Amazon and Google. Check out Milly, her businesses & content:Instagram (Personal): @millyrosebannisterInstagram (GRLKND): @wearegrlkndInstagram (ALLKND): @weareallkndWebsite: GRLKND: https://www.grlknd.org/millybannisterALLKND: https://www.allknd.org/Contact Jimmy & consume Thinkmental content via:Email - thinkmentalaustralia@gmail.comInstagram - @thinkmental_Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC27KTZ4iFHv4vM40dtj31BgFacebook - @thinkmentalausLinkedin - @thinkmentalThank you for supporting Thinkmental!If you would like keep seeing great content like this and support the show further, please do so here:Support the show
Clinical Trial Podcast | Conversations with Clinical Research Experts
Dr. Bierer is the Director of the Regulatory Foundations, Ethics and the Law Program of the Harvard Clinical and Translational Science Center and the Director of Regulatory Policy, SMART IRB. Previously she served as senior vice president, research, at the Brigham and Women's Hospital for 11 years, and was the institutional official for human and animal research, for biosafety, and for research integrity. She initiated the Brigham Research Institute and the Innovation Hub (iHub), a focus for entrepreneurship and innovation. In addition, she was the Founding Director of the Center for Faculty Development and Diversity at the BWH. In addition to her academic responsibilities, she currently serves on the Board of Directors of Vivli, Inc., a non-profit organization founded by the MRCT Center dedicated to global clinical trial sharing; Management Sciences for Health (MSH), an international organization working in partnership globally to strengthen health care, local capability, and access; and the Edward P Evans Foundation, a foundation supporting biomedical research. Previously she has served as the chair of the Board of Directors of the Association for Accreditation of Human Research Protection Programs (AAHRPP), on the Board of Public Responsibility in Medicine and Research (PRIM&R), and as chair of the Secretary's Advisory Committee on Human Research Protections, HHS. She has authored or co-authored over 240 publications and has served on the editorial boards of a number of journals including Current Protocols of Immunology, Blood, Therapeutic Innovation and Regulatory Science, Ethics and Human Research. Dr. Bierer received a B.S. from Yale University and an M.D. from Harvard Medical School. Please join me in welcoming Dr. Barbara Bierer on the Clinical Trial Podcast. This episode is brought to you by Florence Healthcare. To learn more, visit https://florencehc.com/
Welcome to the Siim Land Podcast I'm your host Siim Land and today our guest is Dr. Vera Gorbunova. Vera is a Professor of Biology at the University of Rochester and a co-director of the Rochester Aging Research Center. She has published over 100 publications about longevity, sirtuins, and aging. This episode is brought to you by DoNotAge.org. DoNotAge offers different kinds of molecules as supplements that have been seen to have a longevity benefit, such as NMN, trimethylglycine, apigenin, and hyaluronic acid. They recently came out with the world's first at-home NAD level testing kit as well as a SIRT6 activator. Dr. Vera is one of the advisors of DoNotAge and I'm taking their products as well. You can get a small 5% discount at donotage.org if you use the code SIIM. Timestamps: 01:10 How Vera Became a Longevity Scientist 05:00 What Causes Aging 08:45 What Speeds Up Aging 10:39 Telomeres and DNA Repair 13:00 Sirtuins and Longevity 16:35 How Sirtuins Work 19:05 Human Research in Sirtuins 26:56 NAD+ and Sirtuins 32:17 How the Body Produces NAD 38:08 Hyaluronic Acid Benefits 44:45 New Compounds for Aging 47:20 Rapamycin and Metformin And much more Here are the links to the podcast on all platforms Link to the Audio Podcast on iTunes and Stitcher Link to the podcast on Spotify Link to the podcast on CastBox Watch the Biohacking Bootcamp Videos on Patreon This episode is sponsored by BiOptimizers. They're giving the listeners of this podcast an exclusive offer on one of their best-selling products. It's called Magnesium Breakthrough and is the most full-spectrum magnesium supplement out there. Most supplements contain only 1 or 2 forms of magnesium... when in reality there are at least 7 that your body needs and benefits from. Magnesium is the master mineral that governs virtually all physiological processes in the body. With volume discounts combined with our custom 10% coupon code, SIIM10, you can save up to 40% off select packages of Magnesium Breakthrough! That's an AMAZING value. And I promise that deal is ONLY available on this specific website, Click Here to Support the Show on Patreon! Show Notes DoNotAge SIRT6 Activator - Use Code SIIM DoNotAge - Use Code SIIM Lucas Aoun's Natural Testosterone Optimization Course 10% OFF The Immunity Fix on Amazon Get Magnesium Breakthrough for a 10% Discount! Use Code SIIM for 10% Off Self Decode Use Code SIIM for a 10% Discount on the KAATSU Bands My New Book Stronger by Stress My NEW BOOK Metabolic Autophagy Metabolic Autophagy Audiobook Metabolic Autophagy Master Class Total Sleep Optimization Video Course Get the FULL GUIDE to INTERMITTENT FASTING FREE BOOK Get the Metabolic Autophagy Program Keto Adaptation Manual Book Watch the Biohacking Bootcamp Videos on Patreon Body Mind Empowerment Handbook Keto Fit Program Keto // IF Program Stay Empowered Siim
