Instructional Video18:45
TED Talks

Eva Vertes: Meet the future of cancer research

12th - Higher Ed
Eva Vertes -- only 19 when she gave this talk -- discusses her journey toward studying medicine and her drive to understand the roots of cancer and Alzheimer’s.
Instructional Video17:07
TED Talks

TED: What happens when you have a disease doctors can't diagnose | Jennifer Brea

12th - Higher Ed
Five years ago, TED Fellow Jennifer Brea became progressively ill with myalgic encephalomyelitis, commonly known as chronic fatigue syndrome, a debilitating illness that severely impairs normal activities and on bad days makes even the...
Instructional Video12:49
TED Talks

TED: Why I study the most dangerous animal on earth -- mosquitoes | Fredros Okumu

12th - Higher Ed
What do we really know about mosquitoes? Fredros Okumu catches and studies these disease-carrying insects for a living -- with the hope of crashing their populations. Join Okumu for a tour of the frontlines of mosquito research, as he...
Instructional Video12:56
TED Talks

TED: Fighting a contagious cancer | Elizabeth Murchison

12th - Higher Ed
What is killing the Tasmanian devil? A virulent cancer is infecting them by the thousands -- and unlike most cancers, it's contagious. Researcher Elizabeth Murchison tells us how she's fighting to save the Taz, and what she's learning...
Instructional Video4:32
SciShow

What If We Killed All the Mosquitoes?

12th - Higher Ed
With the Zika virus in the news, some people have wondered why we don't just kill them ALL.
Instructional Video4:08
SciShow

Arctic Bison Mummy!

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News explains how Wikipedia has been used to track, and even predict, outbreaks of disease all over the world, and then introduces you to the most complete naturally mummified bison ever found.
Instructional Video20:40
TED Talks

TED: How to end the pandemic -- and prepare for the next | Maria Van Kerkhove

12th - Higher Ed
We will get out of this pandemic, says Maria Van Kerkhove, the COVID-19 Technical Lead of the World Health Organization (WHO). The question is how fast -- and if we'll take what we've learned from the past two years and apply it to the...
Instructional Video6:22
SciShow

What Is Monkeypox? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
While cases of Monkeypox are being found worldwide, the nature of the disease and the science we currently have available keeps concerns from growing.
Instructional Video18:08
TED Talks

Bonnie Bassler: How bacteria "talk"

12th - Higher Ed
Bonnie Bassler discovered that bacteria "talk" to each other, using a chemical language that lets them coordinate defense and mount attacks. The find has stunning implications for medicine, industry -- and our understanding of ourselves.
Instructional Video6:29
TED Talks

TED: How germs travel on planes -- and how we can stop them | Raymond Wang

12th - Higher Ed
Raymond Wang is only 17 years old, but he's already helping to build a healthier future. using fluid dynamics, he created computational simulations of how air moves on airplanes, and what he found is disturbing -- when a person sneezes...
Instructional Video9:53
TED Talks

TED: What you need to know about CRISPR | Ellen Jorgensen

12th - Higher Ed
Should we bring back the wooly mammoth? Or edit a human embryo? Or wipe out an entire species that we consider harmful? The genome-editing technology CRISPR has made extraordinary questions like these legitimate -- but how does it work?...
Instructional Video11:59
SciShow

Long COVID and Post-infection Syndromes: What We Know So Far

12th - Higher Ed
The list of symptoms for “Long COVID” are even more vast than the opinions about the right name for the condition. But the more we learn about it, and how it is similar to other post-infection syndromes, the better we can help those who...
Instructional Video4:33
SciShow

The 22 Year-Old Chemist Who Changed Leprosy Treatment | Great Minds

12th - Higher Ed
A cure for leprosy eluded humans for thousands of years, until the pioneering chemistry work of Alice Ball. With her treatment, patients recovered enough to be discharged from the hospital by the hundreds.
Instructional Video13:59
TED Talks

TED: Lifesaving scientific tools made of paper | Manu Prakash

12th - Higher Ed
Inventor Manu Prakash turns everyday materials into powerful scientific devices, from paper microscopes to a clever new mosquito tracker. From the TED Fellows stage, he demos Paperfuge, a hand-powered centrifuge inspired by a spinning...
Instructional Video17:30
TED Talks

Mitch Zeller: The past, present and future of nicotine addiction

12th - Higher Ed
Tobacco use remains the leading cause of preventable disease and death in the United States, killing more people each year than alcohol, AIDS, car accidents, illegal drugs, murder and suicide combined. Follow health policy expert Mitch...
Instructional Video6:09
SciShow

What Omicron Means for the Pandemic’s Future | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
New variants of SARS-CoV-2 have emerged throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, with the latest one being Omicron. We’re still trying to learn about its effects and what it means for the overall course of the pandemic, but here’s what we know...
Instructional Video12:42
TED Talks

TED: A brain implant that turns your thoughts into text | Tom Oxley

12th - Higher Ed
What if you could control digital devices using just the power of thought? That's the incredible promise behind the Stentrode -- an implantable brain-computer interface that collects and wirelessly transmits information directly from the...
Instructional Video4:14
SciShow

We Can Cure Ebola! (Mostly—Which Is Better Than Rarely) | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
We’ve made a lot of progress recently in curing two deadly diseases that have been difficult to treat!
Instructional Video15:28
TED Talks

TED: How to read the genome and build a human being | Riccardo Sabatini

12th - Higher Ed
Secrets, disease and beauty are all written in the human genome, the complete set of genetic instructions needed to build a human being. Now, as scientist and entrepreneur Riccardo Sabatini shows us, we have the power to read this...
Instructional Video3:43
SciShow

Killing Mosquitoes With a Flip of a Gene

12th - Higher Ed
Eliminating certain species of mosquitoes could make summertime more enjoyable and cut down on the transmission of certain diseases. And scientists are looking into doing this by manipulating a single gene!
Instructional Video4:30
SciShow

Starfish Eyes, Octopus Blood, and Human Evolution in Action

12th - Higher Ed
You're probably aware that nature has come up with some pretty fascinating animal adaptations over the millennia, and in general, the stranger the adaptation, the more important it is to that organism. Today on SciShow News, Hank has...
Instructional Video13:11
TED Talks

Tal Golesworthy: How I repaired my own heart

12th - Higher Ed
Tal Golesworthy is a boiler engineer -- he knows piping and plumbing. When he needed surgery to repair a life-threatening problem with his aorta, he mixed his engineering skills with his doctors' medical knowledge to design a better...
Instructional Video6:00
TED Talks

Max Little: A test for Parkinson's with a phone call

12th - Higher Ed
Parkinson's disease affects 6.3 million people worldwide, causing weakness and tremors, but there's no objective way to detect it early on. Yet. Applied mathematician and TED Fellow Max Little is testing a simple, cheap tool that in...
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

Could the Plague Rise Again?

12th - Higher Ed
How likely is a 21st-century epidemic of the plague? Unlike other diseases, the plague is alive and well in some parts of the world, but scientists and doctors are continuing to develop better treatments.