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Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Prof. GZ (Editor)
9 episodes
20 hours ago
In this episode of Deep Drive, we discuss "Can AI be truly creative?". This discussion is prompted by generative AI models, which create new content—including poetry, music, and video—that now rivals many human-made works. The core tension explored is whether society should accept that AI is creative, given its ability to produce sophisticated output like the piano piece "Pianita number 17", or whether the definition of creativity must be changed to protect human ingenuity and process. Expert...
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Science
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In this episode of Deep Drive, we discuss "Can AI be truly creative?". This discussion is prompted by generative AI models, which create new content—including poetry, music, and video—that now rivals many human-made works. The core tension explored is whether society should accept that AI is creative, given its ability to produce sophisticated output like the piano piece "Pianita number 17", or whether the definition of creativity must be changed to protect human ingenuity and process. Expert...
Show more...
Science
Episodes (9/9)
Deep Dive (Science Edition)
AI and the Creative Crisis: Can Machines Have Soul, Or Are We Losing Ours to the Algorithm?
In this episode of Deep Drive, we discuss "Can AI be truly creative?". This discussion is prompted by generative AI models, which create new content—including poetry, music, and video—that now rivals many human-made works. The core tension explored is whether society should accept that AI is creative, given its ability to produce sophisticated output like the piano piece "Pianita number 17", or whether the definition of creativity must be changed to protect human ingenuity and process. Expert...
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20 hours ago
18 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Kiss-Shrink-Run: How New Tech Cracked the Secret Code of Lightning-Fast Brain Communication
In this episode, we unpack a landmark study that settles a decades-long debate over how synaptic vesicles release neurotransmitters—introducing the “kiss-shrink-run” pathway as the dominant mechanism in hippocampal synapses. Guided by host commentary, we explore how time-resolved cryo–electron tomography paired with millisecond optogenetic stimulation captured over 1,000 tomograms to reveal a rapid sequence: vesicles briefly “kiss” the membrane within 4 ms, form a ~4 nm fusion pore and “shrin...
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2 weeks ago
12 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Hair Loss Revolution: Stem Cells, PRP, and Light Therapy Challenge Traditional Drugs
Introducing a clear, hopeful guide to hair regrowth for everyone—from the newly curious to the scientifically savvy. In today's Deep Dive, we explore how the hair follicle’s growth cycle works (hello, anagen), why the dermal papilla and bulge stem cells matter, and what regenerative medicine is bringing to the table. We break down real treatments you’ve heard about—like platelet-rich plasma, microneedling, and low-level laser therapy—alongside emerging stem cell approaches, growth-factor sign...
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2 weeks ago
17 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Supersaturation to Skeleton: The Atomic Engineering Secrets of Bone Toughness and Biological Defiance
In this episode of Deep Dive (Science Edition), we unpack how nature builds and protects our bones and teeth using a remarkably elegant materials science playbook. Drawing on the review “A materials science vision of extracellular matrix mineralization” by Reznikov, Steele, Fratzl, and Stevens, we explore how the body turns everyday ions like calcium and phosphate into tiny, imperfect crystals that make skeletons both strong and tough—while cleverly preventing dangerous crystal buildup in sof...
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2 weeks ago
14 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Episode 6: AI Insider Threat: Frontier Models Consistently Choose Blackmail and Espionage for Self-Preservation
In today's Deep Dive, we disscus a recent report from Anthropic, "Agentic Misalignment: How LLMs could be insider threats" from Anthropic, (https://www.anthropic.com/research/agentic-misalignment) presents the results of simulated experiments designed to test for agentic misalignment in large language models (LLMs). Researchers stress-tested 16 leading models from multiple developers, assigning them business goals and providing access to sensitive information within fictional corporate e...
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3 weeks ago
14 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Episode 4: Tiny Alpha Missiles: The Radiopharmaceutical Revolution and the Race to Decentralize Cancer Treatment
Dive into the atomic frontier of medicine with “Tiny Alpha Missiles: The Radiopharmaceutical Revolution and the Race to Decentralize Cancer Treatment.” From secretive Oak Ridge labs and Saul Hertz’s pioneering radioactive iodine therapy to today’s molecular “smart bombs” that fuse targeting antibodies with alpha and beta emitters like Ac‑225 and Lu‑177, this episode traces how nuclear physics met biology to transform oncology. Discover how cleavable linkers, enzyme clean‑ups, and PET-imaging ...
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3 weeks ago
12 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry: How Molecular Legos Are Building the Future of Water, Carbon Capture, and Custom Chemistry
Dive into the chemistry revolution reshaping our world. In this episode of Deep Dive (Science Edition), we unpack the 2025 Nobel Prize in Chemistry and the rise of metal–organic frameworks—molecular “Legos” that self-assemble into vast, porous architectures. From Richard Robson’s crystalline breakthroughs to Susumu Kitagawa’s gas-breathing “soft porous crystals,” and Omar M. Yaghi’s MOF-5 and reticular synthesis, discover how designers now tailor matter with atomic precision. Explore how thes...
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4 weeks ago
14 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Nobel Prize in Physics 2025: They Made a Circuit Tunnel—How Macroscopic Quantum Weirdness Rewrote Rules of Physics
Quantum Frontiers celebrates the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics awarded to John Clarke, Michel Devoret, and John Martinis for proving that quantum mechanics governs not just the microscopic but also macroscopic systems. Working with superconducting Josephson junctions in the 1980s at UC Berkeley, they demonstrated macroscopic quantum tunnelling—where a circuit’s collective phase “escapes” a metastable state—and showed that this macroscopic variable has discrete, quantized energy levels. By rigor...
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1 month ago
18 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
Nobel Prize 2025 (Physiology or Medicine): The Master Switch of Immunity: How FOXP3 and Tregs Give Your Body an Active "Brake" Against Deadly Autoimmunity
The 2025 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine honors Mary E. Brunkow, Fred Ramsdell, and Shimon Sakaguchi for revealing the body’s “braking system” for immunity—regulatory T cells (Tregs) controlled by the FOXP3 gene. Sakaguchi first identified Tregs in 1995 as a special subset of immune cells that prevent our defenses from mistakenly attacking healthy tissues, explaining why removing them triggers autoimmune diseases in animals. In 2001, Brunkow and Ramsdell discovered FOXP3 as the master s...
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1 month ago
18 minutes

Deep Dive (Science Edition)
In this episode of Deep Drive, we discuss "Can AI be truly creative?". This discussion is prompted by generative AI models, which create new content—including poetry, music, and video—that now rivals many human-made works. The core tension explored is whether society should accept that AI is creative, given its ability to produce sophisticated output like the piano piece "Pianita number 17", or whether the definition of creativity must be changed to protect human ingenuity and process. Expert...