WARNING: NSFW. This episode is disturbing and enters into delicate historical territory regarding unethical human experimentation which was forced on civilian populations prior to, during and after World War 2 by governments on all sides of the conflict. If you are not ready to hear the gorey details please avoid listening to this episode. If you are ready to go down one of the darkest rabbit holes we know of, then strap yourself up and prepare your stomach for the gruesome lengths humans will go to obtain knowledge at the expense of other humans.Special Thanks to research assistant Heka Astra for providing exquisite research for this episode.In the free show we discuss:-American and British Mustard Gas Experiments-Spraying Diarrhea Juice on Ourselves-Eugenics -The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiments-Longterm Impact on Minorities-Syphilis-The Hippocratic Oath-Joseph Mengela-Genocide in Nazi Germany-Doing Mescaline at Dachau-Project Paperclip and MK Ultra-Uyghurs-Racism in the American Film IndustryIn the extended episode available at http://www.patreon.com/thewholerabbit we go even deeper down the rabbit hole and discuss:-Diet Pills-The Mentally Disable-Nuremberg Sterilization Laws-The Kwantung Army-The Rape of Nanjing-False Flags-Evil Mastermind Shiro Ishii-Manchukuo-Suzuki Slave Labor-Unit 731-The Frozen Limb Tests-Plague Outbreak-The “Maruda”-The Judas GoatWhere to find The Whole Rabbit:Online Emporium: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/thewholerabbit/Stickers, t-shirts, hoodies and more!Twitter: https://twitter.com/1WholeRabbitLet's get the conversation started!Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/0AnJZhmPzaby04afmEWOAVThe best place for ALL devices.Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_whole_rabbit_/Like, subscribe and comment to see all our weird artsy stuff.Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/thewholerabbit/Please share your strange findings, stories and feedback with us. Sources:Unit 731:https://www.amazon.com/Marutas-Unit-731-Experimentation-Forgotten-ebook/dp/B083LYJ66B https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_731https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mizmXTWDf-4&t=907shttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JBx59FETU30&t=2097sAuschwitz:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dPTvPccmLUM&t=2126sTuskegee Experiments:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZV7RzS8QRXEhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q90hl6YxU3o&t=402sSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/thewholerabbit)
SUBSCRIBE TO SALES SECRETS PODCAST:ITUNES ► https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/s...SPOTIFY ► https://open.spotify.com/show/1BKYsQo...YOUTUBE ► https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVUh...THIS EPISODE IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY SEAMLESS.AI - THE WORLD'S BEST SALES LEADS:WEBSITE ► https://www.seamless.ai/LINKEDIN ► https://www.linkedin.com/company/seamlessai/JOIN FOR FREE TODAY ► https://login.seamless.ai/invite/podcastBrandon Bornancin is a serial salesperson, entrepreneur and founder of Seamless.AI. Twice a week, Brandon interviews the world's top sales experts like Jill Konrath, Aaron Ross, John Barrows, Trish Bertuzzi, Mark Hunter, Anthony Iannarino and many more -- to uncover actionable strategies, playbooks, tips and insights you can use to generate more revenue and close more business. If you want to learn the most powerful sales secrets from the top sales experts in the world, Sales Secrets From The Top 1% is the place to find them.SALES SECRET FROM THE TOP 1%WEBSITE ► https://www.secretsalesbook.com/LINKEDIN ► https://www.linkedin.com/company/sales-secret-book/ABOUT BRANDONBrandon Bornancin is a serial salesperson (over $100M in sales deals), multi-million dollar sales tech entrepreneur, motivational sales speaker, international sales DJ (DJ NoQ5) and sales author who is obsessed with helping you maximize your sales success.Mr. Bornancin is currently the CEO & Founder at Seamless.ai delivering the world's best sales leads. Over 10,000+ companies use Seamless.ai to generate millions in sales at companies like Google, Amazon, Facebook, Slack, Dell, Oracle & many others.Mr. Bornancin is also the author of "Sales Secrets From The Top 1%" where the world's best sales experts share their secrets to sales success and author of “The Ultimate Guide To Overcoming Sales Objections.”FOLLOW BRANDON:LINKEDIN ► https://www.linkedin.com/in/brandonbornancin/INSTAGRAM ► https://www.instagram.com/brandonbornancinofficial/FACEBOOK ► https://www.facebook.com/SeamlessAITWITTER ► https://twitter.com/BBornancin
Paul Moynagh, Professor of Immunology and Director of the Kathleen Lonsdale Institute for Human Research at Maynooth University, talks to Eamon about the state's approach to antigen testing. The Stand is proudly sponsored by Tesco.
