Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

How Celestial Bodies Affect Life in the Ocean

12th - Higher Ed
Life on Earth has always been shaped by other bodies in space, and life in our oceans is especially susceptible to interactions that have huge effects on life as we know it!
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

Groups That Chant Together, Stay Together

12th - Higher Ed
If you've ever been part of a huge crowd, like at a sporting event, you've probably seen people clap, sing, and chant together in sync. How do big groups of individuals all manage to do the same thing at the same time, even when there's...
Instructional Video5:35
SciShow

Can You Use Electricity to Supercharge Your Brain?

12th - Higher Ed
tDCS devices claim to stimulate your brain and have psychological benefits, but do they really work?
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

Will Video Games Eventually Replace Your Therapist?

12th - Higher Ed
You might have heard that video games are bad for you, but psychologists think they might be a useful therapeutic tool for improving some people’s mental health.
Instructional Video5:49
SciShow

You Can Inherit Mitochondrial DNA from Both Parents! | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Earlier this week, a team of researchers announced that they’d made a discovery about how we inherit mitochondrial DNA from our parents that could change what we know about not only disease inheritance, but human history as a whole.
Instructional Video5:18
SciShow

3 Secrets About Ancient Earth, Hidden in Marine Fossils

12th - Higher Ed
Fossils can provide clues to the conditions that ancient species lived in, like what their environments felt like, how deep in the water some species lived, or even how long the Sun was out!
Instructional Video5:30
SciShow

Why People Keep Eating Tide Pods

12th - Higher Ed
Recently, you may have noticed a lot of memes on the Internet joking about eating Tide Laundry Pods. It was just a bit of absurdist fun until videos and stories started popping up of people actually eating them and experiencing some...
Instructional Video12:24
SciShow

6 Mysteries Geologists Can’t Explain — Yet!

12th - Higher Ed
Explaining strange Earth geology is often straightforward — combine a volcanic eruption a dash of erosion, and boom, you’ve got a striking cliff! But not all the features on this planet are so easy to figure out. From the ground randomly...
Instructional Video2:14
SciShow

Can Achy Joints Really Predict the Weather?

12th - Higher Ed
Can your grandma really tell when a storm is coming based on her knee? Scientists have been looking into this tale for years, and either way, you should probably still call her just because.
Instructional Video7:55
SciShow

Does Getting COVID-19 Make You Immune to It? | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
Like a common cold or a cold sore, would it be possible to get a reinfection of COVID-19? Would we be able to build up long-term resistance to it?
Instructional Video5:24
SciShow

How African Dust Feeds Florida's Crops

12th - Higher Ed
Massive amounts of dust manage to travel all the way across the ocean, creating some powerful and surprising global effects!
Instructional Video5:08
SciShow

Counting Species out of Thin Air

12th - Higher Ed
Recent proof-of-concept studies showed that researchers were able to survey animals in an area simply by vacuuming up DNA in the air.
Instructional Video4:38
SciShow

We Totally Missed a Different Kind of Dementia for Decades

12th - Higher Ed
A key part of treating a disorder, is identifying what it's not. It turns out what we thought was one form of dementia may be multiple problems.
Instructional Video9:24
SciShow

Without Volcanoes, Earth Might be Dead

12th - Higher Ed
You might think of plate tectonics as destructive since it's the ultimate force behind earthquakes, tsunamis, and volcanic eruptions. But the slow movement of our planet's surface does a lot more than shake things up now and then. Some...
Instructional Video2:22
MinuteEarth

We don't know what a tree is (and this video won't tell you)

12th - Higher Ed
It turns out that defining what is and isn't a “tree” is way harder than it seems.
Instructional Video3:43
SciShow

The Strange Blind Fish of the Lower Congo River

12th - Higher Ed
The lower Congo River is treacherous, turbulent, and very deep. While that might seem like an inhospitable habitat, hundreds of species of fish thrive there, including some that are really bizarre!SciShow is supported by Brilliant.org.
Instructional Video9:56
SciShow

P-values Broke Scientific Statistics—Can We Fix Them?

12th - Higher Ed
A little over a decade ago, a neuroscientist found "significant activation" in the neural tissue of a dead fish. While it didn't prove the existence of zombie fish, it did point out a huge statistical problem.
Instructional Video5:05
SciShow

Why People Are Sending Themselves Hate Messages

12th - Higher Ed
You might be familiar with the concept of self-harm, but it isn’t just physical. As it turns out, people can harm themselves through the anonymity of the internet.
Instructional Video5:24
SciShow

We Might Be Totally Wrong About Alzheimer’s

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists found that the prevailing hypothesis of how the Alzheimer’s disease starts might be wrong, and some viruses could be the culprit.
Instructional Video12:36
SciShow

SciShow Talk Show: Ecology Project International & Serpentina the Rubber Boa

12th - Higher Ed
This week on the SciShow Talk Show Haley Hanson joins us from Ecology Project International to talk about how they bring high school students into the field to help with research and learn about ecology and conservation. Then Jessi from...
Instructional Video4:34
SciShow

Nobels 2016 How Your Cells Stave Off Starvation

12th - Higher Ed
It’s Nobel Prize week 2016, which means it’s basically science Christmas!
Instructional Video5:27
SciShow

Brain Hacks to Make Your Food Taste Better

12th - Higher Ed
It’s common knowledge that our sense of taste is tied to our sense of smell, right? But our brains are complex and taste is also tied to our senses of touch, sight, and even hearing.
Instructional Video4:27
SciShow

Whiteflies Destroy Crops Thanks to a Stolen Plant Gene | SciShow News

12th - Higher Ed
The silverleaf whitefly – a very prolific pest – is the only insect that we know of with a functional stolen plant gene.
Instructional Video10:15
SciShow

How Machines the Size of Molecules Could Change the World

12th - Higher Ed
Future advances in engineering may come from chemistry. From molecular motors to salt-shaker-drug-deliverers, the future looks small.