POPULARITY
Guest host Geena Davis guides us through the research on love that stretches beyond romance and friendship, showing up in our bonds with objects, nature, grief, and the collective moments that connect us to something larger than ourselves.Summary: In this final episode of our 3-part series on The Science of Love, researchers reveal how love expands our sense of self and strengthens our bond to humanity. We also explore why objects can feel meaningful, how love of nature can motivate care for the planet, he ways grief reshapes our capacity for connection, and our love of humanity.Related The Science of Happiness episodes: The Science of Love Series: https://bit.ly/TheScienceofLoveThe Science of Love, with Geena Davis (Episode 1): https://tinyurl.com/bfave5wdHow 7 Days Can Transform Your Relationship: https://tinyurl.com/bdh2ezhrRelated Happiness Breaks:Visualizing Your Best Self in Relationships: https://tinyurl.com/4797z2vfA Guided Meditation on Embodied Love: https://tinyurl.com/3dmpfam6A Meditation on Love and Interconnectedness: https://tinyurl.com/ye6baxv3Today's Guests:AARON AHUVIA is the most widely published and cited academic expert on non-interpersonal love.Learn more about Aaron Ahuvia here: https://thethingswelove.com/about-aaron/JESSICA EISE is a social and environmental scientist and is an assistant professor in the Department of Environmental and Occupational Health with Indiana University School of Public Health-Bloomington.Learn more about Jessica Eise here: https://jessicaeise.com/YURIA CELIDWEN is an indigenous scholar of contemplative studies, and author of the new book, Flourishing Kin: Indigenous Foundations For Collective Well-Being.Learn more about Yuria Celidwen here: https://www.yuriacelidwen.com/MARY-FRANCES O'CONNOR is a psychologist and professor at the University of Arizona, where she directs the Grief, Loss, and Social Stress Lab.Learn more about Mary-Frances O'connor here: https://maryfrancesoconnor.org/SHIRA GABRIEL is a Professor of Psychology at SUNY, University at Buffalo.Learn more about Shira Gabriel here: https://tinyurl.com/2vvav8xjMessage us or leave a comment on Instagram @scienceofhappinesspod. E-mail us at happinesspod@berkeley.edu or use the hashtag #happinesspod.Help us share The Science of Happiness! Leave us a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts or share this link with someone who might like the show: https://tinyurl.com/2p9h5aapFunding for this special was provided by the John Templeton Foundation, as part of the Greater Good Science Center's Spreading Love Through the Media initiative.Transcription: https://tinyurl.com/22d5nuyr
Over the past three years (150 episodes!) of In this Climate, some themes and lessons have emerged. One of those is the necessity of more sustainable food systems. So, this episode, we're pulling interviews from different moments and tying them together for a multidimensional look at how we grow and distribute and consume. We'll hear about Californian water use, local nutrient cycling, unfair coffee trade, and Panamanian campesino land defenders. Camille Pannu: https://www.law.uci.edu/faculty/lecturers/pannu/ Jason Bradford: https://open.spotify.com/episode/1OBMe3A8erIUcLXCd5TDXZ?si=99d4fadb103d4504 Jessica Eise: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0gLExd4TnGgaRmhKlskcOh?si=75904fcd93f7477d Marvin Wilcox: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5xj8w9PljHE0z8oUf8Cl3c?si=ab64598768524a49
In this episode, Defend & Publish President & Executive Writing Coach Christine Tulley describes strategies for getting started with edited projects such as edited collections and guest edited journal issues. ADDITIONAL LINKS Slides shown in podcast “Herding Experts and Polishing Text: 10 Tips for Creating an Edited Volume” by Jessica Eise (1-28-2019) "Two Big Hassles in Editing a Book, and What You Can Do About Them" BY Pam Thomson (12-9-2013) Upcoming Events & Services: Check out other Defend&Publish events and workshops mentioned in this episode. If you missed one, email christine@defendandpublish.com to see if you can get the recording! Sign up for a free 30 minute consultation at www.defendandpublish.com (scroll down).
Jessica Eise (the United Nations World Food Program's efforts to combat world hunger); Suresh Dhaniyala (tracking how airborne coronavirus particles move)
Social scientists attempt to make sense of the lives that human beings live in the world. That often means trying to put individual lives into the larger context of the world beyond daily routines. On this episode of The Measure of Everyday Life, we talk with Jessica Eise of Purdue University, a researcher who confronts macro-level changes as they are affecting agricultural workers and others around the world. [Note: audio quality is compromised at times on this episode due to remote recording.]