Envisioning community and learning as unschoolers in a rich conversation with Lucy Aitkenread. She is a writer, an activist, and unschooling mother who moved her family from London to a forest in New Zealand. You can find her all over the internet; Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Youtube with her screen name Lulastic and the Hippyshake.She graduated from the London School of Economics in 2008 with a Master of Science in Social Policy. After working for a Global NGO as a climate change campaigner her love of social and environmental justice took a turn towards the impact our lifestyles have on the earth's resources, and the different ways that raising children can promote or impede a fairer world.Lucy has written two bestselling books, "Happy Hair" a guide on living without shampoo, and "Freedom Face: a beauty guide on body products" that want to enable women to shrug off the toxicity, both in ingredients and self-hating messages of the beauty industry. Her third and fourth books are "30 Days of Rewilding: Find your place in nature and watch your family bloom" and "Moon Circle: Rediscover Intuition, Wildness, and Sisterhood". Lucy has also formal training in Integrated Wellness.Through her work, Lucy hopes to inspire people to live in peaceful relationships with the children in their life and the earth they tread upon.--*(20'55”) Lucy mentioned a ship, at the time of recording a massive container ship got stuck in Egypt's Suez Canal, halting marine traffic for almost a week. The Ever Given container ship was freed in the Suez Canal on Monday, March 29, 2021.--Unschool community and support: discolearning.com | youtube channel: life without school | IG: lulasticblog
Paul Moynagh, Professor of Immunology and Director of the Kathleen Lonsdale Institute for Human Research at Maynooth University, talks to Eamon about outdoor transmission, vaccine efficacy, and the latest Covid science. The Stand is proudly sponsored by Tesco.
In this episode, I am envisioning an age-inclusive, non-discriminatory, and interconnected world with Charlotte Japp. She is a big picture thinker, she aims to solve problems through creative ideas that enrich the world. Most known as the founder of Cirkel, a platform that bridges the gap between generations. She has spoken around the world about cross-generational connections and the future of work. Charlotte is passionate about connecting people and she believes there is a big opportunity for doing so across generations.Cirkel community
Post By: Adam Turteltaub Emmelyn Kim is AVP, Research Compliance & Privacy officer of Northwell Health in Lake Success, New York. She is also the authors of the chapters Clinical Research: Financial Conflicts of Interest and Clinical Research: Human Research Protections for the new HCCA Complete Healthcare Compliance Manual. Like the chapters themselves, the conversation in this podcast ventured well outside of the lab into some of the broader issues affecting research, the pandemic and both vaccine distribution and use patterns. We began with a discussion of the Environmental, Social & Governance (ESG) movement that has grown quickly from an ideal to actual compliance requirements already in many countries. Europe leads in this movement for now, but with so much money at stake it’s increasingly like that businesses in the US, including those in healthcare, will be measured on ESG metrics. At that point, ESG may become a compliance requirement. Accelerating the trend, arguably, is the overlap in interests between ESG, diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, #MeToo, the Black Lives Matter movement and more recently efforts to stem anti-Asian hate crimes. In addition, health equity is increasingly seeing scrutiny and concern, with the pandemic having different impacts when assessed by race. She sees compliance playing a central role in the organizational response to these issues, serving as eyes and ears. Plus, compliance is best suited to spot ethical lapses and respond to them. Listen in to learn more in this provocative podcast.
