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  • 04:15 The Cambridge Professor Who Learned To Read At 18

    The Cambridge Professor Who Learned To Read At 18

    99 views / 0 likes - added

    Meet Jason Arday, Cambridge Universitys youngest-ever Black professor who defied all odds in pursuit of his academic ambitions.Jason's remarkable journey begins with a diagnosis of Global Developmental Delay and Autism during his early years. He didn't st

  • 06:18 Cambridge Ideas - Sticky Feet

    Cambridge Ideas - Sticky Feet

    203 views / 0 likes - added

    Ants have incredibly sticky feet. With them they can hang onto ceilings, while carrying 100 times their body weight. But if they are stuck down so successfully - how do they ever get them unstuck? Chris Clemente is studying the mechanisms that ants and ot

  • 03:10 Pixar Did You Know? Fun Facts About Monsters University

    Pixar Did You Know? Fun Facts About Monsters University

    531 views / 0 likes - added

    Learn everything you need to know about Disney•Pixar's Monsters University! Visit Disney Movies Anywhere for more! https://www.disneymoviesanywhere.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Pixar Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/disneypixar/?hl=en https

  • 08:50 Popular The Ohio State University Marching Band Performs their Hollywood Blockbuster Show

    The Ohio State University Marching Band Performs their Hollywood Blockbuster Show

    833 views / 2 likes - added

    The "Hollywood Blockbuster Show" was performed by members of the Ohio State University Marching Band on October 26th, 2013 at the Penn State Game. Coming off of their Michael Jackson Tribute show, students had a week to learn the drill associated with thi

  • 03:37 Are University Admissions Biased? | Simpson's Paradox Part 2

    Are University Admissions Biased? | Simpson's Paradox Part 2

    598 views / 0 likes - added

    Simpson's Paradox Part 2. Thanks to Skillshare for supporting this video! Head to http://skl.sh/minutephysics for your first two months free. Comments disabled because the discourse failed to remain civil. This video is about how to tell whether or not un

  • 00:14 (COLOR!) Albert Einstein in his office at Princeton University

    (COLOR!) Albert Einstein in his office at Princeton University

    237 views / 1 likes - added

    Source: https://youtu.be/XUXFCm2h2zk ======================================= https://www.facebook.com/LewiatanSCP https://tipanddonation.com/scplewiatan =======================================

  • 01:31 Harvard University​ is creating robotic insects to monitor the environment

    Harvard University​ is creating robotic insects to monitor the environment

    487 views / 0 likes - added

    RoboBees are being made at Harvard's Wyss Institute. They can be used for environmental monitoring, search and rescue, and crop pollination. Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/sai FACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/techinsider TWITTER: https://twit

  • 09:20 LOONEY TUNES (Looney Toons): The Dover Boys at Pimento University [ULTRA HD 4K Cartoons]

    LOONEY TUNES (Looney Toons): The Dover Boys at Pimento University [ULTRA HD 4K Cartoons]

    687 views / 0 likes - added

    This video streams up to Ultra HD 4k (2160p). "The Dover Boys at Pimento University" or "The Rivals of Roquefort Hall" (better known as simply The Dover Boys) is a 1942 Merrie Melodies cartoon produced by Leon Schlesinger Productions and directed by Chuck

  • 01:44 Pet birds on FaceTime? Parrot video chats part of study at local university

    Pet birds on FaceTime? Parrot video chats part of study at local university

    164 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers recruited a group of 18 pet parrots to see whether the social creatures could be taught how to place a call. Subscribe to WCVB on YouTube now for more: http://bit.ly/1e8lAMZ Get more Boston news: http://www.wcvb.com Like us: https://www.facebo

  • 00:59 Algae-power: a natural energy supply

    Algae-power: a natural energy supply

    154 views / 0 likes - added

    Read the full story here:https://bit.ly/AlgaeComputingScientists have managed to power a microprocessor continuously for a year using ALGAE! The new system has potential as a renewable way to power large numbers of small devices as part of the Internet of

  • 03:35 Infrared astronomy - with Matthew Bothwell

    Infrared astronomy - with Matthew Bothwell

    130 views / 0 likes - added

    Why does the universe look the way it does? The answer could lie in the massive, dusty, and star-producing galaxies that existed billions of years ago, and are invisible to the naked eye.Watch Matthew Bothwell's full lecture on 'The Invisible Universe': h

  • 04:19 Why Do We Move Our Hands When We Talk?

    Why Do We Move Our Hands When We Talk?

    307 views / 0 likes - added

    Gestures are a really important part of language. But how do we use them, and why? MORE LANGUAGE FILES: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL96C35uN7xGLDEnHuhD7CTZES3KXFnwm0Written with Gretchen McCulloch and Molly Ruhl, with an assist from Lauren Gawn

  • 00:52 Why are rhino horns getting smaller?

    Why are rhino horns getting smaller?

    154 views / 0 likes - added

    University of Cambridge researchers measured the horns of 80 rhinos, photographed in profile view between 1886 and 2018. Horn length was found to have decreased significantly in all species over the last century. Real rhino horns are so valuable that stri

  • 02:25 MetaLimbs: Multiple Arms Interaction Metamorphism (2017)

    MetaLimbs: Multiple Arms Interaction Metamorphism (2017)

    503 views / 0 likes - added

    SIGGRAPH2017 Emerging Technologies Tomoya Sasaki Keio Universityn MHD Yamen Saraiji Keio University Charith Lasantha Fernando Keio University Kouta Minamizawa Keio University Masahiko Inami The University of Tokyo Credits Inami Hiyama Laboratory (The Univ

  • 04:26 Why Extraterrestrial Life Might Not Be So Alien

    Why Extraterrestrial Life Might Not Be So Alien

    162 views / 0 likes - added

    On the website for the department of zoology of the University of Cambridge, the page for Arik Kershenbaum lists his three main areas of research, one of which stands out from the others. Kershenbaum studies Wolves and other canids, Dolphins and cetaceans

  • 04:51 Plastic: the new fantastic?

    Plastic: the new fantastic?

    263 views / 0 likes - added

    Plastic has become a malevolent symbol of our wasteful society. Its also one of the most successful materials ever invented: its cheap, durable, flexible, waterproof, versatile, lightweight, protective and hygienic. During the coronavirus pandemic, plasti

  • 04:35 theredntve

    theredntve

    101 views / 0 likes - added

    This script was a nightmare to pronounce. Written with Molly Ruhl and Gretchen McCulloch. Gretchen's podcast has an episode all about this: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/662535562508517376/lingthusiasm-episode-60-thats-the-kind-of More Language Files: htt

  • 01:52 Blood testing via sound waves

    Blood testing via sound waves

    674 views / 0 likes - added

    A multi-disciplinary team of researchers from MIT, Duke University, Magee-Women's Research Institute, and Nanyang Technological University in Singapore has developed a novel way to analyze blood, for signatures of cancer and other diseases, using sound wa

  • 50:03 The invisible universe, from supernova to black holes  with Matthew Bothwell

    The invisible universe, from supernova to black holes with Matthew Bothwell

    147 views / 0 likes - added

    How different does the invisible Universe look from the home we thought we knew? What does the cosmos have in store for us beyond the phenomena we can see, from black holes to supernovas?Watch the Q&A: https://youtu.be/t8VUHQneRtcMatthew's book 'The Invis

  • 1:25:34 Investigating the Periodic Table with Experiments - with Peter Wothers

    Investigating the Periodic Table with Experiments - with Peter Wothers

    354 views / 0 likes - added

    We celebrate 150 years of the Periodic Table and Mendeleev's genius by braving the elements from Argon to Zinc in this demonstration filled show.Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibeYou can pre-order Peter's book "Antimony, Gold,

  • 14:36 English Civil War: Crash Course European History #14

    English Civil War: Crash Course European History #14

    446 views / 0 likes - added

    The English Civil War. We'll talk about England after Elizabeth, in which things didn't go that smoothly. We'll talk about James I, Charles I, Oliver Cromwell, Charles II, and James II, all of whom ruled England, (and tried to rule all of Britain and Irel

  • 01:07 Taste of the future: robot chef learns to taste as you go

    Taste of the future: robot chef learns to taste as you go

    161 views / 0 likes - added

    A robot chef has been trained to taste food at different stages of the chewing process to assess whether its sufficiently seasoned.Working in collaboration with domestic appliances manufacturer Beko, researchers from the University of Cambridge trained th

  • 03:36 Possible signs of life on Venus

    Possible signs of life on Venus

    297 views / 0 likes - added

    Scientists at MIT, Cardiff University, and elsewhere have observed what may be signs of life in the clouds of Earth's planetary neighbor, Venus. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/life-venus-phosphine-0914)Watch more videos from MIT: http://www.youtube

  • 14:59 18th Century Warfare: Crash Course European History #20

    18th Century Warfare: Crash Course European History #20

    420 views / 0 likes - added

    European powers had a lot of wars in the 18th century, and they weren't confined to Europe. Conflict raged across the globe, in what might be called a World War...but we don't call it that, because we already have a couple of those coming up in the 20th c

  • 13:41 Enlightened Monarchs: Crash Course European History #19

    Enlightened Monarchs: Crash Course European History #19

    655 views / 0 likes - added

    Last time we learned about the Enlightenment, and the philosophers and thinkers whose ideas would shape governance for hundred of years. This week, we're learning how monarchs across Europe were influenced by those ideas. Adoption of Enlightenment ideas a

  • 03:02 Particle robots

    Particle robots

    411 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers from MIT, Columbia University, and elsewhere have developed computationally simple robots that connect in large groups to move around, transport objects, and complete other tasks. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2019/particle-robot-cluster-s

  • 17:06 The Industrial Revolution: Crash Course European History #24

    The Industrial Revolution: Crash Course European History #24

    588 views / 0 likes - added

    We've talked about a lot of revolutions in 19th Century Europe, and today we're moving on to a less warlike revolution, the Industrial Revolution. You'll learn about the development of steam power and mechanization, and the labor and social movements that

  • 24:46 Who REALLY invented the periodic table?

