Nature Extra: Nobel News
Science gets glitzy in October each year as the Nobel Prizes are awarded. Find out who took home the prizes for Medicine or Physiology, Physics and Chemistry. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - October 6, 2016 Category: Science Authors: Springer Nature Limited Source Type: podcasts

Nature Extra: Nobel News
Science gets glitzy in October each year as the Nobel Prizes are awarded. Find out who took home the prizes for Medicine or Physiology, Physics and Chemistry. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - October 6, 2016 Category: Science Authors: Springer Nature Limited Source Type: podcasts

TWiV 367: Two sides to a Coyne
Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Dickson Despommier, Alan Dove, Rich Condit, and Kathy Spindler Guests: Carolyn Coyne and Coyne Drummond Two Coynes join the TWiV overlords to explain their three-dimensional cell culture model of polarized intestinal for studying enterovirus infection.   Links for this episode Carolyn and placentas on TWiV 193 Three-dimensional cell culture model (mSphere) Bioreactor video (JoVE) Neurovirologist Richard T. Johnson, 84 (Hopkins and virology blog) Tardigrade HGT disputed (BioRxiv) Exaptation of archaeal virus capsid protein from Cas4 (Biol Dir) Image credit Letters read on TWiV 367 This ep...
Source: This Week in Virology - MP3 Edition - December 13, 2015 Category: Virology Authors: Vincent Racaniello Source Type: podcasts

" Heart Beast " -- The Discovery Files
For over 30 years, Terrie Williams has been studying exercise physiology in wild animals: African lions and wild dogs, dolphins and whales, coyotes and mountain lions, as well as a few human athletes. She has put mountain lions on treadmills and strapped heart-rate monitors onto big-wave surfers at Mavericks. These studies have given Williams, a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at UC Santa Cruz, a unique perspective on exercise and health. (Source: The Discovery Files)
Source: The Discovery Files - October 2, 2015 Category: Science Authors: National Science Foundation Source Type: podcasts

Emesis and Antiemetics: Aspects of Physiology and Neuropharmacology
The Best Practices and Emerging Treatment Strategies in the Management of Chemotherapy-Induced Nausea and Vomiting (CINV) symposium was held in Chicago, Illinois on May 31, 2015 as an adjunct to the A... Author: imedex Added: 07/16/2015 (Source: Oncology Tube)
Source: Oncology Tube - July 16, 2015 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: podcasts

Nature Extra: Nobel News
Science gets glitzy in October each year as the Nobel Prizes are awarded. Find out who took home the prizes for Medicine or Physiology, Physics and Chemistry. (Source: Nature Podcast)
Source: Nature Podcast - January 26, 2015 Category: Science Authors: Nature Publishing Group Source Type: podcasts

Exercises for the cancer patient - full video
Carol Harrison, senior exercise physiology technologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center, guides the cancer patient through exercises that will strengthen the abdominal & back, chest and legs. For mor... Author: mdanderson Added: 07/23/2014 (Source: Oncology Tube)
Source: Oncology Tube - July 23, 2014 Category: Cancer & Oncology Source Type: podcasts

TWiV 220: Flu watches the clock while T7 gets a CAT scan
Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Rich Condit, Alan Dove, and Kathy Spindler Vincent, Rich, Alan, and Kathy discuss regulation of influenza virus replication by splicing, and the bacteriophage T7 random walk. Links for this episode: Influenza splicing regulates infection (Cell Reports) Reporting on flu splicing from NPR, BBC, NBC Splicing of influenza RNA 8 (jpg) Bacteriophage T7 remodeling during infection (Science) Cryo-ET of intact cells (Trends Cell Biol) T7: The Movie (YouTube) Cry0-EM vs Cryo-ET (Wikipedia) Virus caught in the act (e! Science N...
Source: This Week in Virology - MP3 Edition - February 17, 2013 Category: Virology Authors: Vincent Racaniello Source Type: podcasts

Dr. Jeremy Berg on the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (Video)
(Source: NIGMS Multimedia)
Source: NIGMS Multimedia - October 5, 2009 Category: Biomedical Science Authors: National Institute of General Medical Sciences Source Type: podcasts

Shyness- is it a biological problem?
Today I review a study that suggests shyness may have its roots in brain physiology and may not just due to our environmental experiences. (Source: The Shrink Is In)
Source: The Shrink Is In - January 8, 2007 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: DrGurr Source Type: podcasts

SCCM Pod-30 CCM: Hospital Mortality Assessment
Jack Zimmerman, MD, FCCM, discusses his article in the May 2006 edition of Critical Care Medicine, "Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (or APACHE IV): Hospital Mortality Assessment for Today's Critically Ill Patients." Dr. Zimmerman is professor emeritus of anesthesia and critical care medicine at George Washington University Medical Center in Washington, D.C. (Critical Care Medicine Volume 34, Number 5, May 2006 pp 1297-1310) (Source: SCCM PodCast - iCritical Care)
Source: SCCM PodCast - iCritical Care - May 18, 2006 Category: Intensive Care Authors: The Society of Critical Care Medicine (SCCM) Tags: Medicine Source Type: podcasts