Instructional Video2:37
MinuteEarth

Epigenetics: Why Inheritance Is Weirder Than We Thought

12th - Higher Ed
Epigenetics: Why Inheritance Is Weirder Than We Thought
Instructional Video6:13
Bozeman Science

The Hierarchy of Life

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains how biology is ordered in the hierarchy of life. He first of all describes how emergent properties appear as you move to more inclusive systems. The then describes life at the following levels; atom, molecule,...
Instructional Video5:59
SciShow

Can Rock and Roll Replace Your Insulin?

12th - Higher Ed
Could rock music one day replace your insulin injections? Scientists are pioneering music-controlled cells that could provide the perfect dose of insulin for type 1 or type 2 diabetes with just a bit of music. Specifically, Queen's "We...
Instructional Video7:03
TED Talks

TED: What if a simple blood test could detect cancer? | Hani Goodarzi

12th - Higher Ed
Catching cancer at its earliest stages saves lives. But in a body made up of trillions of cells, how do you spot a small group of rogue cancer cells? Biomedical researcher Hani Goodarzi discusses his lab's discovery of a new class of...
Instructional Video11:39
SciShow

We May Be Able To Grow Human Organs In Animals. Should We?

12th - Higher Ed
Seventeen people in the US die /every day/ waiting for an organ transplant, usually a kidney. One approach is to grow extra kidneys in pigs, an idea known as xenotransplantation. We'll look at two recent milestones, as well as the...
Instructional Video13:47
Bozeman Science

The Endocrine System

12th - Higher Ed
Paul Andersen explains the major elements in the endocrine system. He explains how glands produce hormones which target cells. He differentiates between water soluble and lipid soluble hormones. He then describes the hormones and actions...
Instructional Video5:47
SciShow

The Science Behind Sleep & Love Potions

12th - Higher Ed
Sure, potions of invisibility and immortality may be a little hard to come by in the real world, but there's some legit science behind less fantastic ones. Historical sleep and love potions are grounded in science, even if some of the...
Instructional Video6:52
SciShow

The Ice Bucket Challenge Actually Worked

12th - Higher Ed
The Ice Bucket Challenge raised millions of dollars for research into treatments for ALS, or Lou Gehrig's disease. Where did that money go? Into characterizing new genes that we may be able to target with chemotherapy drugs like paclitaxel!
Instructional Video7:29
Amoeba Sisters

Genetic Engineering

12th - Higher Ed
Explore an intro to genetic engineering with The Amoeba Sisters. This video provides a general definition, introduces some biotechnology tools that can be used in genetic engineering, and discusses some related vocabulary (such as...
Instructional Video14:56
SciShow

How We Get Sick in Space and How to Recover | Compilation

12th - Higher Ed
No one likes being sick, but can you imagine catching a bug while hurling through space? Turns out, this is an issue that many space agencies have worked to study and mitigate.
Instructional Video7:36
SciShow

The Woman Who Saved the World

12th - Higher Ed
On her way to winning the 2023 Nobel Prize for her pioneering work on mRNA vaccines, Katalin Karikó lived a life made for the big screen.
Instructional Video13:58
PBS

Can Viruses Travel Between Planets?

12th - Higher Ed
With the global pandemic of Covid 19 still encompassing the world, we are generally not big fans of viruses right now. But we sure are thinking about them a lot. That’s right, even astrophysicists are pondering these bizarre little...
Instructional Video12:52
TED Talks

TED: The world's rarest diseases — and how they impact everyone | Anna Greka

12th - Higher Ed
Physician-scientist Anna Greka investigates the world's rarest genetic diseases, decoding the secrets of our cells through "molecular detective work." She explains how her team is using new, advanced technology to solve decades-old...
Instructional Video7:54
SciShow

Chemo Sucks. Science Is Changing That

12th - Higher Ed
We use chemotherapy because it works, but no one has ever come home from chemo treatment and gone "That was fun!" Let's look at the new targeted therapies and personalized treatments for cancer that doctors are developing for clinical use.
Instructional Video6:51
SciShow

A Needle So Tiny It Injects Into A Single Cell

12th - Higher Ed
It may be possible to create a needle so small it can inject a vaccine into a single cell. But it's not the product of a medical device company. It's part of something we often think of as making us sick.
Instructional Video8:16
SciShow

How Does Chickenpox Turn Into Shingles?

12th - Higher Ed
You might know that chickenpox and shingles are both caused by the same virus, varicella zoster. Here's why the symptoms, and even the vaccines, are different the second time around.
Instructional Video5:10
SciShow

Why HPV Is Cancer In One Convenient Package

12th - Higher Ed
HPV isn't the only virus that causes cancer, but it's one of the best at it. Here's what we've learned about this supervillain of a pathogen, and how to stop it.
Instructional Video6:52
SciShow

How PET Scans See Cancer

12th - Higher Ed
When someone gets a PET scan to detect tumors and how far a cancer has spread, that machine is actually detecting sugar. Because cancer has a sweet tooth, and this phenomenon, called the Warburg effect, may help us develop new cancer...
Instructional Video7:46
SciShow

Half of All Plants Are Invisible

12th - Higher Ed
If you see an acorn sprout under an oak tree, you're seeing that tree's grandchild. Here's why half of all higher plants are invisible, and why it works for them.
Instructional Video6:45
SciShow

Does COVID Mess With Your DNA?

12th - Higher Ed
As more and more are infected with COVID-19, there's a growing group of people who have what's called Long COVID, meaning they still have symptoms for weeks or months after getting sick. While we still don't know for sure the cause of...
Instructional Video6:51
SciShow

Can We Treat Alzheimer's With Period Blood?

12th - Higher Ed
From diabetes to Alzheimer's, there's a lot that we hope to be able to treat using stem cell therapies. But the stem cells we use tend to be hard to come by. But it turns out there's a new source of stem cells that has researchers...
Instructional Video2:18
MinuteEarth

Why Do Heart Attacks Cause *Arm* Pain?

12th - Higher Ed
When the brain receives pain from an internal organ, it often projects the pain in the wrong place because of the way sensory nerve paths converge
Instructional Video3:10
MinuteEarth

The Disease You Will Never Survive

12th - Higher Ed
A simple mis-folding in a certain brain protein causes a disease for which we have no cure.
Instructional Video3:34
SciShow

Plants That Keep Themselves Warm

12th - Higher Ed
Sometimes, plants do unexpected things. Like control their own body temperature.