    Who REALLY invented the periodic table?

    362 views / 0 likes - added

    Go to https://wix.com/go/PeriodicVideos to start your own website. Check our website at https://www.periodicvideos.net/More links and info in full description Our guest was Peter Wothers from the University of Cambridge: https://www.ch.cam.ac.uk/person/pd

  • 15:08 Popular Scientific Revolution: Crash Course European History #12

    Scientific Revolution: Crash Course European History #12

    1,062 views / 0 likes - added

    There was a lot of bad stuff going on in Europe in the 17th century. We've seen wars, plagues, and unrest of all types. But, there is some good news. Huge advances were underway in the scientific community in Europe at this time. In this video we'll look

  • 02:21 Robo-picker grasps and packs

    Robo-picker grasps and packs

    417 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers from MIT and Princeton University has developed a robotic system that can successfully localize and pick up any item, amid clutter, and move it to another location. This technology earned them a first place spot at the 2017 Amazon Robo

  • 14:06 Reform and Revolution 1815-1848: Crash Course European History #25

    Reform and Revolution 1815-1848: Crash Course European History #25

    495 views / 0 likes - added

    In the aftermath of the revolutions and upheaval in 18th and early 19th century Europe, there was a hunger for reform across the continent. Reformers like Robert Owen, Charles Fourier, and Auguste Comte proposed radical new ideas, and at the same time, re

  • 16:25 The Most Successful Scientific Theory Ever: The Standard Model

    The Most Successful Scientific Theory Ever: The Standard Model

    142 views / 0 likes - added

    The Standard Model of particle physics is the most successful scientific theory of all time. It describes how everything in the universe is made of 12 different types of matter particles, interacting with three forces, all bound together by a rather speci

  • 14:25 World War II Civilians and Soldiers: Crash Course European History #39

    World War II Civilians and Soldiers: Crash Course European History #39

    422 views / 0 likes - added

    Our look at World War II continues with a closer examination of just how the war impacted soldiers in the field, and the people at home. For many of the combatants, the homefront and the warfront were one and the same. The war disrupted life for millions

  • 04:05 What if robots were in charge of the world? | BBC Ideas

    What if robots were in charge of the world? | BBC Ideas

    312 views / 0 likes - added

    Could artificial intelligence do a better job at governing than humans? What is the future of AI? How does artificial intelligence compare to human intelligence? Will AI one day take over the world? A thought experiment, made with the help of Haydn Belfie

  • 04:42 The Sentences Computers Can't Understand, But Humans Can

    The Sentences Computers Can't Understand, But Humans Can

    343 views / 0 likes - added

    The Winograd schema is a language test for intelligent computers. So far, they're not doing well. MORE LANGUAGE FILES: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL96C35uN7xGLDEnHuhD7CTZES3KXFnwm0 Written with Gretchen McCulloch and Molly Ruhl. Gretchen's podc

  • 02:44 Marangoni Bursting: Evaporation-Induced Emulsification of a Two-Component Droplet

    Marangoni Bursting: Evaporation-Induced Emulsification of a Two-Component Droplet

    389 views / 0 likes - added

    Marangoni Bursting: Evaporation-Induced Emulsification of a Two-Component Droplet Guillaume Durey, The Lutetium Project, ESPCI Paris, PSL Research University, Paris, France Hoon Kwon, The Lutetium Project, ESPCI Paris, PSL Research University, Paris, Fran

  • 03:35 Why Do We Gain Fat?  with Eugenia Cheng

    Why Do We Gain Fat? with Eugenia Cheng

    312 views / 0 likes - added

    In this short clip from her talk 'How To Think Like A Mathematician', Eugenia Cheng explains how a whole web of interconnected factors cause us to gain fat. Watch the full talk: https://youtu.be/8emPcpfqPRUEugenia's book "The Art of Logic" is available no

  • 04:34 New The world's first process for making zero emissions cement

    The world's first process for making zero emissions cement

    8 views / 0 likes - added

    Concrete is the second most-used substance on Earth, after water, and it's responsible for 7.5% of total carbon emissions triple that of aviation.Decarbonising cement the carbon-hungry component of concrete is a massive challenge. But Cambridge researcher

  • 14:15 Does Someone Else Have Your Face?

    Does Someone Else Have Your Face?

    550 views / 0 likes - added

    To learn more about Brilliant, check out https://brilliant.org/BeSmart/ SUBSCRIBE so you don’t miss a video! ►► http://bit.ly/iotbs_sub ↓↓↓ More info and sources below ↓↓↓ They say everyone has a doppelgänger, but is that really true? This week we meet a

  • 10:06 Matt & Hugh: the mystery of two balls in a can

    Matt & Hugh: the mystery of two balls in a can

    570 views / 0 likes - added

    Dr Hugh Hunt is a Senior Lecturer in Engineering at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Trinity College. http://www.hughhunt.co.uk/ Watch Hugh and I calculate how fast a motorbike can go on a wall of death. https://youtu.be/b23i3NhFLDc CORRECTIONS

  • 1:09:30 Popular The Science of Fireworks!

    The Science of Fireworks!

    756 views / 0 likes - added

    A brief history of the modern firework. Help us write subtitles for thislecture: http://www.youtube.com/timedtext_video?v=rmtK2BgmGCw Professor Chris Bishop, presenter of the 2008 Royal Institution Christmas Lectures, gives a family lecture on the history

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  • 01:29 Caught inside a bubble

    Caught inside a bubble

    371 views / 0 likes - added

    Finalist of the Best Illusion of the Year Contest 2016Title: Caught Inside A BubbleAuthors: Mark Vergeer, Stuart Anstis and Rob van Lier Institution: University of Leuven, Belgium, Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands, and UC San Diego, USA

  • 03:07 Understanding neural networks

    Understanding neural networks

    283 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT-IBM Watson AI lab research team member David Bau explains how computers show evidence of learning the structure of the physical world.Watch more videos from MIT: http://www.youtube.com/user/MITNewsOffice?sub_confirmation=1The Massachusetts Institute o

  • 03:27 The language of color

    The language of color

    439 views / 0 likes - added

    Cognitive scientists from MIT and elsewhere have found that people can more easily communicate warmer colors than cool ones. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/analyzing-language-color-0918) Watch more videos from MIT: http://www.youtube.com/user/MITNe

  • 00:49 #MacroMonday: Angles

    #MacroMonday: Angles

    367 views / 0 likes - added

    Things aren’t always what they seem . . . or are they? Extreme close-ups often obscure the full picture. Cloaked in mystery, this new video series introduces a variety of objects and moments — found at MIT — that invite you to take a second look. Watch mo

  • 02:58 Robo-thread

    Robo-thread

    313 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have developed a magnetically steerable, thread-like robot that can actively glide through narrow, winding pathways, such as the labyrinthine vasculature of the brain. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2019/robot-brain-blood-vessels-0828)Wat

  • 00:54 Extracting drinkable water from the air

    Extracting drinkable water from the air

    257 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT and elsewhere have developed a solar-powered device that can extract drinkable water directly from the air even in dry regions. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2020/solar-extracts-drinkable-water-1014) Watch more videos from MIT: http

  • 00:41 A paper-thin loudspeaker plays "We Are the Champions" by Queen

    A paper-thin loudspeaker plays "We Are the Champions" by Queen

    124 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have developed a paper-thin loudspeaker that turn any surface into an audio source. This thin-film loudspeaker produces sound with minimal distortion while using a fraction of the energy required by a traditional loudspeaker. Watch more vide

  • 02:24 What do bluebirds eat?

    What do bluebirds eat?

