Instructional Video5:32
SciShow

This Video Game Software Helps Us Do Paleontology

12th - Higher Ed
The same technology that helps you rack up kills in your favorite FPS games also helps paleontologists solve million-year-old mysteries. Thanks to Dr. Anne Kort for helping us with this video!
Instructional Video3:03
SciShow

The Most Beautiful Science of 2012

12th - Higher Ed
Michael Aranda substitutes for Hank again in this week's News to tell you about the winners of the 2012 Visualization Challenge, an annual competition run by the journal Science that selects the most elegant and educational graphics,...
Instructional Video12:29
TED Talks

TED: How video games can level up the way you learn | Kris Alexander

12th - Higher Ed
Video games naturally tap into the way we learn: they focus our attention and track our progress as we head toward a clear goal. Kris Alexander, a professor of video game design and passionate gamer himself, thinks the same elements...
Instructional Video3:03
SciShow

The Most Beautiful Science of 2012

12th - Higher Ed
Michael Aranda substitutes for Hank again in this week's News to tell you about the winners of the 2012 Visualization Challenge, an annual competition run by the journal Science that selects the most elegant and educational graphics,...
Instructional Video10:51
Crash Course

The Pok_mon Phenomenon: Crash Course Games

12th - Higher Ed
Today we're going to do something a little bit different and take everything we've learned so far and apply it to a case study on (arguably) the biggest game franchise in the world: Pok_mon. Now Pok_mon, like a select few other games...
Instructional Video13:05
Crash Course

Let's Make an AI that Destroys Video Games

12th - Higher Ed
Today we create a game and then build an AI to destroy it. Our game is called TrashBlaster, and it’s like Asteroids but with trash in the ocean, and instead of a spaceship John Green Bot is wielding a laser. We'll use machine learning...
Instructional Video16:19
TED Talks

TED: How games make kids smarter | Gabe Zichermann

12th - Higher Ed
Can playing video games make you more productive? Gabe Zichermann shows how games are making kids better problem-solvers, and will make us better at everything from driving to multi-tasking.
Instructional Video4:21
MinutePhysics

The Portal Paradox

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about the Portal Paradox - a paradox in the video game Portal (and Portal 2) regarding whether or not a companion cube passing through a moving portal plops out of the other end with no speed (velocity, momentum), or shoots...
Instructional Video9:25
TED Talks

TED: Everyone can participate in building the metaverse | Sutu

12th - Higher Ed
The promise of the metaverse extends far beyond digital spaces -- it can transform and enrich how we experience the material world, too. From video games that bring communities together to digital art that collides with physical spaces,...
Instructional Video11:26
TED Talks

TED: Esports, virtual Formula 1 and the new era of play | James Hodge

12th - Higher Ed
As the line between the physical and digital worlds blur, so does the line between real-world and virtual sports. Reframing our understanding of competition, data-driven technologist James Hodge explains how far esports (like virtual...
Instructional Video17:54
TED Talks

Daphne Bavelier: Your brain on video games

12th - Higher Ed
How do fast-paced video games affect the brain? Step into the lab with cognitive researcher Daphne Bavelier to hear surprising news about how video games, even action-packed shooter games, can help us learn, focus and, fascinatingly,...
Instructional Video11:56
Bozeman Science

Using Game Design to Improve My Classroom

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how he is using elements of game design to improve his AP Biology class. The entire class revolves around Moodle. Students complete levels to acquire experience points and move up the leader board
Instructional Video3:36
SciShow

Foldit Gamers FTW

12th - Higher Ed
Hank tells us how some gamers are outperforming sophisticated computer programs to help solve the puzzle of protein folding and to assist scientists in finding better treatments for HIV/AIDS, cancer, and Alzheimer's.
Instructional Video12:09
TED Talks

Shyam Sankar: The rise of human-computer cooperation

12th - Higher Ed
Brute computing force alone can't solve the world's problems. Data mining innovator Shyam Sankar explains why solving big problems (like catching terrorists or identifying huge hidden trends) is not a question of finding the right...
Instructional Video7:03
MinutePhysics

Time Travel in Fiction Rundown

12th - Higher Ed
For ages I’ve been thinking about doing a video analyzing time travel in fiction and doing a comparison of different fictional time travels – some do use wormholes, some relativistic/faster than light travel with time dilation, some...
Instructional Video6:55
Be Smart

Is Your Brain Too Old For Video Games?

12th - Higher Ed
Is Your Brain Too Old For Video Games?
Instructional Video8:54
PBS

Can Video Games Become the Next Spectator Sport?

12th - Higher Ed
As our South Korean friends can confirm, video games can most definitely be a spectator sport. But will they ever catch on in a huge way in the good ol' U.S. of A?
Instructional Video12:56
TED Talks

TED: What's it like to be a robot? | Leila Takayama

12th - Higher Ed
We already live among robots: tools and machines like dishwashers and thermostats so integrated into our lives that we'd never think to call them that. What will a future with even more robots look like? Social scientist Leila Takayama...
Instructional Video4:25
SciShow

Video Games Hack Your Brain (In a Fun Way)

12th - Higher Ed
Most of us can probably think of a time when we were enjoying a video game and then suddenly...it's 2 am. And that may not be entirely your fault! Video games are designed with elements that suck you in and put you in a state of flow,...
Instructional Video13:44
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: The Mice of Riddle Place & Bindi the Bearded Dragon

12th - Higher Ed
This week on the SciShow Talk Show Andrij Holian and Paulette Jones talk about the development of a new video game designed for middle school students in order to increase their interest in STEM careers. Then Jessi from Animal Wonders...
Instructional Video13:44
TED Talks

TED: How AI can bring on a second Industrial Revolution | Kevin Kelly

12th - Higher Ed
The actual path of a raindrop as it goes down the valley is unpredictable, but the general direction is inevitable, says digital visionary Kevin Kelly -- and technology is much the same, driven by patterns that are surprising but...
Instructional Video8:59
TED Talks

Neil Burgess: How your brain tells you where you are

12th - Higher Ed
How do you remember where you parked your car? How do you know if you're moving in the right direction? Neuroscientist Neil Burgess studies the neural mechanisms that map the space around us, and how they link to memory and imagination.
Instructional Video7:59
Bozeman Science

Nucleic Acids

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains the importance and structure of nucleic acids. He begins with an introduction to DNA and RNA. He then describes the important parts of a nucleotide and shows how they are connected through covalent and hydrogen...
Instructional Video6:08
Be Smart

Sonic the Hedgehog Is Why You Have Thumbs!

12th - Higher Ed
The human hand, with its multi-talented thumb, might be man's greatest tool. But did you know we can trace that thumb, and the hand and arm it's connected to, all the way back to a 375 million-year-old fish named Tiktaalik? This week I...