The Scientist's Podcast



If you cannot hear this podcast, download the mp3 here.

To view The Scientist's Podcast, you'll need to download and install QuickTime which is freely available from Apple.
Archive  [Subscribe]


The Scientist Podcast - January 2008
[First aired 01 January 2008]

The Scientist Podcast - The biological mechanisms of climate change; and the greening of laboratories

The Week - December 12 2007
[First aired 12 December 2007]

The week - Lewis Cantley talks about a kinase's role in cancer and diabetes; a scientist's strategy to defeat superbugs

The Week - December 5 2007
[First aired 05 December 2007]

The week - One company's ambitions to mass produce bladders; resolving conflicts of interest at FDA; and report finds FDA's science inadequate

The Week - November 28 2007
[First aired 28 November 2007]

The week - A scientist's attempt to catalog species by DNA barcoding turns up surprises -- and criticism; and vote for your favorite laboratory Web site.

The Week - November 21 2007
[First aired 21 November 2007]

The week - The value of race-based clinical trials; neurogenesis, the brain-machine interface and highlights from The Scientist's November issue that focused on neuroscience

The Week - November 14 2007
[First aired 14 November 2007]

The week - Genetic mechanism for fragile X syndrome revealed; microbiology, meet the mystery novel.

The Week - November 07 2007
[First aired 07 November 2007]

The week - Winning iGEM innovations; how an overload of free information might lead to an open access downfall

The Week - October 31 2007
[First aired 31 October 2007]

The week - When patient reported outcomes work and don't work in clinical trials

The Week - October 24 2007
[First aired 24 October 2007]

The week - American Chemical Society compensation causes complaints; sex-linked genes play a role in addiction; scientist uncovers new heart anatomy in Drosophila; and Panama's ecology faces big changes ahead

The Week - October 17 2007
[First aired 17 October 2007]

The week - Satiety and reward are linked by the hormone pyy; the extensive misconduct of a Norwegian researcher continues to surface; big pharma sues US patent office; and what it takes to be the best place to do a postdoc

The Week - October 10 2007
[First aired 10 October 2007]

The week - Senior MIT faculty member Frank Douglas discusses discrimination and his resignation; innate immunity follows migrating humans

The Week - October 03 2007
[First aired 03 October 2007]

The week - Two of our readers debate the role that scientists play in framing science

The Week - September 26 2007
[First aired 26 September 2007]

The week - Author Dan Greenberg discusses capitalism in academic science; salmonella in space become deadlier; Congress gets concerned about biosafety; and researchers develop hair cells on demand

The Week - September 19 2007
[First aired 19 September 2007]

The week - 2007 Lasker Award winner Ralph Steinman talks about his groundbreaking research; and scientists debate what do to about tenure

The Week - September 12 2007
[First aired 12 September 2007]

The week - How the accidental discovery of lysophospholipid receptor happened and has since affected lipidology; Univ New Hampshire offers to reinstate banned professor

The Week - September 05 2007
[First aired 05 September 2007]

The week - Anthony Fauci on where the NIH aims to take AIDS research; bacterial gene jumping affects hosts' evolution

The Week - August 22 2007
[First aired 22 August 2007]

The week - The effect of stress on adolescent brains; neuroscientist censured for misconduct denies wrongdoing

The Week - August 08 2007
[First aired 08 August 2007]

The week - Can systems biology be accepted in the world of drug discovery?

The Week - August 01 2007
[First aired 01 August 2007]

The week - Condoleezza Rice appoints new science advisor; The Scientist's editors discuss scientific bias

The Week - July 26 2007
[First aired 26 July 2007]

The week - NIH considers science in space; what makes an institution one of the Best Places to Work; and why even the best institutions find room for improvement

The Week - July 18 2007
[First aired 18 July 2007]

The week - Improving on animal models to interpret disease; Paris Hilton scares mice, kind of

The Week - July 11 2007
[First aired 11 July 2007]

The week - Whether it makes economic sense to fund science; politicians ask for more open access in science

The Week - July 04 2007
[First aired 04 July 2007]

The week - Hookworm vaccine clinical trials start in rural Brazil; FDA accused of violating First Amendment rights; and hunger protein links stress and obesity