    684 views / 0 likes - added

    What do bluebirds eat? To find out, we placed cameras at 40 bluebird nest boxes in Delaware to record the birds bringing prey back to their nestlings. The prey were identified from the video to determine which arthropod groups are most important in the bl

  • 02:06 How to get conductive gels to stick when wet

    How to get conductive gels to stick when wet

    306 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers at MIT has developed a new way of making polymers adhere to surfaces even with the introduction of moisture, that may enable better biomedical sensors and implants. (Read more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/conductive-gels-stick-wet-0320)Wa

  • 02:13 Sliding through a syringe

    Sliding through a syringe

    251 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT researchers have developed a simple, low-cost technology to administer powerful drug formulations that are too viscous to be injected using conventional medical syringes. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2020/syringe-concentrated-biologic-drugs-0824)

  • 02:17 A light rain can spread soil bacteria far and wide

    A light rain can spread soil bacteria far and wide

    541 views / 1 likes - added

    Using high-resolution imaging, researchers from MIT's Department of Mechanical Engineering observed the effect of raindrops falling on dry soil laden with bacteria. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/light-rain-spread-soil-bacteria-0307) Watch more vid

  • 47:59 Why Do Things Spin? - with Hugh Hunt

    Why Do Things Spin? - with Hugh Hunt

    299 views / 0 likes - added

    Why does a spinning top stand up? Why doesn't a rolling wheel fall over? And how does a falling cat always manage to land on its feet?You can find more of Hugh's work on his website here: http://www2.eng.cam.ac.uk/~hemh1/From topspin in tennis, to angular

  • 02:24 New system can sterilize medical tools using solar heat

    New system can sterilize medical tools using solar heat

    311 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and the Indian Institute of Technology has developed a device that could provide pressurized steam to run autoclaves without the need for electricity in off-grid areas such as the developing world. (Learn more: https://news.

  • 07:56 Popular Where Do Teeth Come From?

    Where Do Teeth Come From?

    2,488 views / 5 likes - added

    Watch the tasty new series “Tacos of Texas” https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCdzQ_ilHPH3rQtgzo4nKM_g Remember to brush, floss, and SUBSCRIBE! ►► http://bit.ly/iotbs_sub ↓↓↓ More info and sources below ↓↓↓ Teeth. We’ve all got ‘em (most of us, anyway). But

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  • Insect-like robots

    Insect-like robots

    184 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers has developed a new generation of tiny, agile drones that look, act and maneuver like actual insects allowing them to operate in cramped spaces and withstand collisions. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2021/researchers-introduce-new

  • 01:04 Robot takes contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs

    Robot takes contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs

    322 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and Brigham and Women's Hospital have developed a system that allows a robot to take contact-free measurements of patients' vital signs. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/spot-robot-vital-signs-0831)Watch more videos fro

  • 02:39 Make way for Little HERMES, the lightweight bipedal robot

    Make way for Little HERMES, the lightweight bipedal robot

    365 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineers at MIT have designed a new lightweight bipedal robot, that can lean from side to side, walk in place, and jump while keeping its balance. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2019/two-legged-robot-mimics-human-balance-while-running-jumping-1030)Watc

  • 04:38 The MIT Intelligence Quest

    The MIT Intelligence Quest

    421 views / 0 likes - added

    The MIT Intelligence Quest seeks to discover the foundations of human and machine intelligence and drive the development of technological tools that can positively influence society. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/mit-launches-intelligence-quest-02

  • 02:35 How to mass produce cell-sized robots

    How to mass produce cell-sized robots

    407 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of engineers at MIT have developed a novel method to mass-produce tiny robots, no bigger than a cell, quickly, easily and accurately with little to no external stimulus. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/how-mass-produce-cell-sized-robots-1023)

  • 01:57 New method removes micropollutants from water

    New method removes micropollutants from water

    466 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT researchers has developed a new way to clear pollutants from water, even when present in extremely low concentrations. (Learn more about their novel method: http://news.mit.edu/2017/electrochemical-clear-pollutants-water-0510) Watch more vid

  • 01:45 Backflipping MIT Mini Cheetah

    Backflipping MIT Mini Cheetah

    562 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT'S new mini cheetah robot is the first four-legged robot to do a backflip. At only 20 pounds the limber quadruped can bend and swing its legs wide, enabling it to walk either right side up or upside down. The robot can also trot over uneven terrain abo

  • 02:30 Giving bug-like, flying robots a boost

    Giving bug-like, flying robots a boost

    157 views / 0 likes - added

    A new fabrication technique, developed by a team of electrical engineers and computer scientists, produces low-voltage, power-dense artificial muscles that improve the performance of flying microrobots. (Learn more: https://news.mit.edu/2021/micro-robots-

  • 02:46 Revolutionizing Agriculture with Low Emissions, Resilient Crops

    Revolutionizing Agriculture with Low Emissions, Resilient Crops

    124 views / 0 likes - added

    This project is working to revolutionize the agricultural sector with climate-resilient crops and fertilizers that have the ability to dramatically reduce greenhouse gas emissions from food production. Learn more about this project: https://climategrandch

  • 02:38 Drones help scientists study Guatemalan volcanoes

    Drones help scientists study Guatemalan volcanoes

    682 views / 1 likes - added

    A team of volcanologists and engineers from the Universities of Cambridge and Bristol has collected measurements from directly within volcanic clouds, together with visual and thermal images of inaccessible volcano peaks at Volcán de Fuego and Volc

  • 02:34 A new way to mix oil and water

    A new way to mix oil and water

    587 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers in the Varanasi Lab at MIT has developed a way to create nanoscale emulsions, of oil and water, stable enough to last indefinitely, and with no mixing required. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/new-way-mix-oil-and-water-1108) Wa

  • 02:32 Jell-O-like, expanding pill

    Jell-O-like, expanding pill

    446 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have designed an ingestible, Jell-O-like pill that, upon reaching the stomach, quickly swells to the size of a soft, squishy ping-pong ball big enough to stay in the stomach for an extended period of time. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/20

  • 02:19 Plug-and-play diagnostics

    Plug-and-play diagnostics

    384 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT’s Little Devices Lab have developed a set of modular blocks that can be put together in different ways to produce diagnostic devices. These “plug-and-play” devices, which require little expertise to assemble, can test blood glucose leve

  • 02:20 One giant leap for the mini cheetah

    One giant leap for the mini cheetah

    152 views / 0 likes - added

    A new control system, designed by researchers in MIT's Improbable AI Lab and demonstrated using MITs robotic mini cheetah, enables four-legged robots to traverse across uneven terrain in real-time. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2021/one-giant-leap-mini

  • 02:20 Lab on a LEGO

    Lab on a LEGO

    529 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT engineers turned to LEGO bricks as the basis of their new microfluidic design because of their precision and consistency. No matter where in the world they are found, LEGO bricks are guaranteed to line up, and snap seamlessly and securely in

  • 03:24 Round Peg in a Square Hole - Numberphile

    Round Peg in a Square Hole - Numberphile

    610 views / 0 likes - added

    Featuring Tadashi Tokieda - more Tadashi videos at: http://bit.ly/tadashi_vids More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ Tadashi Tokieda is a Professor of Mathematics at Stanford University (though this was filmed when he was at Cambridge, in the U

  • 03:09 Forest search-and-rescue

    Forest search-and-rescue

    409 views / 0 likes - added

    A group of researchers from MIT and the NASA Langley Research Center has developed an autonomous system for a fleet of quadrotor drones that enables them to search collaboratively under dense forest canopies using only on-board computation and wireless co

  • 02:35 Lining the GI tract

    Lining the GI tract

    258 views / 0 likes - added

    By making use of enzymes found in the digestive tract, MIT engineers have devised a way to apply a temporary synthetic coating to the lining of the small intestine. This coating could be adapted to deliver drugs, aid in digestion, or prevent nutrients suc

  • 01:52 Origami-inspired medical patch for sealing internal injuries

    Origami-inspired medical patch for sealing internal injuries

    155 views / 0 likes - added

    Taking inspiration from origami, MIT engineers have designed a medical patch that can be folded around minimally invasive surgical tools and delivered through airways, intestines, and other narrow spaces, to patch up internal injuries. (Learn more: https:

  • 02:49 Vision-free MIT Cheetah

    Vision-free MIT Cheetah

    656 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT's Cheetah 3 robot can now leap and gallop across rough terrain, climb a staircase littered with debris, and quickly recover its balance when suddenly yanked or shoved, all while essentially blind. Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2018/blind-cheetah-rob

  • 02:08 Popular Glowing plants provide light to read

    Glowing plants provide light to read

    702 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have been able to induce plants to give off a dim light for nearly four hours. And they believe that, with further optimization, such plants will one day be bright enough to illuminate an entire workspace. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/20

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  • 01:52 Plant-to-human communication

    Plant-to-human communication

    618 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have transformed spinach plants into sensors that can detect explosives and wirelessly relay that information to a handheld device similar to a smartphone. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2016/nanobionic-spinach-plants-detect-explosives-103

  • 03:49 The Science Nobel Prizes Explained in 3 Minutes

    The Science Nobel Prizes Explained in 3 Minutes

    426 views / 0 likes - added

    Science that’s worthy of a Nobel Prize is bound to be complicated. Here’s everything you need to know about this year’s winners. How To Win A Nobel Prize - https://youtu.be/4a1_3aW-VD8 Read More: The Nobel Prize in Physics 2018 https://www.nobelprize.org/

