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Bill-Mike Got Your Thursday Jumping With Cavs & Mitchell's 40 Points Puts "Losing Spell" On The Wizards 114-106-Cavs PBP Tim Alcorn Recap - Gambling Football Season Recap & Super Bowl-Professor Jim Kahler-CSU - Cleveland Beer-Restaurant News-Cleveland.com Marc Bona - Faith Furry Friends - There is a new deal with ESPN, Fox and Warner Bros. Discovery related to the streaming of play-by-play sports. What does that mean to the NFL or Major League Baseball fan who wants to watch games on an app and what will the “bundle” cost?-NBC Radio Rory O'Neill - NBC Radio Erin Real-reaction to what we know about Tucker Carlson's recorded interview with Russian President Vladimir Putin – and when you can watch it
Jim Kahler - Director – Sport & Entertainment Management Program - Monte Ahuja College of Business ( BU 444) - Cleveland State University recapped the regular football season betting and talked Super Bowl wagers with Bill-Mike.
In this special edition of the Darden Admissions podcast, we share a recent installment in our ongoing ‘Office Hours' faculty spotlight series, a conversation with Professor Jim Naughton. Naughton is an Associate Professor in the Accounting area at Darden, and his research examines how financial, legal, and regulatory institutions shape both financial disclosure and economic choices. We talk with Naughton about why he's passionate about the case method, Darden's approach to Accounting, his interest in ESG disclosures and more.
In this special edition of the Darden Admissions podcast, we share a recent installment in our ongoing ‘Office Hours' faculty spotlight series, a conversation with Professor Jim Naughton. Naughton is an Associate Professor in the Accounting area at Darden, and his research examines how financial, legal, and regulatory institutions shape both financial disclosure and economic choices. We talk with Naughton about why he's passionate about the case method, Darden's approach to Accounting, his interest in ESG disclosures and more.
While the Cosmos office takes a short summer break, we've got some bonus summerlistening for you. This episode is the full interview Imma Perfetto did with Professor Jim McLennan, anadjunct at La Trobe University. A former psychologist, Jim has been involved in bushfire safety for decades. He researched community perceptions of risk following the Black Saturday bushfires in 2009, and also works in bushfire safety education. This conversation features everything Jim has to say on our understanding of risk, howdifficult it really is to defend a home from fire, and the mental capacity that people need to survive extreme situations. Our regularly scheduled podcasts will be back again on January 16, with a brand-newseason on vices and the science behind them. This episode was produced by Ellen Phiddian and edited by Andrew Wyrill. Theme music by Will Berryman. For more science news, visit cosmosmagazine.com and follow us on Instagram@cosmosmagazine Love the show? Let us know by rating and leaving a review on Spotify or Apple Podcasts.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Professor Michael John Williams discusses the history of NATO's enlargement during the Clinton administration and its impact on U.S.-Russia relations with Professor Jim Goldgeier. Goldgeier, a professor of international relations with expertise in contemporary international relations and NATO, provides an in-depth analysis of the political and strategic decisions surrounding NATO's expansion and the subsequent reactions from Russia.Key Topics Discussed:NATO Enlargement in the 1990s: Insights into the Clinton administration's approach to NATO enlargement and its implications.U.S.-Russia Relations: Examination of how NATO expansion influenced the dynamics between the U.S. and Russia, including during the Kosovo crisis.Contemporary Relevance: Reflections on the lasting effects of NATO's enlargement policy on current international relations, particularly in Russia's actions in Ukraine and the broader European security environment.Policy Making and International Relations: Discussion on the complexities of foreign policy decision-making and the various factors influencing these decisions at the governmental level.This episode offers a detailed and nuanced perspective on the historical and ongoing significance of NATO's enlargement, focusing on the intricacies of U.S.-Russia relations and the broader impact on global security and diplomacy.Music is considered “royalty-free” and discovered on Story Blocks.Technical Podcast Support by Jon Keur at Wayfare Recording Co.
PREVIEW: #Philippines: From a longer dialogue, Gordon Chang and Professor Jim Holmes of the Naval War College comment on the #PLANavy escalation of its tactics to chase off the Philippine fisherman from the Spratly Islands -- and is it armed harassment? https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/other/philippines-says-chinese-coast-guard-assaulted-its-vessels-with-water-cannons-for-a-second-day/ar-AA1lgLzQ 1920 USS Mississippi Panama Canal
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What do you think when you read the term ‘green stone'? Do you think emerald? Or jade? Jim Cotter, professor of Geology at the University of Minnesota Morris, is more likely to think Ely and the region's greenstone belts. Every month on Minnesota Now, Professor Cotter tells the story of our state through geology. This month, he spoke to Minnesota Now guest host Emily Bright about all things Ely Greenstone. Use the audio player above to listen to the full conversation. Subscribe to the Minnesota Now podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. We attempt to make transcripts for Minnesota Now available the next business day after a broadcast. When ready they will appear here.
Professor Jim Oleske stops by to discuss all of the ups and downs and twists and turns of the Court's wild and wooly free exercise clause doctrine.
Cleveland Sports Business Professor Jim Kahler from Cleveland State University spoke to Bill Wills-Mike Snyder-Scooter about the Legalization of Regulated Sports Wagering - Pros-Cons - Vegas Impact and Ways to Bet on Sports.
