Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Sports
Business
Technology
Fiction
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
Loading...
0:00 / 0:00
Podjoint Logo
US
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts115/v4/8d/84/74/8d84749e-72ee-fc68-ae05-2a9fe0e35df7/mza_11553932337173140093.png/600x600bb.jpg
Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
100 episodes
8 months ago
Researchers from across the scientific disciplines share the unpublished stories behind their recently published research, along with the background of their scientific discoveries.
Show more...
Natural Sciences
Science,
Social Sciences
RSS
All content for Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves. is the property of Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves. and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
Researchers from across the scientific disciplines share the unpublished stories behind their recently published research, along with the background of their scientific discoveries.
Show more...
Natural Sciences
Science,
Social Sciences
Episodes (20/100)
Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Science Writing as Storytelling (rebroadcast) – Ryan Kelly
What matters more in getting cited — what you say or how you say it? In this remastered and remixed version of our first episode of the show, we're revisited by Ryan Kelly from the University of Washington's School of Marine and Environmental Affairs. He talks with us about his article "Narrative Style Influences Citation Frequency fin Climate Change Science," published in the December 2016 edition of the open-access journal PLoS One, along with co-authors Annie Hillier and Terrie Klinger.
Science Writing as Storytelling (rebroadcast) - Ryan KellyScience Writing as Storytelling (rebroadcast) - Ryan KellyScience Writing as Storytelling (rebroadcast) - Ryan Kelly Science Writing as Storytelling (rebroadcast) - Ryan KellyScience Writing as Storytelling (rebroadcast) - Ryan KellyScience Writing as Storytelling (rebroadcast) - Ryan Kelly {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7691 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7691",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7691_9",settings_ap7691); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Owen, now seven years old, with a different starfish.
Websites and other resources

Article Highlights, Summary, Quick findings & Flashcards via Scholarcy
"Do I make myself clear? Media training for scientists" (Science Magazine)
"Studies written in a more narrative style get more citations" (PsyPost)
Annie Hillier's Master's thesis
Book that inspired the study: Influence: the Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini

News and Media

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.



Make a one-time donation via PayPal.



Or support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization,
Show more...
4 years ago
23 minutes 39 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Cold War Ice Core Reveals Historic Glacial Melt – Andrew Christ
How did a Cold War era debacle help us better understand the dangers of climate change? In episode 99 of Parsing Science, we talk with Drew Christ from the University of Vermont about his research into how fossils plucked from forgotten experiment in the Arctic led to his discovery the last time Greenland’s glaciers completely melted, it happened under climate conditions very similar to the present day. His open access article “A multimillion-year-old record of Greenland vegetation and glacial history preserved in sediment beneath 1.4 km of ice at Camp Century,“ was published with multiple co-authors on March 30, 2021 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Cold War Ice Core Reveals Historic Glacial Melt - Andrew ChristCold War Ice Core Reveals Historic Glacial Melt - Andrew ChristCold War Ice Core Reveals Historic Glacial Melt - Andrew Christ Cold War Ice Core Reveals Historic Glacial Melt - Andrew ChristCold War Ice Core Reveals Historic Glacial Melt - Andrew ChristCold War Ice Core Reveals Historic Glacial Melt - Andrew Christ {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7689 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7689",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7689_18",settings_ap7689); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources

Drew's website, photography & Twitter
Drew's webinar on this study:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5CVEVPC5e8




xkcd's Earth Temperature Timeline
Propaganda documentary on Camp Century:




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-DPQ15EgyTY

 
News and Media
Wired | SciTechDaily | World Economic Forum | Weather Channel | Popular Science | CNET | Washington Post | Science Alert