  • 02:24 Magnetic shape-shifters

    Magnetic shape-shifters

    451 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT engineers have created soft, magnetic 3-D-printed structures that can transform their shape almost instantaneously by the wave of a magnet. The structures are flexible, yet strong and could be used to develop remotely controlled biomedical devices. (L

  • Robotic fibers can make breath-monitoring garments

    Robotic fibers can make breath-monitoring garments

    147 views / 0 likes - added

    A new kind of fiber developed by researchers at MIT and in Sweden can be made into cloth that senses how much it is being stretched or compressed, and then provides immediate tactile feedback in the form of pressure or vibration. Such fabrics, the team su

  • 02:00 Slime Oobleck - The science of cornstarch and water

    Slime Oobleck - The science of cornstarch and water

    461 views / 0 likes - added

    When you mix cornstarch and water, weird things happen. Sometimes it acts like a liquid and sometimes it acts like a solid. Now, a team of MIT engineers have developed a mathematical model that can accurately predict this material's behavior under various

  • 03:49 Testing wastewater to help detect Covid-19

    Testing wastewater to help detect Covid-19

    327 views / 0 likes - added

    In a project that will run through the fall semester, wastewater from seven buildings on campus will be tested each day for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19. The project is designed to determine if wastewater testing can be an effective early wa

  • 04:13 Huge Fire At Our Chemistry Building

    Huge Fire At Our Chemistry Building

    611 views / 0 likes - added

    Professor Poliakoff on the blaze at the University of Nottingham's new chemistry building. Blog by the university's Vice-Chancellor at: http://bit.ly/VCNottsFire More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideos.com/ Follow us on Facebook at http://www.facebook

  • 02:10 Self-folding printable structures

    Self-folding printable structures

    469 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of researchers from MIT and Umass Amherst have designed 3-D printed structures that can fold themselves up without any outside stimulus, and the folding begins the instant it is peeled off the printing platform. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/201

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  • 03:08 Making Medallions at MIT

    Making Medallions at MIT

    497 views / 0 likes - added

    Each year, the Department of Materials Science and Engineering gives its graduating students a bronze medallion of the MIT seal. These medallions are entirely prepared, cast, and finished by students in the Merton C. Flemings Materials Processing Laborato

  • 01:31 System can 3-D print an entire building

    System can 3-D print an entire building

    581 views / 0 likes - added

    The list of materials that can be produced by 3-D printing has grown to include not just plastics but also metal, glass, and even food. Now, MIT researchers are expanding the list further, with the design of a system that can 3-D print the basic structure

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  • 1:01:22 Popular Artificial Intelligence, the History and Future - with Chris Bishop

    Artificial Intelligence, the History and Future - with Chris Bishop

    880 views / 0 likes - added

    Chris Bishop discusses the progress and opportunities of artificial intelligence research. Subscribe for weekly science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibe The last five years have witnessed a dramatic resurgence of excitement in the goal of creating intell

  • 01:57 Movable microplatform floating on droplets

    Movable microplatform floating on droplets

    474 views / 0 likes - added

    A new approach to microelectromechanical systems (MEMS), developed by a team of researchers at MIT, could offer a new way of making movable parts with no solid connections between the pieces, potentially eliminating a major source of wear and failure. (Le

  • 05:56 How will the Universe end?  with Katie Mack

    How will the Universe end? with Katie Mack

    151 views / 0 likes - added

    From the big crunch or big rip to vacuum decay, Katie Mack explains the different ways in which physicists believe our universe might end.Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibeKatie Mack is a theoretical astrophysicist and one of

  • 03:27 Tunnel Vision: The Borderline Mural Project at MIT

    Tunnel Vision: The Borderline Mural Project at MIT

    572 views / 0 likes - added

    During the 2017 spring semester a group of students organized to design and paint interactive murals covering a 200-foot long stretch of wall in the tunnel system located under the campus of MIT. The interactive portion comes in the form of augmented real

  • 03:37 AUDIO: New AI model detects asymptomatic Covid-19 infections

    AUDIO: New AI model detects asymptomatic Covid-19 infections

    388 views / 1 likes - added

    A team of MIT researchers have developed an AI model that can distinguish asymptomatic people with Covid-19 from healthy individuals without the disease through forced-cough recordings. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2020/covid-19-cough-cellphone-detect

  • 01:49 Lending a Hand

    Lending a Hand

    184 views / 0 likes - added

    An Inflatable robotic hand design gives amputees real-time tactile control and enables a wide range of daily activities, such as zipping a suitcase, shaking hands, and petting a cat. The smart hand is soft and elastic, weighs about half a pound, and costs

  • 03:36 Deepfake Videos Are Getting Terrifyingly Real I NOVA I PBS

    Deepfake Videos Are Getting Terrifyingly Real I NOVA I PBS

    443 views / 0 likes - added

    Artificially intelligent face swap videos, known as deepfakes, are more sophisticated and accessible than ever. PRODUCTION CREDITS Digital Producer Emily Zendt Production Assistance Rishya Narayanan Taylor White © WGBH Educational Foundation 2018 Add

  • 00:42 Popular Neutron stars collide

    Neutron stars collide

    940 views / 1 likes - added

    For the first time, scientists have directly detected gravitational waves – ripples in space-time – in addition to light from the spectacular collision of two neutron stars. This marks the first time that a cosmic event has been viewed in both gravitation

  • 02:16 Special Visitor To Periodic Videos

    Special Visitor To Periodic Videos

    582 views / 0 likes - added

    A young fan pays a visit to the University of Nottingham Chemistry Department. Thanks to our friends at BBC East Midlands Today, especially Quentin Rayner. EMT: https://twitter.com/bbcemt Quentin: https://twitter.com/quentinrayner University press release

  • 01:24 Meet Boston Jedi

    Meet Boston Jedi

    672 views / 1 likes - added

    Meet Boston Jedi, a Boston-based lightsaber stage combat club that meets weekly to practice on MIT's campus. Members of the club, which include MIT students and alumni, use lightsaber props to create visually engaging battle sequences to perform for audie

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  • 09:18 The Centrifuge Problem - Numberphile

    The Centrifuge Problem - Numberphile

    562 views / 0 likes - added

    More videos with Dr Holly Krieger: http://bit.ly/HollyKrieger More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ Dr Holly Krieger is based at Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge. Want some chemistry videos? Brady does those too: https://www.yout

  • 02:17 One of the strongest lightweight materials known

    One of the strongest lightweight materials known

    477 views / 0 likes - added

    A team of MIT engineers has successfully designed a new 3-D material with five percent the density of steel and ten times the strength, making it one of the strongest lightweight materials known. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2017/3-d-graphene-stronges

  • 04:45 Light-based therapy for Alzheimer's disease

    Light-based therapy for Alzheimer's disease

    520 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers in Li-Huei Tsai's laboratory at the Picower Institute for Learning and Memory have shown that disrupted gamma waves in the brains of mice with Alzheimer’s disease can be corrected by a unique non-invasive technique using flickering light. (Lea

  • 15:18 Eastern Europe Consolidates: Crash Course European History #16

    Eastern Europe Consolidates: Crash Course European History #16

    418 views / 0 likes - added

    While the focus has been on Western Europe so far, there has also been a lot going on in Eastern Europe, which we'll be looking at today. The Commonwealth of Poland-Lithuania, The Ottoman Empire, and Russia were all competing at the eastern end of the con

  • 03:25 3D printing with living organisms

    3D printing with living organisms

    451 views / 0 likes - added

    A method for printing 3D objects that can control living organisms in predicable ways has been developed by an interdisciplinary team of researchers at MIT and elsewhere. This technique may lead to 3D printing of biomedical tools that can be customized to

  • 05:24 First Images of Black Holes!

    First Images of Black Holes!