Jim Kenney, fondly known as The Option Professor, is a graduate of Boston College & Don Bosco Prep. He received his options training at the Chicago Board Options Exchange (CBOE) and several major investment firms. Jim has traded thousands and thousands of options contracts in various markets and has educated numerous investors worldwide on the use and risk associated with options. In this episode of How To Trade It, Jim discusses the benefits and risks for both beginners and experienced traders. You don't want to miss it!Subscribe to How To Trade ItEpisode Sponsor:A new type of trading with Kalshi. Check it out to get started today.You'll want to hear this episode, if you are interested in…[01:35] Gold![06:25} Leverage[09:00] Let's talk about risk[10:06] The beauty of the BUY side[13:51] “Out-of-the-money” [18:39] Steps for beginners[19:54] The importance of sizing[22:22] Volatility[24:58] One-on-one training sessions[31:04] Getting your money off the table![32:36] Education is keyThe Draw of OptionsWhen the gold market collapsed, and I shifted to the stock market, I was immediately drawn to options because of the potential that I saw. You could do a lot with them…ride them, buy them, take in the cash, speculate, use them as insurance…I was fascinated and completely hooked.What is an option anyway?An “option” gives you the right to buy or sell a market at a certain price (called the striking point) for a certain period of time (called the expiration date). If you buy an option, you must pay the premium (the cost of an option). If you are buying a call option, you are anticipating that the value of the stock is going up. If you are buying a put option, you anticipate the market going down. Buying a CallHere's an example…you are looking at Apple, and it's trading at $150 per share. If you buy a call option, you are buying the right to purchase the Apple stock for a set amount of time (let's say 90 days), and you will be charged a $5 premium. You get the right, not the obligation, to purchase 100 shares of Apple at $150, that's the striking price, for $5 x 100 shares…so $500 is your risk. That is what you will pay to leverage $15,000 Apple stock ($150 x100, right?) Resources & People Mentioned7 Best Ways to Trade Options (FREE eBook)Connect with Jim Kenney, The Option ProfessorWebsite: https://www.optionprofessor.comYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCaTmVArwmVjenxLVrSQSJrwEmail: optionprofessor@gmail.comIt's Casey thanks for listening to the How to Trade it Podcast. Kalshi is a new kind of trading strategy that's unrelated to all the damage being done in today's markets. It achieves this through Event Trading. Let me explain how it works. With event trading, you profit when you predict an event correctly. . It's that simple.Click Here to get StartedSupport the show
Listen now to hear a perfect synopsis of what is true and significant in nutrition and disease prevention.
In this episode of Partnering Leadership, Mahan Tavakoli speaks with Jim Detert, John L. Colley Professor of Business Administration at the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business and author of Choosing Courage: The Everyday Guide to Being Brave at Work. In this conversation, Jim Detert shares how we can become more courageous by developing our courage capabilities. Jim Detert also shares how leaders can nurture a psychologically safe organizational culture, enabling and encouraging more courageous interactions and decisions at work. Some highlights:-Why attributing courage just to historical figures can be counterproductive -The importance of being more courageous and how to develop our courage muscle-Jim Detert on the benefits of courage at work-How leaders can create a psychologically safe environment that encourages team members to speak up and contribute their best at workMentioned:-Amy Edmondson, Professor of Leadership at Harvard Business School and author of Fearless Organization and Creating Psychological Safety-Vanessa Bohns (Listen to Partnering Leadership conversation with Vanessa Bohns)-Gary Bolles (Listen to Partnering Leadership conversation with Gary Bolles)-Difficult Conversations by Bruce Patton, Douglas Stone, and Sheila Heen-Radical Candor by Kim Scott-Giving Voice to Values by Mary C. Gentile -The Silent Language Of Leaders by Carol GoldmanConnect with Jim Detert:Jim Detert WebsiteChoosing Courage on AmazonJim Detert on FacebookJim Detert on LinkedInConnect with Mahan Tavakoli:https://mahantavakoli.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/mahan/ More information and resources available at the Partnering Leadership Podcast website: https://www.partneringleadership.com/
In this episode of Partnering Leadership, Mahan Tavakoli speaks with Jim Detert, John L. Colley Professor of Business Administration at the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business and author of Choosing Courage: The Everyday Guide to Being Brave at Work. In this conversation, Jim Detert shares how we can become more courageous by developing our courage capabilities. Jim Detert also shares how leaders can nurture a psychologically safe organizational culture, enabling and encouraging more courageous interactions and decisions at work. Some highlights:-Why attributing courage just to historical figures can be counterproductive -The importance of being more courageous and how to develop our courage muscle-Jim Detert on the benefits of courage at work-How leaders can create a psychologically safe environment that encourages team members to speak up and contribute their best at workMentioned:-Amy Edmondson, Professor of Leadership at Harvard Business School and author of Fearless Organization and Creating Psychological Safety-Vanessa Bohns (Listen to Partnering Leadership conversation with Vanessa Bohns)-Gary Bolles (Listen to Partnering Leadership conversation with Gary Bolles)-Difficult Conversations by Bruce Patton, Douglas Stone, and Sheila Heen-Radical Candor by Kim Scott-Giving Voice to Values by Mary C. Gentile -The Silent Language Of Leaders by Carol GoldmanConnect with Jim Detert:Jim Detert WebsiteChoosing Courage on AmazonJim Detert on FacebookJim Detert on LinkedInConnect with Mahan Tavakoli:https://mahantavakoli.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/mahan/ More information and resources available at the Partnering Leadership Podcast website: https://www.partneringleadership.com/
In this episode, I am joined by Professor Jim Trefil. Professor Trefil has worked at GMU for 50 years! We discuss how the university has changed over the years and the importance of science literacy. Check it out! Social Media/Resources: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-trefil-6b501812/ YouTube Video about Professor Trefil: https://youtu.be/maInGutmWtk If you have a question for the podcast call 571-336-6560 or leave a question via this Google Form. Intro/Outro music was provided by Ryan Rosemond. Check out his Soundcloud channel here: https://soundcloud.com/brothersrosemond/albums Please follow Positive Philter: Positive Philter Facebook Page Positive Philter Twitter Positive Philter Instagram If you would like to support the podcast, please consider donating to the Positive Philter Patreon page: https://www.patreon.com/positivephilter
Gasoline, bacon, produce, vehicles, you name it and the cost has most definitely increased in 2022. The word we have all been hearing since we were kids but was never part of the daily conversation until now... inflation. Inflation is at its highest since 1981 and a some guy named Reagan was President. Why? Well the Talk Wealth To Me team sat went to its economics expert Professor Jim Charkins. Jim is the former Executive Director of the California Council on Economic Education (CCEE) and Professor of Economics at California State University, San Bernardino. He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He has taught at the University of Nairobi in Kenya, the Florida State University, Purdue University, and CSUSB as well as fellow California Jump $tart Coalition board member. He has many distinguished awards in the world of economics and once again Jim breaks it down so even we could understand.Support the show (https://www.sdflc.org/help-sdflc/donate/)
The Mineral Rights Podcast: Mineral Rights | Royalties | Oil and Gas | Matt Sands
In this episode I interview Jim Crompton, oil and gas industry expert, professor at the Colorado School of Mines, and owner Reflections Data Consulting, LLC. He is also an instructor at Top Energy Training which helps educate regulators, inspectors, policymakers, and oil & gas industry professionals so that they can develop informed public policy and regulations around complex issues in the oil and gas industry, like orphan wells. We discuss all aspects of the orphan wells issue, from the size of the problem, advancements in technology that may help industry better prioritize the abandoned wells that require attention, what landowners should do if they find an abandoned well on their property, and incentive mechanisms that might help solve this problem. As always, links to the resources mentioned in this episode can be found at mineralrightspodcast.com
Professor Jim Fisher teaches various courses at Rotman, with a big focus on organization design. In this episode of the Rotman podcast, we catch up with Professor Fisher to learn more about his time at the school so far, and his past experiences. He sheds some much needed light on the changing organizations as we come out of the pandemic. We also learn more about his habits, and what makes him tick. Tune-in today to hear more from Professor Fisher!