The Week - June 27 2007
[First aired 27 June 2007]

The week - What it takes to go green in the laboratory; and the CDC researcher embroiled in a recent drug-resistant tuberculosis case

The Week - June 20 2007
[First aired 20 June 2007]

The week - The roots of Philadelphia's cloning contributions run deep; results from The Scientist's online experiment about stem cell nuclear transfer; Congress begins the budget process; a software bug causes retraction; deCODE settles lawsuit

The Week - June 13 2007
[First aired 13 June 2007]

The week - The molecular links between addiction and other psychological disorders; and the neurobiology of an hallucinogenic drug

The Week - June 06 2007
[First aired 06 June 2007]

The week - Deputy editor Ivan Oransky describes his adventures in pygmy rabbit habitat; the end of Elsevier's arms shows and NIH chimp breeding

The Week - May 30 2007
[First aired 30 May 2007]

The week - The Scientist's editors discuss ways science can exploit the web; DNA breakage and beta cell regeneration are in the news

The Week - May 23 2007
[First aired 23 May 2007]

The week - Careers editor Edyta Zielinska and executives from Amgen talk perks; and whether federal regulations on dietary supplements violate free speech

The Week - May 16 2007
[First aired 16 May 2007]

The week - Feature writer Andrew Holtz talks about the passionate pursuit of oncolytic viruses; Chickens in the city grab attention; and debate reignites over the value of case reports

The Week - May 09 2007
[First aired 09 May 2007]

The week - Feature writer Ishani Ganguli discusses whether fMRI can become the next lie detector; Tanner Edis talks about his new book "An Illusion of Harmony: Science and Religion in Islam"

The Week - May 02 2007
[First aired 02 May 2007]

The week - Feature writer Brendan Borrell and scientist Peter Hudson discuss disease dynamics; an opera sings evolution; and how to uncook an egg

The Week - April 25 2007
[First aired 25 April 2007]

The week - Katherine Eban discusses the US government's disappointing bioterror surveillance initiative; author and geneticist Bryan Sykes talks about his latest book on the surprising history of English genes; and another high-profile research paper is retracted

The Week - April 18 2007
[First aired 18 April 2007]

The week - Philip Mackowiak's book diagnoses the death of Edgar Allen Poe and other famous people; scientists boycott Reed Elsevier; and The Scientist announces winners of the Life Science Industry Awards

The Week - April 11 2007
[First aired 11 April 2007]

The week - Dan Zimmerman explains his funding solution to the vaccine conundrum; author Linda Lear describes the scientific life of Beatrix Potter; and a plagiarism blame game in the news

The Week - April 04 2007
[First aired 04 April 2007]

The week - The Scientist's editors give PR a piece of their minds; and evolutionary biology and religion shake hands in David Sloan Wilson's latest book

The Week - March 28 2007
[First aired 28 March 2007]

The week - An ecologist describes what might be a unifying theory in biology; why we need your help with a new online stem cell feature; and Governor Spitzer and CIRM are in the news.

The Week - March 21 2007
[First aired 21 March 2007]

The week - Scientists tell us how they would build the perfect body parts, from reshaping the eye to self-powered ankles; and Wayne Grody tells us about his life as a scientific advisor in Hollywood.

The Week - March 14 2007
[First aired 14 March 2007]

The week - Staff writer Andrea Gawrylewski talks with Pritpal S. Tamber about trends in publication retractions and why scientific misconduct is hard to track; and editor Edyta Zielinska hears from two post-docs about industry life.

The Week - March 07 2007
[First aired 07 March 2007]

The week - Staff writer Kerry Grens has the week's news and talks to Sarah Leibowitz about food addiction and neural chemistry.

The Week - February 28 2007
[First aired 28 February 2007]

The week - Editor-in-chief Richard Gallagher and deputy editor Ivan Oransky give a behind-the-scenes look at the March issue, from a decade-old publishing controversy to retraction vocabulary; and senior editor Brendan Maher checks in from a Keystone conference on reproduction.

