Sinopsis
Three-Minute Egghead is a podcast about research at UC Davis, produced by Andy Fell in UC Davis Strategic Communications.
Episodios
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Monkey See, Monkey Learn
28/08/2017 Duración: 04minSouth American capuchin monkeys are curious animals that readily learn new skills. UC Davis graduate student Brendan Barrett talks about his work studying how these monkeys learn from each other.
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Synestia, a New Planetary Object
15/06/2017 Duración: 03minUC Davis planetary scientist Sarah Stewart proposes a new kind of planetary object, a giant spinning mass of vaporized rock called a "synestia."
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Science at the Root
15/06/2017 Duración: 03minPlant biologist Siobhan Brady talks about the science of roots, and how important they are for plants to survive and thrive.
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What's Happening To Neanderthal DNA?
15/06/2017 Duración: 04minNeanderthals were our closest relatives, and bits of their DNA live on in our genome. UC Davis evolutionary biologist Graham Coop talks about his work on the fate of Neanderthal DNA in the modern human genome.
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Astronomers see faintest, furthest galaxy
15/06/2017 Duración: 04minUC Davis astronomer Marusa Bradac is looking for the first galaxies that appeared in the universe. She's using the Hubble Space Telescope and the Keck telescopes in Hawaii, as well as a gigantic lens in the sky to spot objects emerging from the fog of the cosmic dark ages.
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A computer model as a crystal ball for E. coli
15/06/2017 Duración: 04minEven the simplest organisms are hard to predict. Computer scientist Ilias Tagkopoulos. UC Davis Genome Center, talks about the model he and colleagues have built for the bacterium E. coli. The model could act as a 'crystal ball' that helps researchers design better experiments. Tagkopoulos says this is an exciting time to be on the interface of biology, computer science and engineering.
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Sunflower Clocks
15/06/2017 Duración: 03minGrowing sunflowers follow the sun during the day, and turn back overnight so they face the rising sun in the morning. UC Davis biologists now show how this is controlled through the plant's circadian clock.
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Parasitic amoeba nibbles on cells
15/06/2017 Duración: 04minUC Davis microbiologist Katy Ralston has discovered that a parasitic amoeba kills other cells by taking small bites or "nibbling." This turns out to be a fundamental process in cell biology.
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Pollinators forage on bitter nectar
15/06/2017 Duración: 03minNectar attracts bees and other pollinators, but it isn't always sweet. A UC Davis scientist is looking at how microbes that live in nectar alter it, and what role these microorganisms play in the dance between flowers and pollinators.
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Do Zebra stripes confuse biting flies?
15/06/2017 Duración: 03minThe function of zebra stripes has puzzled people for millennia. UC Davis biologists put to the test one theory -- that the stripes confuse biting flies by disrupting polarized light.
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Digital archaeology and multitasking by coders
15/06/2017 Duración: 02minHow many projects can you work on without losing focus? UC Davis computer scientists dig through programming website GitHub to find answers about how we manage tasks over time.