Professor Jim Patrick is a world authority on cochlear implants and one of its original engineers. Elaine Wziontek interviewed Professor Patrick and asked him about his Cochlear journey, explain how implants work and how they benefit so many thousands of people, including very young children.
While many of us have decided to kick off the new year determined to improve our health and fitness, it is important that we also look at the other ways to improve our overall wellbeing. That is why on this week's show, we will be looking at just that. I'm joined by Clinical Professor of Psychiatry at Trinity College Dublin, Jim Lucey. We discuss how to build resilience, manage stress and how to make wellness obtainable. His book A Whole New Plan for Living, gives readers ten steps to show us how, by maintaining balance and wellness every day, we can achieve overall wellbeing. Jim says wellness is about more than just the absence of disease or illness, it is a more holistic and inclusive approach to health: “The best definition I use [in the book] is called the eight dimensions of wellness in which wellness is seen as having physical, occupational, environmental, intellectual, social, emotional, spiritual and financial aspects.” By breaking up wellness into parts, Jim says it is easier to apply positive changes in our lives: “Wellness is such a huge thing on its own. When you break it up, you can then say ‘well I can do a small thing'.” It's important not to make these new plans too difficult or dramatic though. In order to try and implement some change in your life, Jim says you should make the goal small enough, so you know you can achieve it every day. For more episodes, tips and advice from the show just go to: independent.ie/podcasts/the-re…health-podcast/ And you can get in touch - I'm @KarlHenryPT on Instagram and realhealth@independent.ie. Don't forget to rate, review and follow on Apple and Google Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts from. The Real Health podcast is in association with Laya Healthcare.
In this episode, we bring you the third and final recording from the recent Evidence Based Eating NZ event in Dunedin. In this episode Professor Jim Mann discusses New Zealand's looming diabetes disaster and the role of plant-based diets in tackling this issue. Jim has been a Professor in Human Nutrition and Medicine at the University of Otago and a consultant Endocrinologist in Dunedin Hospital for 25 years. Jim is also director of the Healthier Lives National Science Challenge and the Director of Edgar Diabetes and Obesity Research, the WHO Collaborating Centre for Human Nutrition and Principle Investigator for the Riddet Institute.Over the coming months, Evidence Based Eating NZ will be delivering their final two public lecture events in Auckland and Wellington that will highlight the power of plant-based whole foods to restore health to all New Zealanders. Please visit the Evidence Based Eating NZ website for more details and to register.
This week we talk with Professor Jim van Os and Doctor Peter Groot about their latest study which looks at the effectiveness of tapering strips to help people get off antidepressant drugs. Jim van Os is Professor of Psychiatric Epidemiology and Public Mental Health at Utrecht University Medical Centre, the Netherlands and Peter Groot works with the User Research Centre of UMC Utrecht. They both are involved with the development and study of tapering strips which are pre-packaged, gradually reducing dosage tablets that facilitate tapered withdrawal from psychiatric drugs. In this interview, we discuss their latest research paper which examines tapering strips in real-world use. *** Download Mad in America's new mobile app here. Available for Apple or Android mobile devices, keep up to date as we publish new audio interviews or browse our archive.
OKCU Dean & Professor of Law Jim Roth Talks Environmental Issues | Justice For All Ep.4 | LegalShield Join LegalShield CEO Jeff Bell as he speaks with Jim Roth, Dean, and Professor of Law at OKCU. He’s also a Director and Chair of Phillips Murrah’s Clean Energy Practice Group and a member of numerous professional organizations. Jim helps his energy clients navigate the regulatory environment encompassing clean energy technologies. You won't want to miss their conversation about environmental law and environmental issues, regulations, and more. Watch, listen, and subscribe on YouTube or wherever you get your podcasts. Read more about the LegalShield mission at https://bit.ly/2Wx69uD Head over to our website to learn more about the different ways LegalShield can help you! https://bit.ly/3iaoNko Follow Us on Social Media: --- Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/LegalShield/ -- LinkedIn| https://www.linkedin.com/company/legalshieldofficial --- Twitter | https://twitter.com/legalshield --- Instagram |
How can you drive engagement with wellbeing? The truth is that it's not easy. Luckily, on this episode we're joined by Professor James McKenna, an expert in behavioural change and the promotion of healthy lifestyles. He spoke to Harry Bliss about the best ways to get your people to engage with wellbeing.
