Instructional Video2:31
Science360

Monkey Business

12th - Higher Ed
Most of us can understand how we feel if someone else gets a better reward for doing the exact same work we did. Researchers are studying how these feelings of inequity evolved and if primates have the same sense of inequity. Sarah...
Instructional Video0:30
Next Animation Studio

Monkeys help pave way for prosthetics that can feel

12th - Higher Ed
Researchers at Duke University have made initial steps toward creating artificial limbs that can not only move like real limbs, but also sense touch. Electrodes were implanted into both the motor and sensory areas of the brains of two...
Instructional Video5:04
Science360

World Cup exoskeleton allows paraplegic to walk again

12th - Higher Ed
Built with funding for basic research from the National Science Foundation, Dr. Miguel Nicolelis and the Walk Again Project have built an exoskeleton that will allow paraplegics to walk again. The exoskeleton uses computer algorithms to...
Instructional Video3:46
Brainwaves Video Anthology

Tom Igoe - Physical Computing

Higher Ed
Coming from a background in theatre lighting design, Igoe believes that all interactive technology design should start with the motivations and actions of the people for whom they're designed. His research interests include physical...
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 Video17:37
TED Talks

Lorrie Faith Cranor: What’s wrong with your pa$$w0rd?

12th - Higher Ed
Lorrie Faith Cranor studied thousands of real passwords to figure out the surprising, very common mistakes that users -- and secured sites -- make to compromise security. And how, you may ask, did she study thousands of real passwords...
Instructional Video0:49
Science360

Coronavirus (COVID-19): Why are bat viruses so deadly?

12th - Higher Ed
Coronavirus outbreak raises question: Why are bat viruses so deadly? It’s no coincidence that some of the worst viral disease outbreaks in recent years — SARS, MERS, Ebola, Marburg and likely the newly arrived COVID-19 — originated in...
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,...