Science Quickly
A podcast by Scientific American
931 Episodio
-
Do You Need to 'Trip' for Psychedelics to Work as Medicine?
Pubblicato: 08/11/2023 -
The Search for New Psychedelics
Pubblicato: 06/11/2023 -
What Are Ultraprocessed Foods, and Are They Bad for You?
Pubblicato: 01/11/2023 -
These Creatures Are Probably the Closest Thing Nature Has to Real Werewolves
Pubblicato: 30/10/2023 -
The World's Most Frightening Animal Sounds like This
Pubblicato: 27/10/2023 -
The Tale of the Rotifer That Came Back to Life after 25,000 Years in an Icy Tomb
Pubblicato: 25/10/2023 -
Generative AI Models Are Sucking Up Data from All Over the Internet, Yours Included
Pubblicato: 23/10/2023 -
Some Parents Show Their Kids They Care with a Corpse
Pubblicato: 20/10/2023 -
How to Handle This New COVID Season
Pubblicato: 18/10/2023 -
As Arctic Sea Ice Breaks Up, AI Is Starting to Predict Where the Ice Will Go
Pubblicato: 16/10/2023 -
Scientists Argue Conservation Is under Threat in Indonesia
Pubblicato: 13/10/2023 -
A Soggy Mission to Sniff Out a Greenhouse Gas 'Bomb' in the High Arctic
Pubblicato: 11/10/2023 -
This Indigenous Community Records the Climate Change That Is Causing Its Town to Erode Away
Pubblicato: 09/10/2023 -
Journey to the Thawing Edge of Climate Change
Pubblicato: 06/10/2023 -
A Popular Decongestant Doesn't Work. What Does?
Pubblicato: 04/10/2023 -
The State of Large Language Models
Pubblicato: 02/10/2023 -
Song of the Stars, Part 3: The Universe in all Senses
Pubblicato: 29/09/2023 -
Song of the Stars, Part 2: Seeing in the Dark
Pubblicato: 27/09/2023 -
Song of the Stars, Part 1: Transforming Space into Symphonies
Pubblicato: 25/09/2023 -
This Researcher Captured Air from the Amazon in Dive-Bombs--And Found Grim Clues That the Forest Is Dying
Pubblicato: 22/09/2023
Host Rachel Feltman, alongside leading science and tech journalists, dives into the rich world of scientific discovery in this bite-size science variety show.