Thank you to 4iiii Innovations for supporting the podcast! If you're after a reliable, accurate power meter, then use code 20214iiii-EI20% to receive 20% off any Factory Install power meter purchased through the 4iiii website.2:45 meet University of Utah Associate Professor, Jim Martin5:00 the muscle force-velocity relationship in cycling9:15 the surprising importance of muscle deactivationSlow+heavy weight lifting can slow down deactivation12:30 the ideal crank length questionNo change in maximal power in crank lengths between 145mm and 195mm crank arms27:30 Jim's recommendations for crank length for aero-minded TT and triathlon competitors32:15 the aero / power trade-off36:30 is there any reason not to go for the shortest available crank?38:00 how does crank length affect self-selected cadence?40:00 what about aero drag implications of cadence43:00 the myth of optimal cadence48:15 on pedaling mechanics trainingSelf-selected pedaling technique is the most efficient57:30 the effect on efficiency of non-round chainringsFor the papers that Jim referenced, head to the X3 Training Podcast Page.
Thanks for listening. SUBSCRIBE to our Youtube Channel so you don't miss our video CafeCasts. Drop-in on my LIVE Podcast each morning at 7:00am Central in the DigiCommCafe Chat Group on Telegram in the Voice Chat! Join our DigiCommCafe Community on the Mighty Networks platform, our Facebook alternative. If you're interested in becoming a licensed amateur radio operator, I recommend you use HamtestOnline for your studies and preparations. I used it to get my Extra Class Upgrade. Do you live in a rural location like me? I'll bet you struggle to get reliable internet, don't you? I have finally found an inexpensive service. It's called Visible which is owned by Verizon and uses their network. They only have one plan and it is unlimited everything for $40 a month! If you join the Digicommcafe Party Party Group that drops to $25/month! Request a line at https://visible.com and use my referral code: 3n37nt. Once you have your SIM card installed and registered, go to https://visible.com/p/DigiCommCafe and join our party to drop to $25 a month for unlimited everything! We are very happy with the service. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/digicommcafe/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/digicommcafe/support
Professor Jim Collins talks to us this week about his endeavours in biodetection using Synthetic riboregulators, which have played a significant role in Sars-Cov2 detection. He also brings us through CellNet, which applies network biology to stem cell engineering.If you are interested in helping The Biotech Podcast please take 30 seconds to take the following survey: https://harry852843.typeform.com/to/caV6cMzGPhoto: Lillie Paquette / MIT School of EngineeringJim Collins Lab: https://be.mit.edu/directory/james-j-collins
Jim Fraser is an expert in forensic investigation and has been involved in hundreds of murder investigations as an expert witness and a cold case reviewer. He's now a research Professor in Forensic Science at the University of Strathclyde and a Commissioner on the Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission.Jim's book Murder Under the Microscope: Serial Killers, Cold Cases and Life as a Forensic Investigator is out now: https://www.waterstones.com/book/murder-under-the-microscope/james-fraser/9781786495945Follow Jim:Twitter: https://twitter.com/JFraserForensicWebsite: https://jimfraser.net/Subscribe to The Kempcast Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-kempcast/id1509339264Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0jpyA0_lbm5B7ugrgNEOugInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/rosskemptv/Twitter: https://twitter.com/RossKempFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/RossKempTVProduced by The Chancer Collective: http://thechancercollective.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_chancer_collective/Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChancerCollectMusic by Reteps: http://reteps.net/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This is a special episode with the Current Chair, Past Chair, and Past-Past Chair and Treasurer of the BSPHN! Having had the BSPHN's annual conference in February, this is the perfect time to get some of the founding committee members together.We begin by understanding how each member of the committee found their way to creating the BSPHN and how the collaboration between health psychology, behavioural science and public health is becoming more and more integral.The group discussed the recent virtual BSPHN conference, which centred on behavioural practice within the Covid pandemic. There has also been great interdisciplinary and rapid insight work during the pandemic, which highlights how crucial this is for future work to solve big public health issues. It may also have removed some of the barriers between academia and implementation as the proof of success is clear to see.They also celebrated some of the opportunities of the online format - allowing live chat and conversation between people during presentations so discussions could be had which isn't as possible during a presentation in a room.Is the BSPHN for you?The group talk about why they think can benefit: health psychologists, behavioural scientists, sociologists, those in Public Health looking for insight in applying those things. It is for all levels - trainees, practitioners, policy makers at every level to get skills to use everyday. It's the kind of group they would have wanted when they were starting out or looking to develop or speak to people.Where is the BSPHN going?It's a movement for change which is creating a nurturing relationship between sectors, removing the 'stand-offishness' people might feel in other contexts or groups. They creating supportive pathways and roles between current, sometimes isolated, teams in public health and behavioural insight work.If you are interested in joining or learning more, check out the BSPHN website.Hope you enjoy the podcast - please leave a review wherever you listen.