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon

Show more...
4 years ago
31 minutes 59 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
DNA Evidence of Denisovan Interbreeding – João Teixeira
What can DNA tell us about the migration of the earliest modern humans and other hominins? In episode 98 of Parsing Science, we talk with João Teixeira from the University of Adelaide about his research which examined the genomes of modern humans to investigate the interbreeding between ancient humans and modern human populations who arrived in Southeast Asia around 60,000 years ago.  His article, “Widespread Denisovan ancestry in Island Southeast Asia but no evidence of substantial super-archaic hominin admixture,” was multiple coauthors and published on March 22, 2021 in Nature Ecology and Evolution.
DNA Evidence of Denisovan Interbreeding - João TeixeiraDNA Evidence of Denisovan Interbreeding - João TeixeiraDNA Evidence of Denisovan Interbreeding - João Teixeira DNA Evidence of Denisovan Interbreeding - João TeixeiraDNA Evidence of Denisovan Interbreeding - João TeixeiraDNA Evidence of Denisovan Interbreeding - João Teixeira {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7687 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7687",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7687_27",settings_ap7687); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources





João's researcher profile
Article preprint on BioRxiv
ARC Centre of Excellence for Australian Biodiversity and Heritage
Article on the biomechanical sequencing of Homo erectus





News and Media
Inverse | Science Alert |  The Conversation | SciNews | Science Daily | Natural History Museum | COSMOS | EurekAlert
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 

 

Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.



Make a one-time donation via PayPal.



Or support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon.
Show more...
4 years ago
33 minutes 57 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
The Dyatlov Pass Incident – Alexander Puzrin
Can science help solve a real-life mystery? In episode 97 of Parsing Science, we talk with Alexander Puzrin from ETH Zurich about his research into The Dyatlov Pass incident, a 62-year-old mystery involving the deaths of nine hikers in the freezing Russian wilderness, a tragedy that’s been attributed to everything from a yeti to military weapons testing and an avalanche. His open access article “Mechanisms of slab avalanche release and impact in the Dyatlov Pass incident in 1959“ was co-authored with Johan Gaume and published on January 28, 2021 in the Nature journal, Communications Earth & Environment.
The Dyatlov Pass Incident - Alexander PuzrinThe Dyatlov Pass Incident - Alexander PuzrinThe Dyatlov Pass Incident - Alexander Puzrin The Dyatlov Pass Incident - Alexander PuzrinThe Dyatlov Pass Incident - Alexander PuzrinThe Dyatlov Pass Incident - Alexander Puzrin {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7685 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7685",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7685_36",settings_ap7685); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources







Article Highlights, Summary, Quick findings & Flashcards via Scholarcy
Alexander's group website
Supplemental materials and videos from the article
Horror/conspiracy video game and movie about the Dyatlov Pass incident
Nature and EPFL videos:








https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=22OmPK7Ml34

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Of_79NZKeag

 
News and Media
Wired | Big Think | New York Times | ARS Technica | Futurity | National Geographic | EurekAlert

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.


Show more...
4 years ago
37 minutes 16 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Monkey Business – Jean-Baptiste “JB” Leca
Do monkeys know how much fruit your sunglasses are worth? In episode 96 of Parsing Science, we talk with Jean-Baptiste "JB" Leca from the University of Lethbridge's Department of Psychology about his field research observing interactions among macaques at a Hindu temple in Bali. There, the monkeys have learned to rob tourists of everything from smartphones to flip flops, and then barter their return to temple staff in exchange for food. His open-access article, “Acquisition of object-robbing and object/food-bartering behaviours: a culturally maintained token economy in free-ranging long-tailed macaques,” was coauthored with Noëlle Gunst, Matthew Gardiner and I. Nengah Wandia, and published on January 11, 2021 in Philosophical Transactions of the the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
Monkey Business - Jean-Baptiste "JB" LecaMonkey Business - Jean-Baptiste "JB" LecaMonkey Business - Jean-Baptiste "JB" Leca Monkey Business - Jean-Baptiste "JB" LecaMonkey Business - Jean-Baptiste "JB" LecaMonkey Business - Jean-Baptiste "JB" Leca {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7683 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7683",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7683_45",settings_ap7683); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources





Article Highlights, Summary, Quick findings & Flashcards via Scholarcy
JB's website, including photos of the robbing monkeys
JB's Google Scholar profile
University of Lethbridge's summary of the study
Sample videos of monkeys robbing and bartering:






https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ymYDfHXq4S0

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uhqKux-liGk

 
News and Media
CBC | BBC | Medium | Earth Touch  | Boing Boing | CTV News| Reddit | The Guardian

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 

 

Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Show more...
4 years ago
35 minutes 15 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Positively Negative – Shiri Melumad
How much can you trust people's retelling of information the've read? In episode 95, Shiri Melumad from the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business discusses her research showing that when – much like the children’s game “telephone” – news is repeatedly retold, it undergoes a stylistic transformation through which the original facts are increasingly replaced by opinions and interpretations, with a slant toward negativity. Her article “The dynamics of distortion: How successive summarization alters the retelling of news”, was published with Robert Meyer and Yoon Duk Kim, on January 7, 2021 in the Journal of Marketing Research.

Positively Negative - Shiri MelumadPositively Negative - Shiri MelumadPositively Negative - Shiri Melumad Positively Negative - Shiri MelumadPositively Negative - Shiri MelumadPositively Negative - Shiri Melumad {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7679 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7679",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7679_54",settings_ap7679); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources





Shiri's website and Twitter
Shiri on Knowledge @ Wharton  
Vox article on Shiri's research into the effect space constraints have on what people share





News and Media

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.



Make a one-time donation via PayPal.



Or support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Doug Leigh & Ryan Watkins
How to Cite
Leigh, D., Watkins, R., & Melumad, S.. (2021). Parsing Science - Positively Negative. doi: 10.6084/m9.figshare.
Show more...
4 years ago
2 minutes 30 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
How Mosquitoes Target Us – Zhilei Zhao & Lindy McBride
Why do mosquitoes prefer us over other animals? In episode 94, we talk with Zhilei Zhao and Lindy McBride from Princeton about their research into how mosquitoes that can carry dangerous diseases - such as Zika, dengue, West Nile virus and malaria - are able to track us down so quickly while ignoring other warm-blooded animals; an ability they’ve developed in just the past few thousand years. Their preprint manuscript  “Chemical signatures of human odour generate a unique neural code in the brain of Aedes aegypti mosquitoes,” was posted to BioRXiv with multiple other co-authors on November 2, 2020. 
How Mosquitoes Target Us - Zhilei Zhao & Lindy McBrideHow Mosquitoes Target Us - Zhilei Zhao & Lindy McBrideHow Mosquitoes Target Us - Zhilei Zhao & Lindy McBride How Mosquitoes Target Us - Zhilei Zhao & Lindy McBrideHow Mosquitoes Target Us - Zhilei Zhao & Lindy McBrideHow Mosquitoes Target Us - Zhilei Zhao & Lindy McBride {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7680 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7680",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7680_63",settings_ap7680); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources





Zhilei's Twitter, website & Twitter thread on this research
Lindy's Twitter & lab website
Podcast interview with Lindy on Pew's Scientists at Work
Image gallery:






 
News and Media
CNN | Head Topics

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.



Make a one-time or ongoing donation via PayPal.



Or support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Show more...
4 years ago
28 minutes 56 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Epistemic Puzzles in ‘The Witness’ – Luke Cuddy
What can a video game teach us about our epistemic philosophy? In episode 93, Luke Cuddy from Southwestern College’s philosophy program talks with us about the video game The Witness, which presents players with a multitude of increasingly sophisticated and frustrating puzzles that perhaps result from the theory of knowledge it reflects. His chapter "The Witness as Philosophy: How Knowledge Is Constructed," was published on July 21, 2020 in The Palgrave Handbook of Popular Culture as Philosophy.