The University of Minnesota has been banned from the Linux kernel. We'll share the history, the context, and where things stand now around the controversial research that led to the ban. Plus Ubuntu 21.04 is out, and we try WSL's new GUI Linux app support.
The University of Minnesota has been banned from the Linux kernel. We'll share the history, the context, and where things stand now around the controversial research that led to the ban. Plus Ubuntu 21.04 is out, and we try WSL's new GUI Linux app support.
The University of Minnesota has been banned from the Linux kernel. We'll share the history, the context, and where things stand now around the controversial research that led to the ban. Plus Ubuntu 21.04 is out, and we try WSL's new GUI Linux app support.
Today I am ENVISIONing with Ala' Abu Hammattah. She currently identifies herself as a psychosocial researcher, facilitator, and therapist. She draws from her experiences in positive and somatic psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and ancient eastern shamanic healing traditions. Her interest lies in enhancing general wellbeing and quality of life, traversing in-depth, influencing factors like religion, spirituality, cross-cultural interactions, politics, and power and rank dynamics. She strongly believes that authentic inner work life is the ultimate way to connect with our life purpose and cultivate ongoing awareness of body-mind processes for self and collective healing. She is currently working to bridge evidence-based research with process work and world work. Ala's process work |
What does it take to be an astronaut? Neil deGrasse Tyson, Gary O’Reilly, and Chuck Nice break down the physical effects of being in space and the results of the astronaut twins study with guests astronaut Scott Kelly and biophysicist Chris Mason. NOTE: StarTalk+ Patrons can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free here: https://www.startalkradio.net/show/the-right-stuff-with-astronaut-scott-kelly-and-dr-chris-mason/ Thanks to our Patrons Jamie Ferns, evan stegall, Payton Hawk, Farid El Nasire, Steve Lindauer, Austin Lawrence, Cory Farnum, Nathan Mills, Trumpet Wom', and Noah for supporting us this week. Photo Credit: NASA. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
➡️ Jak przebiega proces wprowadzania szczepionek i leków na rynek? ➡️ Czy szczepionki na COVID zostały przebadane w takim samym stopniu, jak inne szczepionki czy leki dostępne na rynku? ➡️ Jakie są zasady przeprowadzania eksperymentów na ludziach? ➡️ Jakie instytucje kontrolują przebieg badań? ➡️ Skąd badacze biorą uczestników eksperymentów? O tym wszystkim rozmawiam z gościem tego odcinka Zdalnie o onlajnie. Liudmila Tahai to IRB Administrator w Office of Human Research na Uniwersytecie Georga Washingtona w Waszyngtonie. W swojej pracy zajmuje się kontrolą przebiegu badań medycznych, ich legalności i bezpieczeństwa dla ich uczestników. Liudmila opowiada jak "od kuchni" wygląda świat badań nad lekami i szczepieniami. --- Office of Human Research https://humanresearch.gwu.edu/ --- Najnowsze odcinki Zdalnie o onlajnie znajdziesz na: - https:/zdalnie.vireomedia.pl/ - https://facebook.com/VireoMedia/ --- Zdalnie o onlajnie w formie podcastu odsłuchasz tutaj: Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2CUILNoZEZ5E8oF2glF7c5 Google Podcasts: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8yZTQ0MjE0NC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw== Anchor: https://anchor.fm/zdalnie-o-onlajnie Breaker: https://www.breaker.audio/zdalnie-o-onlajnie Overcast: https://overcast.fm/itunes1525424122/zdalnie-o-onlajnie Pocket Casts: https://pca.st/fwltcvep Radio Public: https://radiopublic.com/zdalnie-o-onlajnie-Gyqw3x
This episode features Anthony Magit, Medical Director at UC San Diego Human Research Protections Program & Professor of Surgery at Rady Children's Hospital. Here, he discusses what the HRP Program is, his work in protecting clinical research participants, and more.
