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TED is a small nonprofit devoted to Ideas Worth Spreading -- through TED.com, our annual conferences, the annual TED Prize and local TEDx events.
TED
TED: Ideas worth spreading
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How many organs could you donate and remain alive? How many planet Earths could fit inside the Sun? How high is a giraffe's blood pressure? Why is the sea blue? To find out, Ask The Naked Scientists!
Ask the Naked Scientists PODCAST
The podcast about the functions, opportunities and consequences of the brain. Each episode concentrates on a special topic, served with mind science news and some music.
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In the first podcast from The Clinical Teacher, Editor in Chief Steve Trumble talks to Professor Bob McKinley (Keele University School of Medicine, UK) , about the article: ‘Teachers: Improving the content of feedback’, which he co-authored with Valerie Williams and Catherine Stephenson, and features in the September 2010 issue of The Clinical Teacher. Bob and Steve discuss the notion that feedback is the clinical teacher’s greatest teaching tool and why British medical students are far less satisfied with the feedback they receive compared to their international peers.
Read the paper: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1743-498X.2010.00380.x/abstract
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We look at the latest news from the stars, planets and other heavenly bodies. Plus interviews with professional astronomers and the answers to your space science questions.
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Although inclusive education of disabled children is now an accepted practice, it is often challenged by negative peer attitudes. Researchers at Tolouse University undertook an interventional study aimed at improving students’ attitudes towards their disabled peers.
Dr Peter Baxter, Editor-in-Chief of Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, spoke to one of the authors of the study, Dr Emmanuelle Godeau (Research Unit on Perinatal Epidemiology, Tolouse University) and to Professor Peter Rosenbaum (Professor of Pediatrics and Developmental Pediatrics, McMaster University) who wrote a commentary on this study.
Related articles:
'Improving attitudes towards children with disabilities in a school context: a cluster randomized intervention study' by Emmanuelle Godeau et al. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-8749.2010.03731.x/pdf
'Improving attitudes towards children with disabilities in a school context' by Peter Rosenbaum. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-8749.2010.03723.x/pdf
OCTOBER 2010: Improving attitudes towards children with disabilities in a school context
The LEaP podcast is a series of interviews with leading scholars in the fields of law, economy and philosophy. It is brought to you by the Centre for the Study of European Contract Law (CSECL) at the University of Amsterdam. Research by the CSECL is multidisciplinary; it involves a wide range of subjects in the fields of law, economics and philosophy. The LEaP series aim is to make current academic discourse readily available to a wide audience.
Music by: C.J.W. Baaij
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Principal investigator Dr Gustavo Saposnik discusses the first stages of the Effectiveness of Virtual Reality Exercises in Stroke Rehabilitation (EVREST) Trial Protocol.
Read the full article in International Journal of Stroke: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/cgi-bin/fulltext/123235937/PDFSTART.
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The Naked Scientists - interactive science, medicine and technology weekly live radio show with Cambridge University's Dr Chris Smith. We strip down science and lay the facts bare answering your science questions, interviewing top scientists and catching up with the latest top science news stories.
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ZooGoer is published bimonthly by Friends of the National Zoo (FONZ) to promote its aims and programs, and to provide imforamtion about FONZ activities to its members, volunteers, and others interested in the purposes of FONZ.
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The discussants are Dr Peter Baxter, Editor of Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, Dr Steven Bachrach, the author of the article, and Dr Jay Shapiro. Dr Bachrach is co-director of the cerebral palsy program at the Department of Pediatrics, Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children and Nemours Children’s Clinic, Wilmington and also part of the pediatric faculty of Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. Dr Shapiro is the director of the Osteogenesis Imperfecta Program at Kennedy Krieger Institute and also a Professor in the Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland.
Related article: Decreased fracture incidence after 1 year of pamidronate treatment in children with spastic quadriplegic cerebral palsy STEVEN J BACHRACH, HEIDI H KECSKEMETHY, H THEODORE HARCKE, JOBAYER HOSSAIN PDF: http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1469-8749.2010.03676.x/pdf
September 2010: Pamidronate treatment and fracture rate in children with cerebral palsy
The Journal of Pathology Podcast Archive hosts a range of podcasts that enhance and complement articles available in the pages of the Journal and its website. They provide an informal insight and guide to the journal and its content in a conversational style. As well as summarizing recent content, the Journal podcasts provide interviews, commentary and comment on matters of interest to pathologists and those working in the broad area of understanding disease.
Podcasts from The Journal of Pathology
Talking Robots is a podcast featuring interviews with high-profile professionals in Robotics and Artificial Intelligence for an inside view on the science, technology, and business of intelligent robotics. It is brought to you by the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems (LIS) at the EPFL in Lausanne, Switzerland. New episodes are released every two weeks, on Fridays at 9am GMT. For more information, click the robot or visit http://lis.epfl.ch/podcast
Talking Robots - The Podcast on Robotics and Artificial Intelligence
Each year, the TED (Technology, Entertainment, Design) conference hosts some of the world's most fascinating people: Trusted voices and convention-breaking mavericks, icons and geniuses. These podcasts (also available in audio format) capture the most extraordinary presentations delivered from the TED stage.
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Conversations about the science of a meaningful life, from UC Berkeley’s Greater Good Science Center. Host Michael Bergeisen interviews leading researchers and thinkers on the roots of compassion, happiness, morality, and more. Provocative, enlightening, and inspiring.
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This activity is intended to assist physicians in understanding how to manage patients who have hereditary angioedema.
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Join host chiefMD, a second year medical student, as he gives his perspective on being a student doctor in today's society and what it takes to become a physician. Healthcare reform, social media, and a variety of other factors play into people's decision to heed the call of becoming a physician. If you're thinking about taking the long but exciteful journey of becoming a physician or perhaps just want to know what goes on behind the scenes then listen in.
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