Epistemic Puzzles in 'The Witness' - Luke CuddyEpistemic Puzzles in 'The Witness' - Luke CuddyEpistemic Puzzles in 'The Witness' - Luke Cuddy Epistemic Puzzles in 'The Witness' - Luke CuddyEpistemic Puzzles in 'The Witness' - Luke CuddyEpistemic Puzzles in 'The Witness' - Luke Cuddy {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7678 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7678",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7678_72",settings_ap7678); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources





Luke's blog, YouTube channel, and Medium site
Luke's book Legend of Zelda and Philosophy
Jonathan Blow's blog
Adam Ruins Everything: Game Designer Jonathan Blow Unpacks ‘The Witness’
The Witness (official website)
In-game video of The Witness:






https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xzNh-hdceiU

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aevy5Mv_ImQ

 
Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.



Make a one-time donation via PayPal.



Or support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Doug Leigh & Ryan Watkins
How to Cite
Leigh,
Show more...
4 years ago
17 minutes 9 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Unintended Consequences of Legal Reforms – Ángela Zorro Medina
What effect did copying the U.S.'s legal system have on Colombia's incarceration system? In episode 92, Ángela Zorro Medina from the University of Chicago discussed her research into how transitioning to an adversarial model of criminal procedure – one controlled by the prosecutor and defense, rather than by the judge and court – impacted the number of inmates detained before their court trials. Her open-access preprint manuscript "The Failed War on Pre-Trial Detention: Evidence from a Quasi-Experimental Reform," was published to Social Science Research Network (SSRN) on Oct. 23, 2020.
Unintended Consequences of Legal Reforms - Ángela Zorro MedinaUnintended Consequences of Legal Reforms - Ángela Zorro MedinaUnintended Consequences of Legal Reforms - Ángela Zorro Medina Unintended Consequences of Legal Reforms - Ángela Zorro MedinaUnintended Consequences of Legal Reforms - Ángela Zorro MedinaUnintended Consequences of Legal Reforms - Ángela Zorro Medina {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7677 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7677",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7677_81",settings_ap7677); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources





Ángela's website and on Twitter
Article highlights, Summary, Quick findings & Flashcards via Scholarcy





Select media and press
 
El Espectador (Spanish)| MSN (Spanish)

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.



Make a one-time donation via PayPal.



Or support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Show more...
4 years ago
30 minutes 22 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Bots’ Meddling in the 2020 Presidential Election – Emilio Ferrara
How are automated social media bots manipulating our political discourse? In episode 91, Emilio Ferrara from the University of Southern California discusses his research into bots' amplification of conspiracies theories across more than 240 million tweets regarding the 2020 U.S. presidential election. His open-access article "Characterizing social media manipulation in the 2020 U.S. presidential election,” was published in  with Herbert Chang, Emily Chen, Goran Muric, and Jaimin Patel in the University of Illinois at Chicago’s journal First Monday.
Bots' Meddling in the 2020 Presidential Election - Emilio FerraraBots' Meddling in the 2020 Presidential Election - Emilio FerraraBots' Meddling in the 2020 Presidential Election - Emilio Ferrara Bots' Meddling in the 2020 Presidential Election - Emilio FerraraBots' Meddling in the 2020 Presidential Election - Emilio FerraraBots' Meddling in the 2020 Presidential Election - Emilio Ferrara {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7675 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7675",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7675_90",settings_ap7675); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources





Emilio's website and Twitter
MIT Technology Review article on Emilio's Botometer
Figure 12: Proportion of users using QAnon hashtags and mean botscore for each news outlet, dot size indicates relative number of tweets.






Indiana University's Hoaxy, a tool to visualize claims and fact-checking
Detecting social bots (2016):




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lyU7J3TalY
 

 
Select media and press
 
Nature | New York Times | USA Today | ScienMag | phys.org | Eurekalert | Defense One
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Show more...
4 years ago

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Pet Project – Eric Tourigny
What do changes in our beliefs about the death of our pets over the past century say about the relationship we have with our companion animals? In episode 90, Eric Tourigny from Newcastle University's School of History, Classics and Archaeology discusses his research into historic pet cemeteries and how they reveal our evolving feelings toward these animals, from beloved pets to valued family members with whom we may hope to reunify in an afterlife. His open-access article "Do all dogs go to heaven? Tracking human-animal relationships through the archaeological survey of pet cemeteries,” was published on October 27, 2020 in the journal Antiquity.