In this episode of Michigan Minds, Julie Lumeng, assistant vice president for clinical and human subjects research and executive director of the Michigan Institute for Clinical and Health Research, explores the importance of human-research activity and the studies she has conducted examining the development of eating behavior in children. Lumeng also shares advice to women and girls embarking on their own journeys into science fields. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This episode features Anthony Magit, Medical Director at UC San Diego Human Research Protections Program & Professor of Surgery at Rady Children’s Hospital. Here, he discusses what the HRP Program is, his work in protecting clinical research participants, and more.
Thomas Lidy: "They didn't know much about AI when they started. First they wanted to do this manual, mapping out the music's world. That's why they are named Musimap because they literally wanted to create a map of music".Listen to the entire podcast or vlog: The Power of Audio + Science + AI with Jasmine Moradi (https://www.jasminemoradi.com, Spotify, Apple Music & Google Play) Episode 6: Musimap's Emotional AI: - Decoding the DNA of music by combining human emotions and AI to gain insight into music consumption.Soundbites#1 How Thomas Lidy's Combined Passion for Computers and Music Brought Him to Become one of the World's Top Experts in Music AI. (03:42 )#2 How FuturePulse is Empowering the Music Industry with Predictive Analytics on Artists, Tracks, Playlists and Genres with just a Few Clicks. (05:30)#3 Semantic Audio Analysis and Music Recognition Explained. (13:25)#4 Bridging the Gap Between Academia and Industry: Vienna University of Technology - Music Information Retrieval Research - Spectralmind #Music Bricks - Musimap. (18:22)#5 The Successful Foundation of the Belgian B2B Music AI Company Musimap is Backed by 20 years of Human Research Combined with Audio-Processing and AI.(23:40)#6 Becoming the “Ultimate Music Assistant” by Scientifically Decoding the DNA of Music. (26:26)#7 A“Humanized” Algorithm = a Human Fused AI + Feedback Loops. (34:19)#8 Is a Universal Music Taxonomy Possible? (38:57)#9 MusiMe: You are What You Listen to. Your Spotify Playlists Reveal Your Personality. Try it Out. https://yawylt.musimap.io/(45:13)#6 How Emotional Artificial Intelligence Music is Revolutionizing Audio Branding, E-Commerce and the Dating Industry. (54:11)Thomas LidyChief Innovation OfficerMusimapwww.musimap.netHost:
On this week's episode, we'll be discussing some infamous examples of human research (some unethical, some downright terrible) including the Stanford Prison Experiment, Tuskegee Syphilis Study, and more.
On this week's episode, we'll be discussing some infamous examples of human research (some unethical, some downright terrible) including the Stanford Prison Experiment, Tuskegee Syphilis Study, and more.
รีวิวคอร์สออนไลน์ จริยธรรมการวิจัยในมนุษย์ ใครคือกลุ่มเปราะบาง บทเรียนจากอดีตของการผิด การสื่อสารให้อาสาสมัครที่เข้าทำการทดลอง จริยธรรมในมนุษย์บอกอะไรแก่เราบ้าง ท่านสามารถเรียนคอร์สนี้ได้ที่ https://ohrs.nrct.go.th/E-learning --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sakol/message
รีวิวคอร์สออนไลน์ จริยธรรมการวิจัยในมนุษย์ ประวัติศาสตร์ของจริยธรรมในมนุษย์มีที่มาที่ไปอย่างไร? ทำไมเราต้องขอจริยธรรมในมนุษย์ก่อนที่เราจะดำเนินการวิจัย? หลักจริยธรรมพื้นฐาน การเคารพในบุคคล คุณประโยชน์ และความยุติธรรมจะส่งเสริมคุณค่าความเป็นคนได้อย่างไร? ท่านสามารถเรียนคอร์สนี้ได้ที่ https://ohrs.nrct.go.th/E-learning --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/sakol/message
Your Fitbit tracker measures your heart rate, records your exercise and tracks your sleep. Ever wonder how the magic happens? Tracy Giest, who leads the Fitbit Human Research Lab, pulls back the curtain on the in-depth experiments and testing Fitbit conducts to develop its hardware, algorithms and new technologies. It's a job that involves everything from dumbbells and snoozing employees to strollers and grocery carts.