Vodka distilled from grain and water sourced in a nuclear disaster zone? Normally when alcohol inspires world-changing ideas, they don’t turn out that well, but this University of Portsmouth Professor is clear-headed about how to help kick-start Chernobyl’s economy. Professor Jim Smith explains his findings after years of studying the impact of radiation upon wildlife and the food chain in nuclear exclusion zones. It turns out that people living in semi-evacuated areas aren’t experiencing life-limitations as a result of radiation as much as the limited economic opportunities. In Life Solved, Jim battles the myth of Chernobyl as exacerbated by popular culture, and explains how his safe, good-tasting and high-quality vodka is the first consumer product to come out of the area since the 1986 disaster. He argues that land is now safe to grow crops and plans for 75% of the product's sales to go back into the local community and wildlife conservation projects. It’s his hope that the Chernobyl Spirit Company’s Atomik Vodka will be the first of many innovations to change the fortunes of people living in the area, and showcase the real Chernobyl to the wider world. https://www.port.ac.uk/news-events-and-blogs/podcasts/life-solved/episode-1-atomik-vodka
Vodka distilled from grain and water sourced in a nuclear disaster zone? Normally when alcohol inspires world-changing ideas, they don't turn out that well, but this University of Portsmouth Professor is clear-headed about how to help kick-start Chernobyl's economy. Professor Jim Smith explains his findings after years of studying the impact of radiation upon wildlife and the food chain in nuclear exclusion zones. It turns out that people living in semi-evacuated areas aren't experiencing life-limitations as a result of radiation as much as the limited economic opportunities. In Life Solved, Jim battles the myth of Chernobyl as exacerbated by popular culture, and explains how his safe, good-tasting and high-quality vodka is the first consumer product to come out of the area since the 1986 disaster. He argues that land is now safe to grow crops and plans for 75% of the products sales to go back into the local community and wildlife conservation projects. It's his hope that the Chernobyl Spirit Company's Atomik Vodka will be the first of many innovations to change the fortunes of people living in the area, and showcase the real Chernobyl to the wider world. Points of Interest:Chernobyl Spirit Company: Atomik Vodkahttps://www.atomikvodka.com The First Liquor Grown from Crops in the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-49251471https://allthatsinteresting.com/chernobyl-atomik-vodkaFollow our latest research - https://www.port.ac.uk/research Professor Jim Smith - http://www2.port.ac.uk/school-of-earth-and-environmental-sciences/staff/jim-smith.htmlSolve Magazine- port.ac.uk/solve https://www.port.ac.uk/news-events-and-blogs/magazines/solve-magazine Portsmouth Social Media LinksFacebook - facebook.com/universityofportsmouthInstagram -instagram.com/portsmouthuni/Twitter - twitter.com/portsmouthuniLinkedIn - linkedin.com/school/university-of-portsmouth/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Have we been here before? Well, maybe not exactly... but close enough! That's the argument that today's guest, Professor Jim Morone makes, and why we should look to the past when trying to figure out what lies ahead. History also shows us that demographic changes (like Latinos moving right) and arguments about the merit of divided government have been features of our politics since the very beginning. While the events of today are unprecedented in many ways, boosted by intense tribalism and rampant disinformation, there are examples from our country's past that we can look to understand the democratic institutions that are, as of now, holding strong. BIO: James A. Morone is the John Hazen White professor of political science and public policy at Brown University. He is author of two New York Times notable books and the award-winning Hellfire Nation: The Politics of Sin in American History. He has won university-wide teaching awards five times and been elected to the National Academy of Science, Engineering, and Medicine. His most recent book, the recent Republic of Wrath: How American Politics Turned Tribal, From George Washington to Donald Trump, published in September. The New York Times says it “offers a fresh theory to an already sizable pile of explanations for our dismal politics.” Jim lives in New Hampshire Sponsored By: Breaking Boundaries with Brad Polumbo: Join Brad Polumbo as he interviews top writers, politicians, and thinkers from all across the political spectrum to give you a new perspective you won't find in the mainstream liberal media or right-wing echo chambers. Eables: A Pain Free Holiday with EABLES CBD Topical Freeze Gel, plus an exclusive discount for The Brian Nichols Show listeners. Promo Code: TBNS Support The Brian Nichols Show Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Professor of Computer Information Systems Jim Conley tells us how his life-changing moment happened and how his RVC journey began. He gives us a lesson on networking and programming and how they have changed dramatically since he started teaching, and we also hear some tales about his youthful dreams of becoming a rock star drummer.
Professor Jim van Os von der Universität Utrecht, Professor für Psychiatric Epidemiology und Public Mental Health ist das, was heute als Disruptor bezeichnet wird. Ein Pionier einer neuen Sichtweise auf Psychosen, für diesen Ansatz kämpft er etwa seit Mitte der 2000er Jahre. Doch in jüngster Zeit erhält immer mehr Gehör. Wieso er das Schizophrenie-Konzept für unsinnig und - für Wissenschaft ein böser Vorwurf - sogar für biased, also vorurteilsbeladen hält, auch im Sinne von "nicht hilfreich für die Betroffenen", erzählt er in dieser dritten Spezial-Podcastfolge von "Aus Krisen zum Glück".
OSU Distinguished Professor Jim Phelan Talks: Rhetorical Narrative Theory & Narrative Medicine by Professor Latinx
Professor Jim Hankins of Harvard joins Spencer to discuss the rapid and worrying rise of hyperpartisanship in the United States on the Left and, to a lesser extent, the Right. Professor Hankins, an expert in Renaissance history, draws on ancient Greece and Italy to forecast where we're likely headed from here.
InSight by GovSight's Gillian Brassil interviews Stanford Center for Deliberative Democracy Director Jim Fishkin about how he developed deliberative polling, its impact on polarization and the mission to keep citizenship simplified.
InSight by GovSight. This week, we delve into the coronavirus response on the state and federal level; a plan allowing for higher vehicle emissions; Bloomberg's campaign layoff lawsuit; polls on Trump, Cuomo and Biden's approval rating and SCOTUS delays. We also interview Professor Jim Fishkin, the director of Stanford's Center for Deliberative Democracy and founder of deliberative polling.
Jim is an art critic and journalist for KECT's Artbound, the nation's largest public television station. In addition, he is the chief editor of the academic journal, Visual Inquiry: Learning and Teaching Art. Daichendt holds a doctorate from Columbia University and graduate degrees from Harvard and Boston universities. He serves as the dean of the College of Arts and Humanities and professor of art history at PLNU. Topics: Oceanside Museum of Arts, Sidewalk Activism Show, Papa Smurf and Contagion, Pandemic Pups, Barcelona, Did Antoni Gaudí take mushrooms?, La Segrada Familia, Teachr's crying game, Jim's upcoming book on Robbie Conal.