Pet Project - Eric TourignyPet Project - Eric TourignyPet Project - Eric Tourigny Pet Project - Eric TourignyPet Project - Eric TourignyPet Project - Eric Tourigny {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7673 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7673",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7673_99",settings_ap7673); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Eric's website and Twitter account
Eric's Twitter thread on this research
Eric's "Finding Fido" project and Exeter's "Ancient Animals" app
The Secret Pet Cemetery of Hyde Park ...




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HrWitagNj8k

 
Select media and press
 
Inverse | Smithsonian | Phys.org | Science | The Guardian
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Ryan Watkins &  Doug Leigh
How to Cite
Watkins, R., Leigh, D., & Tourigny, E.. (2020).
Show more...
4 years ago
28 minutes 12 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Drones Revealing the Past – Jesse Casana
How can drones help us find settlements long-lost to time? In episode 89, Jesse Casana from Dartmouth College's Department of Anthropology discusses his research into using multi-sensor drones to collect data about a major Native American settlement in what is now Southeastern Kansas. His article "A Council Circle at Etzanoa? Multi-sensor Drone Survey at an Ancestral Wichita Settlement in Southeastern Kansas," was published on August 24, 2020 with Elise Jakoby Laugier, Austin Chad Hill, and Donald Blakeslee in American Antiquity.

Drones Revealing the Past - Jesse CasanaDrones Revealing the Past - Jesse CasanaDrones Revealing the Past - Jesse Casana Drones Revealing the Past - Jesse CasanaDrones Revealing the Past - Jesse CasanaDrones Revealing the Past - Jesse Casana {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7672 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7672",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7672_108",settings_ap7672); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Jesse's Spatial Archaeometry Lab (Twitter)
Video of Jesse presenting on his satellite-based archaeology in Syria
Video of Jesse presenting on his drone-based archaeology in Mexico & Illinois



Select media and press
 
Archaeology News Network | Ancient Origins |
Smithsonian Magazine | ArsTechnica | Atlas Obscura
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Doug Leigh & Ryan Watkins
How to Cite
Leigh, D., Watkins, R., & Casana, J.. (2020). Parsing Science - Drones Revealing the Past. figshare.
Show more...
4 years ago
31 minutes 21 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Early Galaxies’ Formation – Arianna Long
How did the earliest and largest clusters of galaxies form? In episode 88, Arianna Long from the University California - Irvine talks with us about her research into the emergence of massive dusty star-forming galaxies that developed billions of years ago. Her article “Emergence of an Ultra-Red Ultra-Massive Galaxy Cluster Core at z = 4” was published on July 31, 2020 with multiple co-authors in The Astrophysical Journal and first submitted to arXiv as a preprint on March 30th 2020.

Early Galaxies' Formation - Arianna LongEarly Galaxies' Formation - Arianna LongEarly Galaxies' Formation - Arianna Long Early Galaxies' Formation - Arianna LongEarly Galaxies' Formation - Arianna LongEarly Galaxies' Formation - Arianna Long {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7670 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7670",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7670_117",settings_ap7670); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Arianna on Twitter, including her thread on this study
Arianna's article "The Curious Case of Dusty Star-Forming Galaxies" for the Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Arianna's Women in Natural Sciences (WiNS) Award from UCI
African American Women in Physics' website and on Facebook



Select media and press
 
Astrobites
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Doug Leigh & Ryan Watkins
How to Cite
Leigh, D., Watkins, R., & Long, A.. (2020). Parsing Science - Early Galaxies’ Formation. doi: 10.6084/m9.figshare.13283789
 
Show more...
4 years ago
36 minutes 5 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Silencing an ALS Gene – Tim Miller
How could a gene that causes one type of ALS be switched off? In episode 87, Tim Miller from the Washington University in St. Louis discusses his research into therapies that target the single strands of DNA or RNA which cause many cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig's disease. His article “Phase 1–2 Trial of Antisense Oligonucleotide Tofersen for SOD1 ALS” was published with multiple co-authors on July 9th 2020 in the New England Journal of Medicine. 