    394 views / 0 likes - added

    The Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration observed the supermassive black holes at the center of M87 and our Milky Way galaxy (SgrA*) finding the dark central shadow in accordance with General Relativity, further demonstrating the power of this 100 year-o

  • 07:01 Popular A Very Early Periodic Table - Periodic Table of Videos

    A Very Early Periodic Table - Periodic Table of Videos

    961 views / 0 likes - added

    The Professor discusses a long-lost treasure found in a university storage room... See Brady with the table on Objectivity: https://youtu.be/2eRLeS1UdPo More links and info in full description ↓↓↓ Our thanks to David O'Hagan at University of St Andrews -

  • 13:39 The Holocaust,Genocides, and Mass Murder of WWII: Crash Course European History #40

    The Holocaust,Genocides, and Mass Murder of WWII: Crash Course European History #40

    547 views / 2 likes - added

    During World War II, Nazi Germany undertook the imprisonment and summary execution of many of its own citizens, and citizens of the nations they occupied. One of the groups that came under assault was the European Jewish population. More than six million

  • 02:05 Secrets of the conch shell and its toughness

    Secrets of the conch shell and its toughness

    442 views / 0 likes - added

    The shells of marine organisms take a beating from impacts due to storms and tides, rocky shores, and sharp-toothed predators. But as recent research has demonstrated, one type of shell stands out above all the others in its toughness: the conch. Now, res

  • 01:20 Fast and forceful gel robots

    Fast and forceful gel robots

    526 views / 0 likes - added

    Engineers at MIT have fabricated transparent gel robots that can perform a number of fast, forceful tasks, including kicking a ball underwater, and grabbing and releasing a live fish. (Learn more:https://news.mit.edu/2017/transparent-gel-robots-catch-rele

  • 04:38 Curious about Curling? Meet the MIT club

    Curious about Curling? Meet the MIT club

    420 views / 0 likes - added

    For many people, including those that participate, the sport of curling is somewhat of a mystery. "There's a lot of science behind curling, including some that's actually not so well understood," says graduate student Nate Bailey, a member of the MIT Curl

  • 02:39 Furry Wetsuits

    Furry Wetsuits

    420 views / 0 likes - added

    Inspired by hairy, semiaquatic mammals such as beavers and sea otters, a group of MIT engineers are fabricating fur-like rubbery pelts learn how these mammals stay warm and even dry while diving underwater. (Learn more: http://news.mit.edu/2016/beaver-ins

  • 02:55 How to image atoms

    How to image atoms

    143 views / 0 likes - added

    In the basement of MIT.nano there is a specialized microscope able to image materials at the atomic level. In this video we go through each step of how to image the tiny building blocks for all materials: atoms. (Learn more about MIT.nano: https://mitnano

  • 15:34 Commerce, Agriculture, and Slavery: Crash Course European History #8

    Commerce, Agriculture, and Slavery: Crash Course European History #8

    408 views / 0 likes - added

    We've been talking a lot about kings, and queens, and wars, and religious upheaval for most of this series, but let's take a moment to zoom out, and look at the ways that individuals' lives were changing in the time span we've covered so far. Some people'

  • 08:06 Catalan's Conjecture - Numberphile

    Catalan's Conjecture - Numberphile

    532 views / 0 likes - added

    With Dr Holly Krieger from Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge. Have a look at Brilliant (and get 20% off) here: https://brilliant.org/Numberphile More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓↓ More Numberphile videos with Dr Krieger: http:/

  • 01:39 Popular Robots learn to use their hands

    Robots learn to use their hands

    837 views / 0 likes - added

    Having robots learn dexterous tasks requiring real-time hand-eye coordination is hard. Many tasks that we would consider simple, like hanging up a baseball cap on a rack, would be very challenging for most robot software. What's more, for a robot to learn

  • 01:55 Muscles made of nylon

    Muscles made of nylon

    645 views / 0 likes - added

    MIT researchers have come up with one of the simplest and lowest-cost systems yet for developing artificial muscles, in which a material reproduces some of the bending motions that natural muscle tissues perform. The key ingredient? Nylon fiber. (Learn mo

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  • 07:05 Do we live in a multiverse? - with Laura Mersini-Houghton

    Do we live in a multiverse? - with Laura Mersini-Houghton

    162 views / 0 likes - added

    What lies beyond the edge of our own universe? Learn more from cosmologist Laura Mersini-Houghton as she discusses her ground-breaking theory in this short video.Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibeLaura's book is out now: https

  • 04:54 The Meteorite Museum

    The Meteorite Museum

    429 views / 1 likes - added

    http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions! Peek inside the meteorite vault at Arizona State University where billion-year-old rocks from space give researchers clues about the formation of our solar system. The meteorites s

  • 04:17 Does Letter Order Matter?

    Does Letter Order Matter?

    678 views / 0 likes - added

    You’ve probably seen the internet meme about word order – but is it true? Does the order of letters in a word matter, or can people read a jumble just as quickly as a proper sentence? Learn more at HowStuffWorks.com. Share on Facebook: https://goo.gl/97ny

  • 02:31 Popular 100 Candles - Periodic Table Of Videos

    100 Candles - Periodic Table Of Videos

    766 views / 0 likes - added

    A short clip from the 100th birthday celebration for Dan Eley, FRS, held at the University of Nottingham. More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideos.com/ Follow us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/periodicvideos And on Twitter at http://twitter.com

  • 04:13 Popular Black Hole Seen For The First Time. Black hole breakthrough: Event Horizon Telescope's landmark imag

    Black Hole Seen For The First Time. Black hole breakthrough: Event Horizon Telescope's landmark imag

    2,033 views / 10 likes - added

    On April 10, 2019, the international Event Horizon Telescope (EHT) collaboration revealed humanity's first glimpse of a black hole. Learn more: https://insidetheperimeter.ca/black-hole-breakthrough-astronomers-release-landmark-image Download free posters

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  • 04:54 This river can be switched on and off

    This river can be switched on and off

    143 views / 0 likes - added

    Surely water simulation can be done with computers now? Well, not quite. At the University of Sherbrooke, there's an artificial research river, and I asked them to start it up. The University's civil engineering department: https://www.usherbrooke.ca/gciv

  • 08:44 Why Computers Can't Count Sometimes

    Why Computers Can't Count Sometimes

    416 views / 0 likes - added

    Sometimes, numbers on sites like YouTube and Twitter jump up and down; subscriber counts lag, like-counts bounce all over the place. Why is it so hard for computers to count? To answer that, we need to talk about threading, eventual consistency, and cachi

  • 10:00 Fibonacci Numbers hidden in the Mandelbrot Set - Numberphile

    Fibonacci Numbers hidden in the Mandelbrot Set - Numberphile

    589 views / 1 likes - added

    With Dr Holly Krieger from Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge. Have a look at Brilliant (and get 20% off) here: https://brilliant.org/Numberphile More Numberphile videos with Dr Krieger: http://bit.ly/HollyKrieger Her Twitter: https://twitter

  • 08:25 Popular A Fascinating Thing about Fractions - Numberphile

    A Fascinating Thing about Fractions - Numberphile

    842 views / 0 likes - added

    The Dynamical Uniform Boundedness Conjecture with Dr Holly Krieger. Extra from this interview: https://youtu.be/v4LWFzTyhpU Dr Krieger on the Numberphile Podcast: https://youtu.be/QmfQQzjpdpM More links & stuff in full description below ↓↓&d

  • 02:48 New coating could prevent pipeline clogging

    New coating could prevent pipeline clogging

    461 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at MIT have developed a coating that could stop the buildup of hydrate ices that slow or block oil and gas flow. These hydrates are potentially explosive and are largely responsible for the initial failure to contain the oil spill that rocked

  • 03:57 Where Does One Ocean End And Another Begin?

    Where Does One Ocean End And Another Begin?

    289 views / 0 likes - added

    Check out Brilliant (and get 20% off) here: https://brilliant.org/MinuteEarth/Earth's ocean water is continuous. How can we divide it into sections that are more useful?Thanks also to our Patreon patrons https://www.patreon.com/MinuteEarth and our YouTube

  • 03:43 How Smart Are Animals? Our Tests May All Be Wrong…

    How Smart Are Animals? Our Tests May All Be Wrong…

    497 views / 1 likes - added

    The way animals think and communicate is a mystery, but science is working on changing that. Here’s what we know so far. After a Decade of Colony Collapse, Bees Are Bouncing Back! (Sort Of) - https://youtu.be/n9NQ9o7UWT4 Read More: Sheep are able to recog

  • 04:03 How Many Languages Are There?

    How Many Languages Are There?

    307 views / 0 likes - added

    The answer is, of course, a bit more complicated than you might think. Written with Molly Ruhl and Gretchen McCulloch. Gretchen's podcast has an episode all about this: https://lingthusiasm.com/post/154520059101/lingthusiasm-episode-1-speaking-a-single-la

  • 03:37 Scaffolding of the Galaxies

    Scaffolding of the Galaxies

    397 views / 0 likes - added

    In the Center for Theoretical Physics at MIT, researchers develop ideas for describing the fundamental physical laws governing our universe, from perspectives spanning nuclear and particle physics, string theory, gravity, and quantum information. (Learn m

  • 03:19 Magic Jug - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Magic Jug - Periodic Table Of Videos

    584 views / 0 likes - added

    Some colour change reactions demonstrated by Dr Sam Tang from the University of Nottingham. More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideos.com/ Follow us on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/periodicvideos And on Twitter at http://twitter.com/periodicvideo

  • 13:44 Catholic Counter-Reformation: Crash Course European History #9

    Catholic Counter-Reformation: Crash Course European History #9

    459 views / 0 likes - added

    When the Protestant Reformation broke out in Western Europe, the Catholic Church got the message, at least a little bit. Pope Paul III called a council to look into reforming some aspects of the Catholic Church and try to stem the tide of competing Christ

  • Frederick Douglass | The Most Photographed American of the 19th Century

    Frederick Douglass | The Most Photographed American of the 19th Century

    252 views / 2 likes - added

    Born into slavery as Frederick Douglass in 1818, this renowned lecturer and author would become one of the greatest public speakers of his time. After escaping slavery in 1838, Douglass joined the abolitionist movement. As a paid traveling lecturer, peopl