University of Tennessee Professor Jim Fordyce (PhD, UC Davis) joins us to discuss ecology, ecological thinking, their importance, and why it matters to us all. Great discussion.Dr. Fordyce's UT page: https://eeb.utk.edu/people/james-fordyce/Contact Michael:1. ccerppodcast@aol.com2. http://www.goldams.com 3. https://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-gold-2883921/ 4. https://www.facebook.com/groups/1152144714995033/Join us at CCERP on Facebook! https://www.facebook.com/groups/1152144714995033/Show notes:1. Ecologya. https://www.esa.org/about/what-does-ecology-have-to-do-with-me/b. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecologyc. https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/ecology/2. Wolves of Yellowstone/How Wolves Change Riversa. Most have seen this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oSBL7Gk_9QUb. This has more information and starts with the work of hydrologist Bob Beschta ("why predators are important for ecosystems": https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vF4F7yvMlAMc. This mentions Beschta: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2011/12/111221140710.htmd. A Beschta bio on PBS: https://www.pbs.org/strangedays/episodes/predators/experts/bio_beschta_bob.html3. Local Floraa. edible and medicinal: https://www.foragingtexas.comb. https://npsot.org/wp/houston/native-plant-info/c. http://counties.agrilife.org/harris/files/2011/05/houstonplants.pdf4. The Importance of Waspsa. https://www.independent.co.uk/environment/in-defence-of-wasps-why-squashing-them-comes-with-a-sting-in-the-tale-a7144306.htmlb. https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-41042948c. https://www.newsweek.com/most-people-hate-wasps-theyre-just-important-bees-11266165. The Importance of Snakesa. https://www.pbs.org/wnet/nature/the-reptiles-snakes-saving-snakes/2911/b. https://news.cornell.edu/stories/2018/02/snakes-act-ecosystem-engineers-seed-dispersalc. https://savethesnakes.org/s/why-snakes/6. The Sea Otter, Starfish, Kelp, and more: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hRGg5it5FMI7. The critter I was trying to think of in the podcast was the Little Brown Skink (this link also has a link to the video I took): https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/107913458. Passionflower (aka Passiflora): a. Purple: https://www.wildflower.org/plants/result.php?id_plant=pain6b. Yellow: https://www.wildflower.org/plants/result.php?id_plant=palu29. The Gulf Fritillarya. https://texasinsects.tamu.edu/gulf-fritillary/b. https://www.inaturalist.org/taxa/49150-Agraulis-vanillae10. The Kaibab Deer Crash (just some of the info and analysis; I looked at this last year, but don't recall if I have the latest, most comprehensive analysis available)a. https://www.biologycorner.com/worksheets/kaibab.htmlb. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaibab_Plateauc. https://www.wafwa.org/Documents%20and%20Settings/37/Site%20Documents/Working%20Groups/Mule%20Deer/Workshop%20Proceedings/Deer/1976%20Logan%20UT%20Mule%20Deer%20Decline%20in%20the%20West/1976-Mule%20Deer%20Decline%20in%20the%20West.pdfd. http://www.ndow.org/uploadedFiles/ndoworg/Content/public_documents/Wildlife_Education/Publications/muledeer.pdfe. https://books.google.com/books?id=MHHtDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA184&lpg=PA184&dq=kaibab+mule+deer+crash&source=bl&ots=H2iF4k-LmC&sig=njBusrCtEGEURDjZ1hEUzvK6kQQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwinur6W3O3bAhUs5YMKHaANDXA4ChDoAQhXMAk#v=onepage&q=kaibab%20mule%20deer%20crash&f=false
With less than a year until the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, the conversation on riding in heat and humidity continues. Otago University’s Professor of Exercise and Environmental Physiology, Jim Cotter, gives the lowdown on how to get the most out of your training when the sun just won’t quit. Matt Rowe, Greg Henderson and Kristin Armstrong take on how beneficial warm-ups truly are, as well as how to earn Drops the smart way. They also dive into Greg’s old habit of training in the bathroom. Want to know why? Tune in to Episode 35!
There’s less than a year till the 2020 Tokyo Olympics. Summer heat and humidity won’t make for a fun time, but Professor of Exercise and Environmental Physiology Jim Cotter at Otago University discusses how to maximize your efforts alongside the Power Up crew—including his former student: our very own Greg Henderson! 3x Olympic Gold Medalist Kristin Armstrong also weighs in on everything from the psychological impact of pre-cooling to electrolytes and the Gatorade era.
Professor Jim McManus has over thirty years experience in the public health industry. This all started as a volunteer and a service provider driven by a passion for psychology and a desire to be socially useful.He is now the Director of Public Health at Hertfordshire County Council and vice President of the Association of Directors of Public Health. He is a Chartered Psychologist, British Psychological Society Fellow and co-founder and chair of the Behavioural Science and Public Health Network. Jim is also a visiting professor at both the London School of Economics and the University of Hertfordshire and completed six years as deputy chair of the National Institute for Health Research Public Health Advisory Board.Obviously Jim has a lot of experience across the public health world, but he manages to communicate this in the first RWBS podcast in an interesting and humorous way.
April 28, 2019: Heritage Sunday. Guest Speaker professor Jim Scheibel.Scripture readings: 1 Peter 4:10; Galatians 5: 13-14.