Silencing an ALS Gene - Tim MillerSilencing an ALS Gene - Tim MillerSilencing an ALS Gene - Tim Miller Silencing an ALS Gene - Tim MillerSilencing an ALS Gene - Tim MillerSilencing an ALS Gene - Tim Miller {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7669 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7669",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7669_126",settings_ap7669); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



NEJM editorial on Tim's study
Tim's lab website
Video of Tim discussing new therapies for ALS:




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4I0asIWLCxM
 

 
Select media and press
 
EurekAlert | WBUR | Physician's Weekly | Futurity | Medscape | 2 Minute Medicine
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Ryan Watkins &  Doug Leigh
How to Cite
Watkins, R., Leigh, D., & Miller, T.. (2020). Parsing Science - Silencing an ALS Gene. doi: 10.6084/m9.figshare.13232651
 
Music
What’s The Angle? by Shane Ivers
Transcript
Show more...
4 years ago
24 minutes

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Fool Me Once Again – Darwin Guevarra
Can we knowingly fake ourselves out? In episode 86 of Parsing Science we talk with Darwin Guevarra from Michigan State University about his research exploring how placebos sometimes have the power to reduce neural markers of emotional distress, even in cases in which people are told told that they're only taking a placebo rather than an active drug. His open access article, “Placebos without deception reduce self-report and neural measures of emotional distress,” was published with Jason S. Moser, Tor Wager & Ethan Kross on July 29th, 2020 in the journal Nature Communications.

Fool Me Once Again - Darwin GuevarraFool Me Once Again - Darwin GuevarraFool Me Once Again - Darwin Guevarra Fool Me Once Again - Darwin GuevarraFool Me Once Again - Darwin GuevarraFool Me Once Again - Darwin Guevarra {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7668 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7668",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7668_135",settings_ap7668); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



As discussed in the episode, Figure 2c from the article 
Darwin on Twitter and his personal website
Darwin on The Scientistt podcast
Matthew Lieberman's website
Benjamin Meyer on ResearchGate
What is the placebo effect:




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z03FQGlGgo0
 

 
Select media and press
 
Wired | ZME Science | PsyPost
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Doug Leigh & Ryan Watkins
How to Cite
Leigh, D., Watkins,
Show more...
4 years ago
26 minutes 59 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Hot Girl Summer – Kyesha Jennings
How are Black women using social media to develop community and identity? In episode 85 we talk with Kyesha Jennings from North Carolina State University Department of English about her analysis of what the wildly popular meme "hot girl summer" - drawn from lyrics by hip-hop phenomenon, Megan Thee Stallion - tells us about changes in the ways in which Black women cultivate community in digital spaces. Her open access article “City Girls, hot girls and the re-imagining of Black women in hip hop and digital spaces,” was published on June 1st 2020, in the journal, Global Hip Hop Studies.

Hot Girl Summer - Kyesha JenningsHot Girl Summer - Kyesha JenningsHot Girl Summer - Kyesha Jennings Hot Girl Summer - Kyesha JenningsHot Girl Summer - Kyesha JenningsHot Girl Summer - Kyesha Jennings {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7667 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7667",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7667_144",settings_ap7667); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Twitter posts tagged #hotgirlsummer
Kyesha on Twitter and her NC State faculty profile
Kyesha on NPR: The Sophistiratchet Scholar
Megan Thee Stallion on Twitter
Megan Thee Stallion's "Don't Stop" scholarships



Select media and press
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Ryan Watkins & Doug Leigh
How to Cite
Watkins, R., Leigh, D., & Jennings, K.. (2020). Parsing Science - Hot Girl Summer. doi:  10.6084/m9.figshare.13096718
 
Music
What’s The Angle?
Show more...
4 years ago
26 minutes 45 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Why Narcissists Are “Never Wrong” – Tori Howes and Ed Kausel
Should I have done something differently? Or could nobody have seen it coming? In episode 84 Satoris "Tori" Howes from Oregon State University-Cascades and Edgar "Ed" Kausel from Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile join us to discuss their research into the malleability of narcissists' memory, as well as whether they're able to reflect on their mistakes to learn from them. Their article "When and why narcissists exhibit greater hindsight bias and less perceived learning," which they co-authored with Alex Jackson and Jochen Reb, was published on June 4, 2020 in the Journal of Management.