  • 06:16 The Phenomenon of the Missing Fundamental

    The Phenomenon of the Missing Fundamental

    353 views / 0 likes - added

    Why do some higher frequencies sound like they have lower pitch than lower frequency sounds? Engineer and music lover Shaun Fitzgerald explores the phenomenon of the missing fundamental.Subscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiSubscRibeShaun

  • 12:52 Chemical Weapons (Sarin Gas) - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Chemical Weapons (Sarin Gas) - Periodic Table Of Videos

    527 views / 0 likes - added

    Discussing chemical weapons, including Sarin and Mustard Gas. Featuring professors Rob Stockman and Martyn Poliakoff from the University of Nottingham. Extra footage will be at: http://youtu.be/lay6VoWBQek More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideos.com/

  • 10:01 Popular Why You Should Embrace Your Stutter | Juan V. Lopez | TEDxUniversityofNevada

    Why You Should Embrace Your Stutter | Juan V. Lopez | TEDxUniversityofNevada

    789 views / 1 likes - added

    Juan V. Lopez is an MBA student at The University of Nevada. In this inspiring talk, Juan explains why he now embraces his stutter as an integral part of his unique self. Juan V López is a MBA Candidate at the University of Nevada, first-generation

  • 05:53 Never-Before-Seen Footage Uncovers Antarctica’s First Scientific Missions

    Never-Before-Seen Footage Uncovers Antarctica’s First Scientific Missions

    503 views / 0 likes - added

    During the Cold War, Antarctica was primed for conquest. Here’s how it became an international science laboratory. This NASA Mission Uses Cold War Planes to Map the World's Largest Island https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oiQq9kWhGxI Subscribe! https://www.

  • 08:14 Upgrade Your Hand With This Extra Thumb

    Upgrade Your Hand With This Extra Thumb

    42 views / 0 likes - added

    Have you ever thought about using an extra thumb? Perhaps you could play the guitar faster, or hold an extra tool as you continue to work? Well think no more, as Dani Clode has invented just that. We took a trip down to the University of Cambridge, where

  • 1:11:40 Popular The Million Dollar Equations - with Tom Crawford

    The Million Dollar Equations - with Tom Crawford

    864 views / 0 likes - added

    In the year 2000 it was announced that seven of the biggest unsolved problems in mathematics would each be given a $1million prize. Only one has been solved.Watch the Q&A: https://youtu.be/AFc7kGfLSIcSubscribe for regular science videos: http://bit.ly/RiS

  • 04:21 Popular Oscillating Reaction - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Oscillating Reaction - Periodic Table Of Videos

    759 views / 0 likes - added

    Example of a Belousov--Zhabotinsky reaction (or BZ reaction). Featuring Professor Martyn Poliakoff from the University of Nottingham. And the hands of Dr Samantha Tang! More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideos.com/ Follow us on Facebook at http://www.f

  • 01:01 Building a soft robotic cube

    Building a soft robotic cube

    649 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers from MIT’s Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL) have developed a soft robotic cube that uses a series of spring-loaded metal tongues to jump, bounce, and roll. In this video, we watch the process of building a

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  • 14:36 Einstein's grades

    Einstein's grades

    343 views / 0 likes - added

    Come and take a look at Einstein's report card from his final school year and his time studying at ETH university in Switzerland. We will learn interesting facts about his life, his teachers and the state of physics at the time. Timestamps: 0:00 - Intro1:

  • 16:34 Expansion and Consequences: Crash Course European History #5

    Expansion and Consequences: Crash Course European History #5

    407 views / 0 likes - added

    European exploration had a lot of side effects. When the Old World and the New World began to interact, people, wealth, food, animals, and disease began to flow in both directions. In the New World, countless millions were killed by smallpox, measles, and

  • 07:37 Knighthood For The Professor

    Knighthood For The Professor

    533 views / 1 likes - added

    Our very own Professor Poliakoff has become Sir Martyn... He received a knighthood in the UK's New Year's Honours List. This video also features a "recent knight" - University of Nottingham Vice-Chancellor, Sir David Greenaway. Full interview with Sir Dav

  • 07:27 Liquid Electrons - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Liquid Electrons - Periodic Table Of Videos

    621 views / 0 likes - added

    Solvated electrons - sodium in ammonia. Featuring Dr Rob Stockman from the University of Nottingham. Hello Internet podcast: http://www.hellointernet.fm And on YouTube (although a few weeks behind): http://bit.ly/HelloInternetYT More chemistry at http://w

  • 04:12 Why Old Screens Make A ᴴᶦᵍʰ ᴾᶦᵗᶜʰᵉᵈ Noise

    Why Old Screens Make A ᴴᶦᵍʰ ᴾᶦᵗᶜʰᵉᵈ Noise

    537 views / 0 likes - added

    Last week I made a video surrounded by old-school CRT monitors and televisions - cathode ray tubes. And I completely forgot to remove the high pitched whine they produce. Here's why: why they make that noise, and why I didn't notice it. Thanks again to th

  • 06:31 How Computers Compress Text: Huffman Coding and Huffman Trees

    How Computers Compress Text: Huffman Coding and Huffman Trees

    542 views / 0 likes - added

    Computers store text (or, at least, English text) as eight bits per character. There are plenty of more efficient ways that could work: so why don't we use them? And how can we fit more text into less space? Let's talk about Huffman coding, Huffman trees,

  • 04:22 Dawn Of The Cyborg Bacteria

    Dawn Of The Cyborg Bacteria

    572 views / 0 likes - added

    http://www.sciencefriday.com In a basement laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania, two roboticists have harnessed the innate sensing, swimming, and swarming abilities of bacteria to power microscopic robots. Even though their work sounds like the pr

  • 03:49 Aspirin Journey through the body - 3D Animation

    Aspirin Journey through the body - 3D Animation

    394 views / 0 likes - added

    Copyright Sheffield Hallam University www.3dsteve.co.uk

  • 01:01 Amazon made its first drone delivery

    Amazon made its first drone delivery

    640 views / 1 likes - added

    Prime Air is Amazon's latest beta test for package delivery via drones. The company is hosting a trial in Cambridge, England with two customers, with plans to broaden reach in the UK and beyond. -------------------------------------------------- Follow BI

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  • 02:38 The nautilus will make you rethink intelligence

    The nautilus will make you rethink intelligence

    495 views / 0 likes - added

    Nautiluses have survived five mass extinctions thanks in large part to a big and complex brain that smells and feels better than it can see. That's why Dr. Jennifer Basil, an evolutionary biologist at Brooklyn College, has rethought how humans perceive in

  • 00:22 Snippet: 3D hologram

    Snippet: 3D hologram

    671 views / 0 likes - added

    Daniel Smalley and colleagues used a tiny glowing particle to paint a 3D image--aka a 'Princess Leia' hologram--which unlike regular holograms can be seen from different angles. Learn more: http://www.sciencemag.org/news/2018/01/princess-leia-holograms-on

  • 04:09 Popular This Is How Aliens Might Contact Us

    This Is How Aliens Might Contact Us

    890 views / 3 likes - added

    Could Aliens Be Trying To Contact Earth Without Us Knowing? To create your stunning website & support Life Noggin, go to https://www.wix.com/go/lifenoggin Subscribe: https://bit.ly/SubLifeNoggin | Get your exclusive Life Noggin merch: http://keeponthinkin

  • 02:26 Leonardo da Vinci: Machines in Motion

    Leonardo da Vinci: Machines in Motion

    538 views / 0 likes - added

    Exhibition at California University of Pennsylvania

  • 08:12 Why You Should Turn On Two Factor Authentication

    Why You Should Turn On Two Factor Authentication

    346 views / 0 likes - added

    The short answer is: "because it'll make things more secure". The long answer involves Ronald Reagan. MORE BASICS: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL96C35uN7xGLLeET0dOWaKHkAlPsrkchaWritten with Sean Elliott https://twitter.com/SeanMElliott/ Camera b

  • 02:28 Popular How Do Our Bodies Fight Off Dangerous Chemicals?

    How Do Our Bodies Fight Off Dangerous Chemicals?

    758 views / 0 likes - added

    UC San Diego's Amro Hamdoun explains how you can think of cells like night clubs. With every substance that a cell encounters it has to decide which to eliminate and which to let in. Since humans have generated over 80,000 synthetic compounds, it's now ev

  • 01:22 Researchers Recruit Sheep Instead of Lawn Mowers

    Researchers Recruit Sheep Instead of Lawn Mowers

    256 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers at the University of California, Davis are exploring the idea of replacing conventional lawn mowers with sheep that will graze and munch on campus lawns. AmazeLabs Johana Restrepo has more.