This week on MIA Radio, we interview Professor Jim van Os. Professor van Os is Chairman of the Division of Neuroscience at Utrecht University Medical Centre, Utrecht, The Netherlands, and Visiting Professor of Psychiatric Epidemiology at King’s College, Institute of Psychiatry in London. He trained in Psychiatry in Casablanca, Bordeaux and the Institute of Psychiatry and the Maudsley Royal Hospital in London. We last spoke with Jim for the podcast in August 2017 and this time we focus on a recent paper written by Jim and co-authors that was published in the journal World Psychiatry in January 2019. The paper is entitled ‘The diagnosis evidence-based group-level symptom-reduction model as organizing principle for mental health care. Time for change?‘ In this episode we discuss: What the diagnosis evidence-based group-level symptom-reduction model is and how it currently informs mainstream mental healthcare. How mental health funding and mental health professional partners work together to monitor and assess the effects of current evidence-based interventions. How this curative medical model is attractive, but often fails to work for patients. That the focus on biological, brain-based diseases and symptoms conflicts with the experience of people who are attempting to develop a narrative view of their difficulties and suffering. That the paper is an attempt to start a discussion about building a synthesis between the diagnosis, symptom-based medical world and the lived experience of individual people. How the creation of specific and discrete diagnoses has reinforced the symptom-led approach to mental health and has also necessitated the stratification of doctors into silos of expertise. How Jim favors a spectrum-based approach over a fixed diagnosis and that an example is autism spectrum disorder as described in DSM V. The limitations of using ‘target symptom reduction’ as an outcome measure for mental health. That symptom reduction can be beneficial in the short-term but is not a good long-term measure of recovery. That the paper attempts to make clear how important individual experiences are and the need to be sensitive to the existential domain, saying “restoration of health is not the goal, it is the means to enable a person to find and pursue meaningful goals, accordingly, the person’s existential values become central”. That the evidence suggests that any treatment effect or improvement is often down to meaningful interaction rather than the specific expertise of the treating professional. That, in many countries, we still see a huge gulf between mental healthcare and social care which remain separate and remote from each other and that this separation is not how the person experiences their world. The importance of including lived experience in the evidence base, particularly because randomized controlled trials, considered the gold standard of evidence, are often not conclusive in the field of mental health. That, in mental health, evidence shows that 30% to 40% of the response is down to placebo and the expectation of being helped. That the desire is to make the existential domain the primary lens through which to view human experience and to respond to mental or emotional suffering. That, arguably, ‘love is the most powerful evidence-based treatment in mental health’. Relevant links: Professor Jim van Os The evidence-based group-level symptom-reduction model as the organizing principle for mental health care: time for change? Tedx: Maastricht, Connecting to Madness ISPS Liverpool Conference Jim Van Os Keynote Address Schizophrenia does not exist © Mad in America 2019
This is Event 3 of Victorian Fabians' Autumn Series on 'What do we mean by Equality?' The first two events of our Autumn series explored the effects and degree of economic inequality, as well as the renewed concept of 'class' as revealed through social and cultural inequality in Australia. Our next event will look at how to address the consequences of inequality, now and in future. What will be the developments in society that might lead to increased or diminished future social and economic inequality? What societal and policy changes, both to the nature of work and the provision of social services such as education, health and welfare, are needed to redress the inequality imbalance? Are our institutional responses up to the task? What sort of governing institutions and policies are needed to promote equality? Jim Stanford Jim Stanford is an economist and the Director of the Centre for Future Work, based at the Australia Institute. He is a Canadian who has relocated to Australia, much to our benefit! In Canada, he served for over 20 years as an economist and Director of Policy with Unifor, Canada’s largest private-sector trade union (formerly Canadian Auto Workers). In Australia he has pursued interests in precarious and insecure work, the effects of automation on work, the strategic importance of public sector work, and how governments could support better wages and working conditions for all.
Dang and Yidu interview Dr. Jim Liew, Professor at John Hopkins School of Business and Senior advisor at BlockMedX. Dr. Liew is an expert on machine learning and is going to be teaching a blockchain course at John Hopkins. We talk about why you should learn to look beyond haters, challenges to blockchain adoption, ICO regulation, how knocking down walls for data access will spur innovation, especially in healthcare, the place of AI in predictive health, and where BlockMedX fits into that. Hosted by: Dang Du & Yidu Wang Show notes by: Dang Du Links: blockmedx.com linkedin.com/in/jim-kyung-soo-liew-ph-d-1424ab2 Follow A Bit Cryptic Podcast: Twitter: twitter.com/keepitcryptic Medium: medium.com/@abitcryptic Steemit: steemit.com/@abitcryptic If you what you heard, please leave us a 5-star review and share the podcast!
On MIA Radio this week, Akansha Vaswani and Dr Peter Groot discuss Tapering Strips, a novel and practical solution for those who wish to taper gradually from a range of prescription drugs. Akansha is a doctoral candidate at the University of Massachusetts, Boston and her dissertation research will involve interviewing psychiatrists in the US about their experiences helping people stop or reduce their dose of antidepressant medication. Dr Groot is a researcher and geneticist who has led the development of Tapering Strips. In a recent study, published in the journal Psychosis, Dr Groot, together with Jim van Os, reported on the results of their trial which recorded the experiences of people using Tapering Strips. In this episode we discuss: What motivated Peter to be interested in and study the effects of coming off antidepressants drugs. That the observational study reported in Psychosis was based on questionnaires completed by users who had made use of tapering medication (Tapering Strips) to slowly reduce their medication dosage. How the questionnaire asked about withdrawal symptoms and the ease of tapering using the strips and whether people had tried to withdraw previously using conventional methods. That Tapering Strips offer a flexible and necessary addition to standard doses that have been registered by the pharmaceutical companies. That current guidelines advise doctors to let patients start on the same recommended dose of an antidepressant, without taking into account large differences that exist between patients (weight, sex, etc). How we would be surprised if, when we came to buy shoes or clothes, our choices were limited to only a few sizes, but we don’t question this limitation with our medications. How current guidelines are based on group averages and do not help a doctor to determine how a given individual patient should taper. How shared decision making, in which the patient and the doctor work in a collaborative way, can make tapering easier. How shared decision making has contributed to the success