Dog Tails: Conversations with the Pet Dog Trainers of Europe
In this Dog Tails we tackle the controversial topic of food. Deciding what to feed your dog can be a confusing process and there are many different opinions out there. We chat to Helen Moore of Wholesome Canine, a health and wellness space for dogs in Canada, to gain her perspective. We cover loads of key topics in this episode, such as the pet food industry, the types of options available for dogs, how to select a high-quality food, feeding bones and why good nutrition is so important. We loved having this conversation and hope you love listening to it! Wholesome Canine: www.wholesomecanine.ca 'Metabolomics from a Diet Intervention in Atopic Dogs, a Model for Human Research?': https://bit.ly/3hPKpPO Books for home-cooked feeding and recipes include 'Home-Prepared Dog & Cat Diets - The Healthful Alternative' by Donald R. Strombeck (also available at www.dogcathomeprepareddiet.com) and 'Real Food for Healthy Dogs & Cats' by Dr. Karen Becker. Helen also referred to 'Nutrigenomics' by Dr. Jean Dodds. Dog Tails is produced by the Pet Dog Trainers of Europe (www.pdte.eu). Our aim is to build a world in which dogs are understood, respected and treated with kindness and empathy. You can help us by sharing this podcast and getting in touch at petdogtrainersofeurope@gmail.com. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/pdte/message
This week I sit down with Milly Rose Bannister. Founder of GRLKND, a non profit organization providing female identifying youth with a safe space for empowered self development. We talk about the purpose behind creating this non profit, what they do and WHY! Milly is certified in Positive Psychology, Human Research and Suicide Prevention. Check out Milly and GRLKND on Instagram: @millyrosebannister @wearegrlknd Follow me on Instagram @didiaskpodcast https://linktr.ee/nataliehamel
Research pushes the boundaries of medicine and biology.Bioethics safeguards the participants that take part in experiments to test new technologies or medicines. This week we interviewed three guests passionate about the role of ethics in research; Dr. Rebekah McWhiter, Dr. Lisa Eckstein and Dr. Frederic Gilbert. A jam-packed episode covering the ethical considerations for printing organs, genetic research and clinical trials. Host: Niamh ChapmanProduction: Olivia Holloway
Neuroscience and the Soldier: How will future troops sense, perceive and interact with the world of technology? U.S. Army CCDC Army Research Laboratory Director Dr. Phil Perconti talks with recently promoted Dr. Vernon Lawhern, a mathematical statistician from the lab's Human Research and Engineering Directorate.
Public Health Announcement
In an unprecedented sharing of discovery, 84 researchers have released their key findings from NASA’s landmark Twins Study.
This week it's a bonus episode where Matt Spaiser from the Suits of James Bond and Pete Brooker from Human Research talk about the Orlebar Brown 007 collection. Matt picks out his favourite pieces, Pete chimes in with his thoughts on where you are in life, depending on what piece you chose. Catch the YouTube version of the show You can also follow the show on Twitter to get more info on the brands of James Bond. Matt has written and reviewed all the clothes on James Bond including this capsule collection that is selling out fast, over on his website. Pete publishes show notes from the episodes and also writes about various James Bond themed editorials on his site, Human Research. You can leave a review on iTunes. Or follow the show on Stitcher To email the show get in touch with matt@bondsuits.com
Kimberly Ruppert, team leader in the Office of Evaluation and Inspections in Boston, is interviewed by Katherine Harris, a public affairs specialist in Washington, DC.
At its foundation, the digital revolution in business isn't really about technological innovation as much as it is about the ideological triumph of the quantitative approach to research. If we're going to build a new model for a more human approach to business, we'll have start by finding alternative methodologies for business research. That's the topic of this episode... and hang on, because it gets kind of weird.
When you combine natural language interface, emotion modeling, CG animation, and various forms of Artificial Intelligence, you get lifelike computer characters with autonomous interaction. This new kind of digital actor is called a Virtual Human, and can be deployed across a wide spectrum of functions -- enabling authentic human interaction with machines. From psychological counseling to education to customer service to endless other applications, virtual humans will play an increasingly active role in society. My guest today is Jonathan Gratch, Director for Virtual Human Research at the USC Institute for Creative Technologies -- among the most comprehensive research and development facilities for Virtual Humans. Jon is also a USC Research Professor of Psychology and Computer Science – the two areas most central to the development of Virtual Humans. We talk with Jon about emotional interactive machines, what we learn about human beings by modeling human behavior in algorithms, and the potential for people developing emotional connections to digital agents.