The Week - February 21 2007
[First aired 21 February 2007]

The week - Senior editor Brendan Maher talks with Don Brown about the early days at the Carnegie Institution; contributor Ishani Ganguli gives an update on a tenure-or-bust hunger strike; and Andrea Gawrylewski has the latest from The Scientist Daily News.

The Week - February 14 2007
[First aired 14 February 2007]

The week - Staff writer Kerry Grens hears from Steve Rawsthorne about the celebrities who sell bad science; contributor David Kirby reads an essay on Hollywood's take on heredity; and intern Andrea Gawrylewski has the perfect Valentine's gift for the scientist in your life.

The Week - February 07 2007
[First aired 07 February 2007]

The week - Staff writer Kerry Grens talks with deputy editor Ivan Oransky about his visits to various dairy farms, what he learned about the risks of drinking milk, and how a cow reacts to having a farmer's arm reach into her stomach.

The Week - January 31 2007
[First aired 31 January 2007]

The week - Staff writer Kerry Grens speaks with Carl Cohen about what happens when lab researchers fight, and how lab leaders can smooth over tensions; and intern Andrea Gawrylewski has the news on the recent identification of the Vitamin A receptor and evidence of the p53 gene's tumor suppressing power.

The Week - January 24 2007
[First aired 24 January 2007]

The week - Contributor Ted Agres interviews Dave Moore of the Association of American Medical Colleges about issues facing the new democrat-led Congress; and from our culture Friday series, staff writer Kerry Grens features a book review of The Fourth Horseman.

The Week - January 17 2007
[First aired 17 January 2007]

The week - Staff writer Kerry Grens talks with Indoor Technologies president Martin Chapman about the uncertain existence of the lauded hypoallergenic cat; and intern Andrea Gawrylewski has updates on a new gene implicated in Alzheimer's disease and the status of a vaccine against Chikungunya virus.

The Week - January 10 2007
[First aired 10 January 2007]

The week - Feature contributor Kate Travis talks with Robert Seder about the promise of developing vaccines based on Toll-like receptors, and Bruce Beutler tells intern Andrea Gawrylewski why TLRs might not be the answer.

The Week - January 03 2007
[First aired 03 January 2007]

The week - Feature contributor Brendan Borrell talks with former Evolution editor Richard Palmer about fraud accusations against star ornithologist Anders Pape Møller; deputy editor Ivan Oransky points out a potentially overlooked conflict of interest by NIH researcher Thomas Walsh.

The Week - December 20 2006
[First aired 20 December 2006]

The week - Alex Rich looks back 50 years at the discovery of the RNA double helix; researchers report a new class of small, non-coding RNAs; and MHC-matched embryonic stem cells graft in mice successfully.

The Week - December 13 2006
[First aired 13 December 2006]

The week - Feature contributor Merrill Goozner talks about his time in Asia visiting malaria clinics to understand why less effective drugs are often used instead of artemisinin; a lead researcher at the NIH pleads guilty to consulting for Pfizer; and lifespan?s link to telomerase expression takes a blow.

The Week - December 6 2006
[First aired 06 December 2006]

The week - Feature writer Alan Dove interviews Gerd Maul on the challenges to developing a vaccine for cytomegalovirus; and staff writer Kerry Grens has news of viral defenses against RNA silencing and troubles in ensuring drug safety

The Week - November 29 2006
[First aired 29 November 2006]

The week - Staff writer Kerry Grens speaks with John Radford about what to expect for an annual bonus this year, and wraps up the news with a look at structural variations in the human genome.

The Week - November 22 2006
[First aired 22 November 2006]

The week - Juhi Yahjnik reports on the challenges of becoming a scientist in high school; and staff writer Kerry Grens rounds up the news with colon cancer stem cells, animal terrorism legislation, and avian flu mutants.

The Week - November 15 2006
[First aired 15 November 2006]

The week - Juhi Yajnik asks Polydex Pharmaceuticals CEO George Usher how to be successful in getting non-profit funding; and staff writer Kerry Grens rounds up the news with upcoming legislation and an investigation into possible scientific misconduct.