Why Narcissists Are "Never Wrong" - Tori Howes and Ed KauselWhy Narcissists Are "Never Wrong" - Tori Howes and Ed KauselWhy Narcissists Are "Never Wrong" - Tori Howes and Ed Kausel Why Narcissists Are "Never Wrong" - Tori Howes and Ed KauselWhy Narcissists Are "Never Wrong" - Tori Howes and Ed KauselWhy Narcissists Are "Never Wrong" - Tori Howes and Ed Kausel {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7666 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7666",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7666_153",settings_ap7666); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Tori on ORCID
Ed on Twitter
Fischhoff & Beyth's (1975) "I knew it would happen: Remembered probabilities of once-future things"



 
Select media and press
 
Science Alert | Psych Central | Science Daily | EurekAlert | International Business Times
 

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Show more...
4 years ago
30 minutes 10 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Adhering to Prohibitive Taboos – Manvir Singh
Why do religious leaders abstain from some pleasures? In episode 83, Manvir Singh from Harvard University's Department of Human Evolutionary Biology discusses his research into why shaman healers among the a group of people off the coast of Indonesia observe costly prohibitions, such abstinence or food restrictions, especially given that they could exploit their position for self-serving ends instead. His open-access article “Why do religious leaders observe costly prohibitions? Examining taboos on Mentawai shamans” was co-authored with Joseph Henrich and published on June 11, 2020 in the journal Evolutionary Human Sciences.

Adhering to Prohibitive Taboos - Manvir SinghAdhering to Prohibitive Taboos - Manvir SinghAdhering to Prohibitive Taboos - Manvir Singh Adhering to Prohibitive Taboos - Manvir SinghAdhering to Prohibitive Taboos - Manvir SinghAdhering to Prohibitive Taboos - Manvir Singh {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7664 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7664",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7664_162",settings_ap7664); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Manvir's website and Twitter
The study's data, code and supplementary material
Manvir interviewed on The Dissenter:




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ijf8cNBgztA
 




Video documentary of a Mentawai wedding ceremony:




https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e63F1oTz_YU

 
Select media and press

div.altmetric-embed {flex-shrink: 2; -webkit-flex-shrink: 2;}
 


Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Show more...
5 years ago
29 minutes 36 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Moderating Spanking’s Lasting Impacts – Nicole Barbaro
Does spanking really have lasting impacts on kids' later lives? In episode 82, Nicole Barbaro from Western Governors University Labs talks with us about her research into the factors that determine the answer to this question. Her study “The effects of spanking on psychosocial outcomes: revisiting genetic and environmental covariation” was developed with Eric Connolly, Madi Sogge, Todd Shackelford, and Brian Boutwell and first uploaded on March 8th, 2020 to the preprint server PsyArXiv.

Moderating Spanking's Lasting Impacts - Nicole BarbaroModerating Spanking's Lasting Impacts - Nicole BarbaroModerating Spanking's Lasting Impacts - Nicole Barbaro Moderating Spanking's Lasting Impacts - Nicole BarbaroModerating Spanking's Lasting Impacts - Nicole BarbaroModerating Spanking's Lasting Impacts - Nicole Barbaro {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7661 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7661",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7661_171",settings_ap7661); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Nicole's overview of the article on her blog
Open Science resources for the article
Nicole's chapter on Behavior Genetics for the SAGE Handbook of Evolutionary Psychology (in press for December 2020 release)
Nicole's website and Twitter
Nicole on "Mating, Life History, Attachment, And Mate Guarding" (The Dissenter vodcast)
"What is Evolutionary Psychology?" with Nicole's co-author, Todd Shackelford (Darwinian Diva podcast)



Bonus Clips


Clips available include ...
Full episode with available download
More coming soon


🔊 Access bonus content here.