Entrevista a la Doctora Jessica Eise, investigadora norteamericana en las áreas de agricultura y cambio climático, líder del proyecto “Clima y Café”, un espacio para acompañar a los caficultores en la adaptación al cambio climático. www.climaycafe.com. Conoceremos el proyecto y algunas historias de su investigación en el eje cafetero colombiano y a final de la emisión escucharemos música parrandera característica del Paisaje Cultural cafetero colombiano inspirada en el Café. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/andreladelcafe/message
As climate changes, so do pieces of culture. Pieces like car ownership, outdoor sports, and the drinks we share. This is the final episode in our beverage series, and it's all about coffee. We follow guests to Colombia, El Salvador, and Costa Rica to learn about the systems preventing coffee farmers from building climate resilience and possibilities for improvement. In this episode: James Harper of the Filter Stories podcast Jessica Eise of the Purdue University Brian Lamb School of Communication Thaleon Tremain of Pachamama Coffee Cooperative
We didn’t agree on everything, but it was good fun! This conversation was a good way to start digging into the vast & complex world of food safety and agricultural systems, also touching on career trade-offs and purpose. Jessica works as a researcher in communications at Purdue University in Indiana, United States. She recently edited a book combining the perspective of 17 academic voices from her sector, the typical minefield I love to get myself into.
Special Intro: Bill Corbett from Rifftrax and MST3K Film at 11: Deadpool 2 (2018) BookIT: Author Jessica Eise joins us to discuss her sci-fi time travel novel Renee Scroll With it: School’s out for Summer and Too Much Scrolling is hitting the road. Join us on June 8th, 2018 in Indianapolis for Indy POP con and make your plans now for Star Wars Celebration 2019 in Chicago, April 11-15, 2019. Show Notes: http://bit.ly/tms52218
Special Intro: Neve McIntosh -- Madame Vastra from Doctor Who Film at 11: Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle (2018 on Amazon) BookIT: The Creature Court (2018) by Tansy Rayner Roberts Scroll With it: Alphabet presents its Google I/O 2018 this week and the AI at I/O is ok. Join us in reading Renee (2017) by Jessica Eise. Send your questions for the author and we will discuss it in depth on May 22, 2018. Show Notes: http://bit.ly/tms51518
Special Intro: Artist Nate Jones Film at 11: Ash vs. Evil Dead (2018) BookIT: Soonish (2017) by Kelly and Zach Weinersmith Scroll With it: Nick Dorsey joins us to discuss how tabletop gaming can improve your life. Join us in reading Renee (2017) by Jessica Eise. Send your questions for the author and we will discuss it in depth on May 22, 2018. Show Notes: http://bit.ly/tms5818
Special Intro: Jessica Eise -- author of our current book club book -- Renee Film at 11: Avengers: Infinity War (2018) BookIT: Professor Gary K. Wolfe joins us to discuss How Great Science Fiction Works Scroll With it: Uranus smells like rotten eggs, MoviePass is changing how we watch movies, and our patrons got a free copy of our next book club book. Join us in reading Renee (2017) by Jessica Eise. We will discuss it in depth on May 22, 2018.
Special Intro: Star Wars: Heir to the Empire author Timothy Zahn Film at 11: A Quiet Place (2018) BookIT: After On (2017) by Rob Reid Scroll With it: Our patrons got a free copy of our next book club book this week. Join us in reading Renee (2017) by Jessica Eise. We will discuss it in depth on May 22, 2018. Support us on our Patreon page to be a part of the great discussion. Show Notes: http://bit.ly/tms42418
Special Intro: Charlie Adler -- All of the voices on Cow and Chicken Film at 11: Chappaquiddick (2017) BookIT: Let Your Life Speak: Listening for the Voice of Vocation (2009) by Parker J. Palmer Scroll With it: Action Comics #1000 is released tomorrow, Wednesday, April 18 and the end is near...the end of the school year that is! Join us in reading our next book Renee (2017) by Jessica Eise. We will discuss it in depth on May 22, 2018. Show Notes: http://bit.ly/tms41718
Ken Foster finds a familiar face in Colombia, his former co-host, Jessica Eise. Jessica is a Ph.D. student at Purdue University's Brian Lamb School of Communication. She's in Colombia as a part of an international collaborative project with researchers from the area and conducting in-depth interviews with coffee farmers on the subject of climate change and climate fluctuations.
Author and Purdue University communications expert Jessica Eise talks with Farming Show host Dillon Honcoop about the challenges the agricultural community faces in telling its story to an urban public increasingly less connected with where food comes from.
Is there a scarcity of communication in agriculture? And is this breakdown endangering the future of food and agriculture? Join Ken Foster as he explores these questions with authors Jessica Eise and Whitney Hodde as they discuss their book, The Communication Scarcity in Agriculture. Changing demographics, cultural shifts, technological advances and agriculture’s silence, argue Eise and Hodde, all combined to create the perfect storm – a great chasm between those who know, and those who don’t know, agriculture. Listen now to get the whole story!