The Week - November 8 2006
[First aired 08 November 2006]

The week - feature contributor Gail Dutton talks with Steven Deeks about patients who are resistant to HIV; and staff writer Kerry Grens rounds up the news with cool mice living longer, EPA libraries shutting down, and the NIH rethinking plans for an anti-terror lab

The Week - November 1 2006
[First aired 01 November 2006]

The week - staff writer Kerry Grens rounds up the news with a controversial publication about cancer among IBM employees, and Brigham Young University's fight with Pfizer over Celebrex; and senior editor Brendan Maher and feature contributors Lance Liotta and Emanuel Petricoin discuss the merits of clinical proteomics

The Week - October 25 2006
[First aired 25 October 2006]

The week - how objective are scientists when it comes to politics? Three-thousand responses to our online poll indicate that party affiliation strongly colors their opinions. Daniel Sarewitz director of the Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes at Arizona State University, discusses the results with staff writer Kerry Grens. Also, a new mutation is linked to brittle bone disease, and a preview of what's to come in our November print edition.

The Week - October 18 2006
[First aired 18 October 2006]

The week - staff writer Kerry Grens rounds up the news with testimony on a lawsuit between deCODE Genetics and former employees, a discovery into the genetics behind XX males, and plans for change by the new editor-in-chief at PNAS; and senior editor Brendan Maher and behavioral ecologist William Brown discuss what makes a dancer sexy as they reveal the results of our online dancing survey;

The Week - October 11 2006
[First aired 11 October 2006]

The week - senior editor Brendan Maher talks with Nobel laureate Paul Greengard and Per Svenningsson about how antidepressants, neuro-psychiatric disorders, and drugs of abuse and addiction appear to act in the brain through a single regulator, DARPP32. Also, Staff writer Kerry Grens reports on scientists in the UK that have found evidence supporting the evolutionary theory of punctuated equilibrium.

The Week - October 4 2006
[First aired 04 October 2006]

The week - staff writer Kerry Grens talks about a survey of congressional candidates' stances on research funding, in preparation for the midterm elections; editorial intern Juhi Yajnik reports on the financial rewards of winning the Nobel prize; and news editor Alison McCook speaks with L A Times reporter Joe Mathews, author of The People's Machine: Governor Schwarzenegger and the Rise of Blockbuster Democracy, about the struggle over voter-approved stem cell research funding in California.

The Week - September 27 2006
[First aired 27 September 2006]

The week - A look at how married researchers working in the same company manage their relationship without coming to blows. Plus, Kate Travis investigates a new report that finds industry scaling back dollars for academic R&D.

The Week - September 20 2006
[First aired 20 September 2006]

The Week - the Lasker Foundation announced the 2006 award recipients for its prizes in biomedical research. The Scientist's Kerry Grens has a run-down of the winners; Juhi Yajnik chats with Joseph Gall, winner of the Lasker Award for Special Achievement in Medical Science. Also this week, animal rights activists are sent to prison, and two studies find RNA interference screens are less faithful than previously thought.

The Week - September 13 2006
[First aired 13 September 2006]

The Week - a look at why what your grandmother ate when she was pregnant with your mother may affect your children's health. At its core, the field of nutrigenomics is the study of how genes and nutrients interact to promote health or disease. In the September issue of The Scientist, Kate Travis takes a look at the state of the field, the early findings that will fuel further research, and the challenges that lie ahead. She recently spoke with Patrick Stover, one of the pioneers in nutrigenomics research.

The Week - September 6 2006
[First aired 06 September 2006]

The Week - Senior editor Brendan Maher speaks to Gordana Vunjak-Novakovic, author of a feature in our September issue. Tissue engineering's most formidable challenge, says Vunjak-Novakovic, is mimicking the environment in which tissues grow naturally. Here she tells us how the work toward overcoming that challenge could change the face of transplant medicine and also how it is growing new and exciting collaborations.

The Week - August 30 2006
[First aired 30 August 2006]

The Week - Chandra Shekhar reports on the challenges facing the new director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute. Andrew Holtz finds out why there?s stiff resistance to financial disclosure at the institute in charge of handing out California?s stem cell research windfall. Finally, senior editor Brendan Maher reveals the truth behind a headline-grabbing Nature study claiming that embryonic stem cell lines could be created without destroying embryos.

The Week - August 23 2006
[First aired 23 August 2006]