BJ and Mike continue their conversation with Dr. Mark Shelhamer of Johns Hopkins University and NASA's former Chief Scientist for Human Research. Mark looks into the future and discusses the challenges and the reality of the next space frontier: a trip to Mars.
The Ethics Police?: The Struggle To Make Human Research Safe
The Ethics Police?: The Struggle To Make Human Research Safe
Referat "Herausforderungen des HRM (Human Research Management) aus der Sicht der unternehmerischen Entwicklung" Dr. Silvio Inderbitzin, CEO Spirig AG, Egerkingen
Medizinische Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 10/19
DEUTSCHE ZUSAMMENFASSUNG siehe PDF-Datei S. 7 (Teil I) und S. 111 (Teil II). /// ENGLISH ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Fetal cystic lung lesions, such as congenital cystic adenomatoid malformation of the lung (CCAM) and bronchopulmonary sequestration (BPS), were once considered rare and of poor prognosis. The advances in prenatal imaging and fetal therapeutic intervention techniques have contributed to a revision of this opinion. However, hardly any long-term investigation exists and prenatal predictive factors are still controversially debated with a lack of detail. This complicates adequate counseling of expectant parents and patients management. The goal of this research was four-fold: (1) to study the long-term outcome of children with prenatally detected congenital cystic lung lesions, (2) to compare the long-term outcome with the early outcome of the disease, (3) to determine prenatal ultrasonographic features which are prognostic for the outcomes, and (4) to compare the findings of this study with the data obtained by an extended statistical analysis of all major series of patients published in the literature. PATIENTS AND METHODS: This prospective cohort study, a long-term follow-up study, was conducted on 60 fetuses prenatally diagnosed with cystic lung lesions and ultrasonographically evaluated from 1988 through 2002 at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF) Medical Center and at the University Hospital Großhadern of the Ludwig-Maximilians-University (LMU) Munich, Germany. Based on a follow-up questionnaire (see appendix of PDF-file for copy) with 39 questions, sent to the patients’ parents up to 14 years later, and a review of the patients’ medical records, clinical data were extracted about present and past respiratory and non-respiratory symptoms, therapeutic interventions, and imaging studies. Respiratory difficulties such as the requirement of ventilatory support or oxygen, recurrent respiratory infections, asthma, and/or limited physical endurance were categorized into four severity groups. The study patients were classified into five surgical intervention groups: (1) termination of pregnancy, (2) invasive fetal treatment, (3) neonatal surgery, (4) childhood surgery, and (5) no surgical intervention. Postoperative early and late complications were investigated. The outcome was grouped into (i) early neonatal outcome, (ii) interim childhood outcome, and (iii) final outcome. The age at improvement was evaluated. To identify prenatal predictors for the outcome, the children’s prenatal ultrasound data were retrospectively reviewed. Data about the size, (Stocker) type, and location of the lung lesion and the development of a hydrops fetalis, mediastinal shift, ascites, pleural and pericardial effusions, skin edema, placental thickening, polyhydramnios, and the fetal growth were extracted. All quantifiable parameters were categorized into four severity groups. The size of the mass was categorized into (i) small, (ii) moderate, (iii) large, or (iv) very large. The predictive value of each prenatal parameter examined in this study was compared with predictions published in the literature. All study data were analyzed using the Pearson's chi-square test, t-tests of the means, analysis of variance (ANOVA), and bivariate correlation. The Committee of Human Research approved the study (see appendix of PDF-file for approval letter). RESULTS: The survival rate in this study of 60 fetuses with cystic lung lesions was 94% (51 of 54 cases) to the exclusion of 4 terminated pregnancies and 2 deceased, untreated fetal treatment candidates. Three patients died after birth despite invasive fetal treatment due to advanced hydrops fetalis and delayed open fetal surgery. Of the 51 surviving children, 11 (22%) children had invasive fetal treatment, 12 (24%) were operated on as neonates, 15 (29%) were operated on in childhood, and 13 (25%) had no surgery. Invasive fetal treatment had a success rate of 79% (11/14) with hydrops regressions 1 to 3 weeks after intervention. Asymptomatic or only mildly affected after birth were 31 (61%) children, 4 (8%) neonates had moderate respiratory symptoms, and 16 (31%) had severe early respiratory difficulties. Prematurity had a considerable influence on the early respiratory difficulties (p