  • 12:06 Galaxies, Part 1: Crash Course Astronomy #38

    Galaxies, Part 1: Crash Course Astronomy #38

    687 views / 0 likes - added

    The Milky Way is our neighborhood in the universe. It’s a galaxy and there are many others out there. Galaxies contain gas, dust, and billions of stars or more. They come in four main shapes: elliptical, spiral, peculiar, and irregular. Galaxies can colli

  • 05:01 Bridge Building Competition

    Bridge Building Competition

    664 views / 0 likes - added

    This video shows some of the wicked constructions for the 2013 Bridge Building Competition at the University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

  • 04:21 Popular What Is 4-Strand DNA & Why Are Scientists So Excited?

    What Is 4-Strand DNA & Why Are Scientists So Excited?

    945 views / 0 likes - added

    We've all learned that DNA is a double helix, but it's more complex than we may think. What other configurations can DNA have? Is Traveling in Our DNA? - http://bit.ly/1ZyqcyY Sign Up For The Seeker Newsletter Here - http://bit.ly/1UO1PxI Read More: Super

  • 06:43 Haptic Tactics : Allison Okamura

    Haptic Tactics : Allison Okamura

    534 views / 0 likes - added

    Allison Okamura and the CHARM lab at Stanford University focus on what the sense of touch can bring to robot-human interactions. Learn more: http://specialprojects.sciencemag.org/xxfiles/

  • 02:07 Popular Yeast Cell - 3D

    Yeast Cell - 3D

    906 views / 0 likes - added

    D. Allan Drummond, a professor at University of Chicago, prints these scientifically accurate budding yeast cells in brass at 10,000 times their actual size.

  • 07:39 Seaborgium Chemistry - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Seaborgium Chemistry - Periodic Table Of Videos

    665 views / 0 likes - added

    Scientists create Seaborgium hexacarbonyl from the short-lived element. More on Seaborgium: http://youtu.be/UWq0djr790E More on heavy elements: http://youtu.be/z3oY-XHwss8 The paper referenced in this video (subscription only) at: http://www.sciencemag.or

  • 02:51 Christmas Lectures 2012 - Lighting a fire in 15% Oxygen

    Christmas Lectures 2012 - Lighting a fire in 15% Oxygen

    85 views / 1 likes - added

    As part of Lecture One of his 2012 Christmas Lectures, 'The Modern Alchemist', Dr Peter Wothers visits a research lab near Cambridge where they are investigating new fire prevention technologies.Normal air contains 21% Oxygen. Will Peter be able to light

  • 03:02 How Planes Are Engineered to Fly Upside-Down

    How Planes Are Engineered to Fly Upside-Down

    604 views / 0 likes - added

    Plane wings are engineered to make flight as efficient as possible, but what exactly has to change so they can fly upside down? What's It Like To Ride In A Fighter Jet? - https://youtu.be/CHuf06pPDts Sign Up For The Seeker Newsletter Here - http://bit.ly/

  • 11:08 Take a Virtual Reality tour of six REAL exoplanets (4K, 360 VR experience) | We The Curious

    Take a Virtual Reality tour of six REAL exoplanets (4K, 360 VR experience) | We The Curious

    429 views / 0 likes - added

    What would it be like to stand on the surface of another planet? We teamed up with a group of astrophysicists to create a scientifically accurate, virtual reality tour of six planets discovered outside our solar system. So strap on a VR headset, surf the

  • 04:31 Copper Sulfate (slow Motion) - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Copper Sulfate (slow Motion) - Periodic Table Of Videos

    588 views / 1 likes - added

    Copper Sulfate and Ammonia at high speed - watch the colour change and precipitation. More chemistry in slow motion: http://bit.ly/chemslomo Featuring Professor Martyn Poliakoff from the University of Nottingham. More chemistry at http://www.periodicvideo

  • 04:49 Popular Making Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream With 'Dr. B'

    Making Liquid Nitrogen Ice Cream With 'Dr. B'

    741 views / 0 likes - added

    KUT's Mose Buchele learns how to make liquid nitrogen ice cream with Kate Biberdorf, a chemist with the University of Texas at Austin.

  • 05:37 The environmental cost of free two-day shipping

    The environmental cost of free two-day shipping

    503 views / 0 likes - added

    What’s the environmental impact of online shopping and what are the solutions to make it more sustainable? Climate Lab is produced by the University of California in partnership with Vox. Hosted by conservation scientist Dr. M. Sanjayan, the videos explor

  • 07:03 Takeout creates a lot of trash. It doesn't have to.

    Takeout creates a lot of trash. It doesn't have to.

    472 views / 0 likes - added

    Our single-use items aren't helping the fight against climate change but there are easy hacks to reduce and reuse. Climate Lab is produced by the University of California in partnership with Vox. Hosted by conservation scientist Dr. M. Sanjayan, the video

  • 09:23 Food waste is the world's dumbest problem

    Food waste is the world's dumbest problem

    576 views / 1 likes - added

    Eat your peas! It’s the easiest way to fight climate change. This is the fourth episode of Climate Lab, a six-part series produced by the University of California in partnership with Vox. Hosted by Emmy-nominated conservation scientist Dr. M. Sanjayan, th

  • 08:56 What's The Longest Word You Can Write With Seven-Segment Displays?

    What's The Longest Word You Can Write With Seven-Segment Displays?

    541 views / 0 likes - added

    That's right, we're kicking Season 2 of the Basics off with a technical episode about a somewhat-obsolete technology! IT'S PARTY TIME. Wait, no, not party time. IT'S CODE TIME. Close enough. Let's talk about seven-segment displays, and about the longest w

  • 08:11 The fight to rethink (and reinvent) nuclear power

    The fight to rethink (and reinvent) nuclear power

    469 views / 0 likes - added

    New nuclear energy technology has come a long way - but can we get over our fears? This is the fifth episode of Climate Lab, a six-part series produced by the University of California in partnership with Vox. Hosted by Emmy-nominated conservation scientis

  • 05:40 The diet that helps fight climate change

    The diet that helps fight climate change

    637 views / 1 likes - added

    You don’t have to go vegan to fight climate change. Research shows that small changes to our diets can make big differences. Climate Lab is produced by the University of California in partnership with Vox. Hosted by conservation scientist Dr. M. Sanjayan,

  • 07:20 Old And New Labs - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Old And New Labs - Periodic Table Of Videos

    664 views / 0 likes - added

    With one eye on the past, The Professor shows us the new teaching lab at the University of Nottingham's School of Chemistry! Featuring Professor Sir Martyn Poliakoff. Hydrogen Bubbles: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d49TzVF1gmY Exploding Pianos: https://

  • 13:38 Reformation and Consequences: Crash Course European History #7

    Reformation and Consequences: Crash Course European History #7

    481 views / 0 likes - added

    The Protestant Reformation didn't exactly begin with Martin Luther, and it didn't end with him either. Reformers and monarchs changed the ways that religious and state power were organized throughout the 16th and early 17th centuries. Jean Calvin in Franc

  • 13:10 Black Nitrogen - Periodic Table of Videos

    Black Nitrogen - Periodic Table of Videos

    316 views / 0 likes - added

    Researchers discover a new form of Nitrogen.More links and info in full description Discussed by Professor Sir Martyn Poliakoff from the University of Nottingham.Our thanks to Dr Dominique Laniel and his team, which did the research. Check the paper: http

  • 08:59 Going green shouldn't be this hard

    Going green shouldn't be this hard

    496 views / 0 likes - added

    Going green does not need to be a sacrifice, either for us as individuals or for businesses, governments and the economy. This is the second episode of Climate Lab, a six-part series produced by the University of California in partnership with Vox. Hosted

  • 04:42 Popular Pythagoras Cup (Greedy Cup) Filled With Mercury

    Pythagoras Cup (Greedy Cup) Filled With Mercury

    805 views / 0 likes - added

    More Mercury: https://youtu.be/5I4rxfnCtxY Numberphile for Pythagorean math: https://youtu.be/ItiFO5y36kw Buy a Pythagorean Cup on Amazon: http://bit.ly/Pyth_Cup This features features Professor Sir Martyn Poliakoff from the University of Nottingham. Siph

  • 02:50 Why Are Adults Bad At New Languages?

    Why Are Adults Bad At New Languages?

    366 views / 0 likes - added

    Thanks to the University of Minnesota for sponsoring this video! http://twin-cities.umn.edu/Learning a new language as an adult is harder than doing so as a child because adults usually arent as invested and often use the wrong strategies.Thanks also to o

  • Som ET - 41 - Mars - Crater in Tyrrhena Terra - 8K

    Som ET - 41 - Mars - Crater in Tyrrhena Terra - 8K

    92 views / 0 likes - added

    A lovely crater with an eroded rim, but highly visible bedrock within.Audio: Som ET - 41 - MarsCredit: NASA/JPL/University of Arizona.#nasa #mars #curiosity #hirise #perseverance #marte # # # # # # #

  • 09:08 Is the Periodic Table Upside Down?

    Is the Periodic Table Upside Down?

