Instructional Video16:08
Be Smart

How Blind People See With Sound… with @MollyBurkeOfficial!

12th - Higher Ed
I met Molly Burke a few months ago. She’s awesome. I absolutely love what she’s done on YouTube to bring awareness to living with disability, and turning it into ability. And her guide dog Gallop is awesome too! When Molly and I first...
Instructional Video5:51
TED Talks

TED: Blindness isn't a tragic binary -- it's a rich spectrum | Andrew Leland

12th - Higher Ed
When does vision loss become blindness? Writer, audio producer and editor Andrew Leland explains how his gradual loss of vision revealed a paradoxical truth about blindness -- and shows why it might have implications for how all of us...
Instructional Video9:16
SciShow

Will You be Iron Man?

12th - Higher Ed
We have the technology! We can rebuild...ourselves! Human interface technologies like Google Glass, robotic prosthetics, and bionic eyes have the potential to help people recover lost abilities, but also to grant us new abilities. Will...
Instructional Video9:16
SciShow

Will You be Iron Man?

12th - Higher Ed
We have the technology! We can rebuild...ourselves! Human interface technologies like Google Glass, robotic prosthetics, and bionic eyes have the potential to help people recover lost abilities, but also to grant us new abilities. Will...
Instructional Video5:39
SciShow

When Blindsight is 20 20

12th - Higher Ed
We tend to think of physical blindness like a blindfold, but it’s much more complicated than that, and in some instances, people who have lost their vision can still "see" subconsciously.
Instructional Video10:10
Crash Course

Russia, the Kievan Rus, and the Mongols Crash Course World History

12th - Higher Ed
In which John Green teaches you how Russia evolved from a loose amalgamation of medieval principalities known as the Kievan Rus into the thriving democracy we know today. As you can imagine, there were a few bumps along the road. It...
Instructional Video6:33
TED Talks

Andrew Bastawrous: Get your next eye exam on a smartphone

12th - Higher Ed
Thirty-nine million people in the world are blind, and the majority lost their sight due to curable and preventable diseases. But how do you test and treat people who live in remote areas, where expensive, bulky eye equipment is hard to...
Instructional Video11:46
TED Talks

TED: What reality are you creating for yourself? | Isaac Lidsky

12th - Higher Ed
Reality isn't something you perceive; it's something you create in your mind. Isaac Lidsky learned this profound lesson firsthand, when unexpected life circumstances yielded valuable insights. In this introspective, personal talk, he...
Instructional Video18:45
TED Talks

Oliver Sacks: What hallucination reveals about our minds

12th - Higher Ed
Neurologist and author Oliver Sacks brings our attention to Charles Bonnet syndrome -- when visually impaired people experience lucid hallucinations. He describes the experiences of his patients in heartwarming detail and walks us...
Instructional Video20:35
TED Talks

TED: Can we create new senses for humans? | David Eagleman

12th - Higher Ed
As humans, we can perceive less than a ten-trillionth of all light waves. "Our experience of reality," says neuroscientist David Eagleman, "is constrained by our biology." He wants to change that. His research into our brain processes...
Instructional Video17:24
TED Talks

Thulasiraj Ravilla: How low-cost eye care can be world-class

12th - Higher Ed
India's revolutionary Aravind Eye Care System has given sight to millions. Thulasiraj Ravilla looks at the ingenious approach that drives its treatment costs down and quality up, and why its methods should trigger a re-think of all human...
Instructional Video11:36
TED Talks

Chris Downey: Design with the blind in mind

12th - Higher Ed
What would a city designed for the blind be like? Chris Downey is an architect who went suddenly blind in 2008; he contrasts life in his beloved San Francisco before and after -- and shows how the thoughtful designs that enhance his life...
Instructional Video18:20
TED Talks

Pawan Sinha: How brains learn to see

12th - Higher Ed
Pawan Sinha details his groundbreaking research into how the brain's visual system develops. Sinha and his team provide free vision-restoring treatment to children born blind, and then study how their brains learn to interpret visual...
Instructional Video4:28
SciShow

How to Write Directly on the Brain

12th - Higher Ed
Scientists have found a way to hack the visual process and generate shapes directly on the brain, so a person can see them without using their eyes.
Instructional Video14:35
TED Talks

TED: The dangers of willful blindness | Margaret Heffernan

12th - Higher Ed
Gayla Benefield was just doing her job -- until she uncovered an awful secret about her hometown that meant its mortality rate was 80 times higher than anywhere else in the US. But when she tried to tell people about it, she learned an...
Instructional Video13:32
TED Talks

TED: The internet's accessibility problem -- and how to fix it | Clive Loseby

12th - Higher Ed
The internet provides access to knowledge for billions across the world, but how accessible is it really? Website accessibility advocate Clive Loseby sheds light on why many parts of the web are closed off to those with disabilities --...
Instructional Video11:16
TED Talks

TED: A new way to fund health care for the most vulnerable | Andrew Bastawrous

12th - Higher Ed
In 2011, eye surgeon and TED Fellow Andrew Bastawrous developed a smartphone app that brings quality eye care to remote communities, helping people avoid losing their sight to curable or preventable conditions. Along the way, he noticed...
Instructional Video4:39
TED Talks

TED: A rare galaxy that's challenging our understanding of the universe | Burcin Mutlu-Pakdil

12th - Higher Ed
What's it like to discover a galaxy -- and have it named after you? Astrophysicist and TED Fellow Burcin Mutlu-Pakdil lets us know in this quick talk about her team's surprising discovery of a mysterious new galaxy type.
Instructional Video14:23
SciShow

Cyborg Eyes and Stumpy the Dumpy Tree Frog: SciShow Talk Show #11

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow graphics guy Louey Winkler discusses LED contact lenses and the implications of enhancing and assisting human beings with technology, and then attempts to stump Hank with a physics riddle. Jessi from Animal Wonders shares Stumpy...
Instructional Video3:56
SciShow

The Bizarre Link Between Blindness and Schizophrenia

12th - Higher Ed
You might have heard that supposedly, no one who was born blind has ever been diagnosed with schizophrenia. But if that’s true, how those two conditions so closely related to each other?
Instructional Video4:49
TED Talks

TED: Clues to prehistoric times, found in blind cavefish | Prosanta Chakrabarty

12th - Higher Ed
TeD Fellow Prosanta Chakrabarty explores hidden parts of the world in search of new species of cave-dwelling fish. These subterranean creatures have developed fascinating adaptations, and they provide biological insights into blindness...
Instructional Video4:02
MinutePhysics

The Man Who Corrected Einstein

12th - Higher Ed
This video is about how Russian physicist Aleksandr Fridman corrected Albert Einstein about the expansion of the universe. Einstein thought that general relativity implied that space had to be static and unchanging, but he had made a...
Instructional Video4:44
TED-Ed

TED-Ed: Are there universal expressions of emotion? | Sophie Zadeh

Pre-K - Higher Ed
The 40 or so muscles in the human face can be activated in different combinations to create thousands of expressions. But do these expressions look the same and communicate the same meaning around the world regardless of culture? Is one...
Instructional Video10:12
TED Talks

TED: What if we eliminated one of the world's oldest diseases? | Caroline Harper

12th - Higher Ed
Thousands of years ago, ancient Nubians drew pictures on tomb walls of a terrible disease that turns the eyelids inside out and causes blindness. This disease, trachoma, is still a scourge in many parts of the world today -- but it's...