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Science Magazine Podcast - Podcast Stream


Description: Periodic audiocasts from Science Magazine, the world's leading journal of original scientific research, global news, and commentary. For a full archive of shows, please visit www.sciencemag.org/multimedia/podcast.

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Science Magazine Podcast - streams of individual podcasts

Science Podcast, 3 September 2010 How social network structure affects the spread of behavior; challenging the mammoth-killer-impact hypothesis; your Letters to Science magazine; and more.

Science Podcast, 27 August 2010 Multiple planets discovered around a star similar to our Sun; modeling the epigenetics of aging and behavior; using satellite images for archaeological research; and more.

Science Podcast, 20 August 2010 Tracking subsurface oil plumes from the Gulf spill; a fast-acting antidepressant; a decade of open-access in scientific publishing; and more.

Science Podcast, 13 August 2010 Special podcast about energy: the difficult transition to renewable energy sources; scaling up biofuel production using non-food plants; how input from social scientists may help craft better solutions for the world's nuclear waste problem; and more.

Science Podcast, 6 August 2010 White-nose syndrome pushes the little brown bat toward regional extinction; Arctic methane's warming impact may be less catastrophic than thought; chlorine isotopes provide new constraints on the moon's 'dryness'; and more.

Science Podcast, 30 July 2010 Highly impulsive individuals have fewer dopamine receptors in a key brain area; pharma starts limiting development of new drugs for central nervous system disorders; your Letters to Science; and more.

Science Podcast, 23 July 2010 First demonstration of a safe, effective vaginal gel for preventing sexual transmission of HIV; a plan to dam Patagonian rivers; how mosses solve a fluid-dynamics problem; and more.

Science Podcast, 19 July 2010 -- Special: HIV Prevention Progress New research establishes the efficacy of vaginal gels containing anti-retroviral drugs in inhibiting sexual transmission of HIV.

Science Podcast, 16 July 2010 A genetic variation that helps protect against African sleeping sickness may contribute to high rates of kidney disease; socially responsible pricing may allow consumers and businesses to benefit; a new push to get scientists into the classroom; and more.

Science Podcast, 9 July 2010 Coping with an epidemic of HIV/AIDS in Eastern Europe; how a bacterium helps its host fight off a parasite; fireflies that synchronize in order to attract a mate; and more.

Science Podcast, 2 July 2010 Genetic signatures of exceptionally long life; a call for public discourse about the real and imagined concerns about synthetic biology; insights into how early life experiences shape behavior later in life; and more.

Science Podcast, 25 June 2010 Engineered lung tissue; the uncertainty in extracting natural gas from shale; your Letters to Science magazine; and more.

Science Podcast, 18 June 2010 How swine flu is changing in swine; taking noise into account when studying stresses on marine life; violinmakers take up the tools of science to study what makes great violins great; and more.

Science Podcast, 11 June 2010 Regulating love and aggression with oxytocin; the origins of Oort cloud comets; finding new evidence that Polynesians sailed to South America; and more.

Science Podcast, 4 June 2010 Curbing deadly inflammation to treat septic shock; creating foolproof systems to ensure safety of nuclear materials; following crickets in the wild to measure natural and sexual selection; and more.

Science Podcast, 28 May 2010 How perceptions of fairness change as we grow up; rediscovering a forgotten corridor between the world's first civilizations; your Letters to Science; and more.

Science Podcast, 21 May 2010 Controlling a bacterial cell with a chemically synthesized genome; measuring instantaneous Brownian velocity; how animal communication provides insight into the origins of language; and more.

Science Podcast, 14 May 2010 Carbon dioxide limits many plants' ability to grow; rising temperatures are driving lizard populations to extinction; malaria is becoming resistant to drugs; and more.

Science Podcast, 7 May 2010 The first draft of the Neandertal genome; the link between physical cleanliness and past behavior; new evidence in Antarctica of our early solar system; and more.

Science Podcast, 30 April 2010 Punishment is ineffectual without communication; the first sample-return mission to an asteroid is finally coming home; your Letters to Science magazine; and more.

Science Podcast, 23 April 2010 The effects of teacher quality on early reading; a chronology of Asian monsoons and megadrought; a new resource for ecology research; and more.

Science Podcast, 16 April 2010 How the brain is limited to two goals at once; testing and treatment for rare genetic diseases; bringing telescopes to rural Senegal; and more.

Science Podcast, 9 April 2010 A newly discovered species of hominid; the evolution of human behavior; a computer tournament to try to understand why copying others is such a good way to learn; and more.

Science Podcast, 2 April 2010 Changing chimpanzee research; how herpes can repeatedly re-infect; a better understanding of the Earth's evolution; and more.

Science Podcast, 26 March 2010 Pre-existing immunity to pandemic influenza; sex bias in studies with animal models; your Letters to Science; and more.

Science Podcast, 19 March 2010 The biology behind learning deficits at puberty; a three-dimensional invisibility cloak; the Nile delta's sinking future; and more.

Science Podcast, 12 March 2010 Parent-offspring conflict among birds; ocean versus land biodiversity; peace through vaccine diplomacy; and more.

Science Podcast, 5 March 2010 Methane gas venting to the atmosphere; metal-protein complexes that make strong, stretchy fibers; challenges for stem-cell science; and more.

Science Podcast, 26 February 2010 Counting tumor cells in the blood; turning a biomass-derived compound into jet fuel; your Letters to Science; and more.

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