    395 views / 0 likes - added

    Featuring Professor Martyn Poliakoff from The University of Nottingham.More links and info in full description The Nature Chemistry paper being discussed is here: https://rdcu.be/bvAnSSupport us on Patreon (and have your name on our table): https://www.pa

  • 07:44 Diatoms: Tiny Factories You Can See From Space

    Diatoms: Tiny Factories You Can See From Space

    343 views / 0 likes - added

    We owe so much to diatoms! They help us make beer, paint, and kitty litter, and they're responsible for some of the air you're breathing right now!Follow Journey to the Microcosmos:Twitter: https://twitter.com/journeytomicroFacebook: https://www.facebook.

  • 01:30 Remote Controls

    Remote Controls

    317 views / 0 likes - added

    Finalist of the Best Illusion of the Year Contest 2016Title: Remote Controls Author: Arthur G. Shapiro Institution: American University, USA

  • 01:07 Silhouette Zoetrope

    Silhouette Zoetrope

    338 views / 0 likes - added

    Finalist of the Best Illusion of the Year Contest 2016Title: Silhouette ZoetropeAuthor: Christine VerasInstitution: Nanyang Technological University, Singapore

  • 03:58 Popular Do Gut Feelings Actually Exist?

    Do Gut Feelings Actually Exist?

    721 views / 1 likes - added

    Have you ever wondered why you get that feeling in your gut when faced with a risky decision? There's more behind it than you may think. How Scientists Are Hacking Bacteria To Fight Disease - https://youtu.be/caiIUZDclIg Sign Up For The Seeker Newsletter

    Featured
  • 03:39 How to Make Your Face More Likable | Earth Lab

    How to Make Your Face More Likable | Earth Lab

    234 views / 0 likes - added

    A program can work out how trustworthy and likeable you seem based on your features, and how to improve them.Best of Earth Lab: http://bit.ly/EarthLabOriginals Best of BBC Earth: http://bit.ly/TheBestOfBBCEarthVideos The Doctors Are In The House: http://b

  • 07:18 FizzBuzz: One Simple Interview Question

    FizzBuzz: One Simple Interview Question

    608 views / 0 likes - added

    There are a lot of opinions on how to hire coders, and most of them are terrible. The opinions, that is, not the coders. But a basic filter test to make sure someone can do what they say they can: that seems reasonable, and FizzBuzz is one of the more com

  • 08:07 Popular Argon  - Periodic Table of Videos

    Argon - Periodic Table of Videos

    962 views / 0 likes - added

    A new and improved Argon video. More links and info in full description ↓↓↓ Featuring Professor Sir Martyn Poliakoff and Senior Technician Neil Barnes at the University of Nottingham. Videos on all the elements: http://bit.ly/118elements See our recent He

  • 01:14 Change the color

    Change the color

    397 views / 0 likes - added

    Best Illusion of the Year Contest - 2019Title: Change the Color Author: Haruaki FukudaInstitution: University of TokyoCountry: Japan

  • 05:13 Popular Cool Explosions And Bags Of Hydrogen - Periodic Table Of Videos

    Cool Explosions And Bags Of Hydrogen - Periodic Table Of Videos

    765 views / 0 likes - added

    A series of Hydrogen explosions, including with cooled balloons and plastic bags. Featuring Neil Barnes, Darren Walsh and Martyn Poliakoff from the University of Nottingham. Video by Brady Haran. Extra footage: https://youtu.be/wHu39QPAUfo More slow motio

    Featured
  • 09:10 Making Acid Rain (INDOORS) - Periodic Table of Videos

    Making Acid Rain (INDOORS) - Periodic Table of Videos

    439 views / 0 likes - added

    Check out our Acid Rain demonstration. Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/periodicvideosMore links and info in full description Featuring Sir Martyn Poliakoff and Neil Barnes from the University of Nottingham.Rain drops on Sixty Symbols: https

  • 01:08 Mask Induced Filling out

    Mask Induced Filling out

    248 views / 0 likes - added

    Best Illusion of the Year Contest - 2017 The Mask Induced Filling-outAuthor: Shuichiro TayaInstitution: Hiyoshi Psychology Laboratory, Keio UniversityCountry: Japan

  • 01:13 Bodiject Fingers

    Bodiject Fingers

    301 views / 0 likes - added

    Best Illusion of the Year Contest - 2019Title: Bodiject FingersAuthor: Kenri KodakaInstitution: Naoya City UniversityCountry: Japan

  • 01:07 Helix Rotation

    Helix Rotation

    305 views / 0 likes - added

    Best Illusion of the Year Contest - 2019Title: Helix Rotation Author: Arthur G. ShapiroInstitution: American University Country: USA

  • 03:36 Science vs the Weather: Salford's Energy House

    Science vs the Weather: Salford's Energy House

    593 views / 0 likes - added

    At the University of Salford's Energy House, all the energy use is monitored and controlled, allowing researchers to experiment with all sorts of insulation and energy-saving techniques. But how to control for factors like sun, wind and rain? The solution

  • Electric fields elicit ballooning in spiders

    Electric fields elicit ballooning in spiders

    165 views / 0 likes - added

    The aerodynamic capabilities of spiders have intrigued scientists for hundreds of years, biologists from the University of Bristol believe they have found the answer...Paper: Current Biology, Electric fields elicit ballooning in spiders. Erica L. Morley a

  • 09:15 Amazing Marching Band! Halftime vs. Michigan State. One Giant Leap.

    Amazing Marching Band! Halftime vs. Michigan State. One Giant Leap.

    522 views / 1 likes - added

    Watch The Ohio State University Marching Band's "One Giant Leap" halftime show as the Buckeyes football team took on Michigan State on Oct. 5, 2019. #GoBucks

  • 03:04 Bill meets bots

    Bill meets bots

    700 views / 0 likes - added

    Bill Gates visited a Harvard University lab that makes robotic gloves, pants, and flying insects. These incredible creations are powerful examples of the exciting innovation underway in the field of robotics. Learn more at https://b-gat.es/2TqZoDP

  • 02:05 Codename: Kids Next Door - Operation: C.O.L.L.E.G.E.

    Codename: Kids Next Door - Operation: C.O.L.L.E.G.E.

    353 views / 0 likes - added

    Numbuh One discovers that England's most prestigious university has accepted a 10-year-old boy, and is convinced that the adults want to steal the new student's brain.Subscribe for more Cartoon Network fun!

  • 06:05 Could These Numbers Unravel New Dimensions in Space?

    Could These Numbers Unravel New Dimensions in Space?

    406 views / 1 likes - added

    These multidimensional number systems are helping us explain the laws of nature. Here’s how. Can Hawking’s Black Hole Paradox Be Solved With Fuzzballs? - https://youtu.be/esPa1tVSjew Read More: The Peculiar Math That Could Underlie The Laws of Nature http

  • 02:35 Popular This Man Protects the World's Rarest Colors

    This Man Protects the World's Rarest Colors

    771 views / 1 likes - added

    The materials collection, at the Harvard Art Museums in Cambridge, MA, houses thousands of pigments, including some of the world’s rarest. Dragon's blood, mummy, Indian yellow: these are but a few flashy highlights from the museum's collection. SUBS

  • 05:00 What Happens if Earth Gets 2°C Warmer?

    What Happens if Earth Gets 2°C Warmer?

    360 views / 0 likes - added

    Over the last 20 years, 2°C has been referenced in climate policies and agreements made by the Council of the European Union, the G8 (now the G7), and more. So what makes two degrees so important? -- Producer/Video by: Jason Lederman Narrator: Amy Schelle

  • 06:30 Bats Take Flight

    Bats Take Flight

    600 views / 1 likes - added

    http://www.patreon.com/scifri - Please Help Support Our Video Productions! You’d think that bats and birds fly in similar ways—in fact, many scientists used to consider bat flight a minor variation of bird flight. But, with the aid of high-speed video, re

  • 12:34 This $8 Trillion Coronavirus Mistake Could Kill 100%, w Stephen Fry. AI Is Watching.

    This $8 Trillion Coronavirus Mistake Could Kill 100%, w Stephen Fry. AI Is Watching.

    178 views / 0 likes - added

    Experts warned that a pandemic was inevitable. Preparing would have cost the US around $1billion. Instead, it will now cost $8 trillion, and over 200,000 deaths. We explore the greatest existential threats - AI, nuclear and biological - and how coronaviru

  • 07:54 Moscovium (NEW ELEMENT) - Periodic Table of Videos

    Moscovium (NEW ELEMENT) - Periodic Table of Videos

    656 views / 0 likes - added

    Element 115 has been named Moscovium, after the city of Moscow. Videos on all 118 elements: http://bit.ly/118elements Nihonian: https://youtu.be/-HcSEKuYGM8 Tennessine: https://youtu.be/1RGlXh9eC5E Oganesson: https://youtu.be/VMv44bIBdQI Discussed by Prof

  • 01:01 Using Eye Gaze to Teach a Robot

    Using Eye Gaze to Teach a Robot

    328 views / 0 likes - added

    Carnegie Mellon University's Henny Admoni uses nonverbal human behavior, such as eye gaze, to better understand people's intentions. Using that information, Admoni creates algorithms that will allow future robots to be more collaborative in everyday life.


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