Support us for as little as $1 per month at Patreon. Cancel anytime.
We’re not a registered tax-exempt organization, so unfortunately gifts aren't tax deductible.
Hosts / Producers
Doug Leigh & Ryan Watkins
How to Cite
Leigh, D., Watkins, R., & Barbaro, N.. (2020).
Show more...
5 years ago
32 minutes 47 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Picking Apart Conspiracy Theories – Tim Tangherlini
Is it an actual conspiracy, or just a theory about one? In episode 81, Tim Tangherlini from the University of California Berkeley’s Folklore Program discusses his research into how conspiracy theorists interpret and use what they believe is “hidden knowledge” to connect multiple human interactions that are otherwise unlinked ... and how when one of these links is cut, they're less able to hold together a coherent story about it. His open access article “An automated pipeline for the discovery of conspiracy and conspiracy theory narrative frameworks: Bridgegate, Pizzagate and storytelling on the web” which he published with Shadi Shahsavari, Behnam Shahbazi, Ehsan Ebrahimzadeh, and Vwani Roychowdhury on June 16, 2020 in the journal PLOS One. 

Picking Apart Conspiracy Theories - Tim TangherliniPicking Apart Conspiracy Theories - Tim TangherliniPicking Apart Conspiracy Theories - Tim Tangherlini Picking Apart Conspiracy Theories - Tim TangherliniPicking Apart Conspiracy Theories - Tim TangherliniPicking Apart Conspiracy Theories - Tim Tangherlini {{svg_share_icon}}Click bottom of waveform to add your commentsSubscribe: iTunes | Google Podcasts | Google Play | Spotify | RSS jQuery(document).ready(function ($){var settings_ap7660 = { design_skin: "skin-wave" ,autoplay: "off",disable_volume:"default" ,loop:"off" ,cue: "on" ,embedded: "off" ,preload_method:"metadata" ,design_animateplaypause:"default" ,skinwave_dynamicwaves:"off" ,skinwave_enableSpectrum:"off" ,skinwave_enableReflect:"on",playfrom:"off",default_volume:"default",disable_scrub:"off",soundcloud_apikey:"" ,skinwave_comments_enable:"on",settings_php_handler:window.ajaxurl,skinwave_mode:"alternate",skinwave_wave_mode:"canvas",pcm_data_try_to_generate: "on","pcm_notice": "off","notice_no_media": "on",design_color_bg: "111111",design_color_highlight: "FF4C65",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_number: "3",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_waves_padding: "1",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_reflection_size: "0.25",skinwave_wave_mode_canvas_mode:"normal",preview_on_hover:"off",skinwave_comments_playerid:"7660",embed_code:""
,enable_embed_button:"on",php_retriever:"https://www.parsingscience.org/wp-content/plugins/dzs-zoomsounds/soundcloudretriever.php" }; try{ dzsap_init(".ap_idx_7660_180",settings_ap7660); }catch(err){ console.warn("cannot init player", err); } });
 
Websites and other resources



Tim's Twitter profile
The Bridgegate dataset
Network graph: "Dissecting the #PizzaGate conspiracy theories" (New York Times)
Network graph: "Chris Christie and the lane closings: A spectator’s guide" (New York Times)
Archived r/pizzagate subreddit (banned by Reddit on November 12, 2016) and still-active Voat subverse v/pizzagate
Research mentioned: "Conspiracy theorists believe wild ideas because they want to feel special" (Quartz)
Research mentioned: "Why some people are more likely to believe wild conspiracy theories than others" (Business Insider Australia)
Vladimir Propp's theory of narrative structure
"Learning from Lombardi" on Mark Lombardi’s neo-c...
Show more...
5 years ago
32 minutes 31 seconds

Parsing Science: The unpublished stories behind the world’s most compelling science, as told by the researchers themselves.
Researchers from across the scientific disciplines share the unpublished stories behind their recently published research, along with the background of their scientific discoveries.