of the use of tapering medication and the availability of tapering medication makes shared decision making practically possible. How shared decision and the availability of tapering medication makes life easier for the doctor as well as for the patient. How working initially as a volunteer to develop Tapering Strips brought Peter into contact with Professor Jim van Os and the User Research Centre of Maastricht University. That, in the study, 1,750 questionnaires were sent, with 1,164 received, a response rate of 68%. Of those returned, 895 said their goal was to taper their antidepressant drug completely and 70% succeeded in this goal. That the median time taken for people in the study to withdraw from Venlafaxine was 56 days or two Tapering Strips. There were a variety of reasons reported for those who didn’t reach their goal, including the fact that some of the patients were still tapering. Other reasons reported for not withdrawing completely were due to the occurrence of withdrawal symptoms, relapse of an original condition or even issues related to reimbursement of the cost of the tapering medication by insurance companies. That 692 patients reported that previous attempts to withdraw had failed in comparison to the successful use of Tapering Strips. That people using multiple drugs should only ever taper one medication at a time and in discussion with a medical professional. That Peter’s goal for Tapering Strips is to make sure that people that want to withdrawal gradually can access Tapering Strips and have the cost reimbursed by health insurers. That Tapering Strips were not developed to get everyone off their antidepressant drug but to enable patients to get to a dosage that provides benefit for them (which can be zero) while minimising adverse effects. That people outside the Netherlands can get Tapering Medication, but only with a prescription signed by a certified doctor, instructions and receipt/order forms can be found at taperingstrip.org. That Tapering Strips are also available for antipsychotics, sedatives (benzodiazepines), analgesics and for some drugs other than psychotropics, like some anti-epileptic drugs, which are currently being developed. That Peter warns against tapering by taking doses on alternating days, particularly for drugs like paroxetine or venlafaxine that have a short metabolic half-life, because this will lead to more severe withdrawal symptoms. Relevant Links: Tapering Strips (website of the User Research Centre of Maastricht University) Treatment guidelines for the use of tapering strips Summary of the tapering study in the journal Psychosis (blog) Tapering Strips study from the journal Psychosis Peter Groot interviewed on Let's Talk Withdrawal Claire shares her experience with Tapering Strips (YouTube) Petition requesting use of Tapering Strips in the UK Mad in America report on Tapering strips study Prime Time for Shared Decision Making Mandatory Shared Decision Making © Mad in America 2018
This week! Professor Jim returns to show us how we can be right about a thing by being right about a thing, Uncle Mark wants us all to be wary of strangers with yellow cravats, and Uncle Dan gets Uncle Mark all sweaty with the gayest part of the Bible yet!
This Week, Uncle Doug gets up on his Rameumptom to yell about big buildings, Professor Jim stops by to see what's fallen through the cracks and Uncle Dan shows us one simple trick for for getting pan-fresh man-flesh every time.
On this week's show! Uncle Doug joins Uncle Mark and Uncle Dan to explore the fine line between prophecy and infuriating garbage, Professor Jim returns to discuss what the matter with scarecrows, and activist Marissa Alexa McCool walks us through our first day of Trans 101! Find Marissa and follow the work she is doing at: @RisMcCool on Twitter http://www.incitingincident.libsyn.com/ http://www.spreaker.com/show/2240735
This week! Professor Jim returns to keep us from getting stuck in a stupid loop, we meet some people who, we can not stress enough are not Muslims, and the cofounder and spokesman of The Satanic Temple, Lucien Greaves joins us to talk about how Satanism is as American as apple pie! Find Lucien and support the work he is doing at: https://thesatanictemple.com/ https://greyfaction.org/
Get comfortable, because this week Uncle Mark and Uncle Dan are gonna have the 'Talk', we slip all over the slope with Professor Jim and despite our best efforts we all end up in Hell.
This week! We chat with Professor Jim about Hanlon and his razor, we learn some sad shit about yet another way people can be the wrong color in the wrong place, and Rabbi Gruber tells us about his exodus.
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This episode deviates from our typical weekly interview, so I'm posting it on the weekend as special bonus episode! Professor Nagle identifies with the catholic tradition. The first half of our discussion is his religious journey away from catholicism to agnosticism and back again. It's important to note that Professor Nagle uses the term deconversion in a broader sense than I do. For this podcast I define deconversion in the sense of a person leaving Christianity altogether and becoming atheist or agnostic. Professor Nagle uses the term deconversion to define various religious transitions in life. The second half of the interview he discusses current research on deconversion and the focus of his particular research, including how religious teaching changes in response to our cultural climate? He is currently working on his doctorate at Fordham University in New York. Show Notes: Versions of Deconversion: Autobiography and the Loss of Faith by John Barber https://www.amazon.com/Versions-Deconversion-Autobiography-Studies-Religion/dp/0813915465 @jamesMnagle
Jim Liew, assistant professor of finance at Johns Hopkins Carey Business School Summary: Guest host Dan Rasmussen talks to Professor Jim Liew about momentum investing and crowd sentiment on the podcast. Professor Liew discusses this strategy, both the academic side and its relevance for asset management.
Prof. Jim Morrone of Brown University’s Taubman Center discusses his latest poll looking at how Rhode Islanders feel going into the April presidential primaries
Economic History Society annual conference, on 28 March 2015. The panel discussed Thomas Piketty’s book, Capital in the Twenty-First Century. Chaired by Professor Sir Rick Trainor, Rector of Exeter College, Oxford, the panel comprised Professor Martin Daunton, Head of the School of the Humanities and Social Sciences at Cambridge, Avner Offer, Chichele Professor of Economic History at Oxford, Jim Tomlinson, Professor of Economic and Social History at the University of Glasgow, and Dr Keith Tribe, independent scholar.
Professor Jim al-Khalili talks to Cern physicist Tejinder Virdee, about the search for the elusive Higgs boson, also known as the "God particle". Last December, scientists working at the Large Hadron Collider caught a tantalising glimpse of the Higgs; but they need more data to be sure of its existence. Twenty years ago, Tejinder set about building a detector within the Large Hadron Collider that's capable of taking 40 million phenomenally detailed images every second. Finding the Higgs will validate everything physicists think they know about the very nature of the universe: not finding it, will force them back to the drawing board. By the end of the year, we should know one way or the other.
Remembered with Love" - biology professor Jim Miller
In this podcast, Professor Jim van Os discusses the importance of gene-environment interactions in the understanding of the aetiology of psychiatric disorders. He talks about the influence of environmental factors as the causes of psychiatric disorders as well as the genetic basis for psychiatric disorder, and discusses significant laboratory research findings as evidence for their interactions.