Man-made polymers that function like DNA; the role of individual confidence in group decision-making; a parasite that’s sweeping its way through U.S. citrus plants; and more.
Elucidating complex biological processes through quantitative modeling; why women are under-represented in scientific faculty; using virtual animals to predict real animals’ responses to climate change; and more.
Elucidating complex biological processes through quantitative modeling; why women are under-represented in scientific faculty; using virtual animals to predict real animals’ responses to climate change; and more.
Meghna Sachdev chats with Marie Davidian, Professor of Statistics at North Carolina State University, and Thomas A. Louis, Professor of Biostatistics at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, about their editorial ‘Why Statistics?’
Continue reading about Science Policy Podcast - Why Statistics? (9 April 2012)
Meghna Sachdev chats with Marie Davidian, Professor of Statistics at North Carolina State University, and Thomas A. Louis, Professor of Biostatistics at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, about their editorial ‘Why Statistics?’
Continue reading about Science Policy Podcast - Why Statistics? (9 April 2012)
A genetic look at resistance to antimalarial drugs; exploring flexoelectricity in writing electronic memory; the 2011 Nobel Prize rivalry; and more.
New insights into uranium age-dating; elucidating the curved 3D grid of the human brain; replicating psychology experiments; and more.
Foothill College President Judy Miner speaks about her editorial entitled “America’s Community Colleges.”
Continue reading about Science Policy Podcast - Community Colleges (26 March 2012)
Encouraging entrepreneurship in the developing world; the immune system and early microbe exposure; robots that fly like birds; and more.
Encouraging entrepreneurship in the developing world; the immune system and early microbe exposure; robots that fly like birds; and more.