Teaching robots to smile, and the effects of a rare mandolin on a scientist’s career

Teaching robots to smile, and the effects of a rare mandolin on a scientist’s career

Robots that can smile in synchrony with people, and what ends up in the letters section First on this week’s show, a robot that can predict your smile. Hod Lipson, a roboticist and professor at Columbia University, joins host Sarah Crespi to discuss how mirrors can help robots learn to make facial expressions and eventually improve robot nonverbal communication. Next, we have Margaret Handley, a professor in the department of epidemiology and biostatistics and medicine at the University of California San Francisco. She shares a letter she wrote to Science about how her past, her family, and a rare instrument relate to her current career focus on public health and homelessness. Letters Editor Jennifer Sills also weighs in with the kinds of letters people write into the magazine. Other Past as Prologue letters: A new frontier for mi familia by Raven Delfina Otero-Symphony A uranium miner’s daughter by Tanya J. Gallegos Embracing questions after my father’s murder by Jacquelyn J. Cragg A family’s pride in educated daughters by Qura Tul Ain One person’s trash: Another’s treasured education by Xiangkun Elvis Cao This week’s episode was produced with help from Podigy. About the Science Podcast Authors: Sarah Crespi; Jennifer Sills Episode page: https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.zy9w2u0 About the Science Podcast: https://www.science.org/content/page/about-science-podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Grappling with declining populations, and the future of quantum mechanics

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When we’ll hit peak carbon emissions, and macaques that keep the beat

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First up on the podcast: the mysterious fate of Europe’s Neolithic farmers. They arrived from Anatolia around 5500 B.C.E. and began farming fertile land across Europe. Five hundred years later, their ...

20 Marras 202532min

Solving the ‘golfer’s curse’ and using space as a heat sink

Solving the ‘golfer’s curse’ and using space as a heat sink

First up on the podcast, Online News Editor David Grimm joins host Sarah Crespi for a rundown of online news stories. They talk about lichen that dine on dino bones, the physics of the lip-out problem...

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6 Marras 202535min

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First up on the podcast, increased carbon dioxide emissions sink more acidity into the ocean, but checking pH all over the world, up and down the water column, is incredibly challenging. Staff Writer ...

30 Loka 202545min

The contagious buzz of bumble bee positivity, and when snow crabs vanish

The contagious buzz of bumble bee positivity, and when snow crabs vanish

First up on the podcast, the Bering Sea’s snow crabs are bouncing back after a 50-billion-crab die-off in 2020, but scientists are racing to predict what’s going to happen to this important fishery. C...

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Hunting ancient viruses in the Arctic, and how ants build their nests to fight disease

Hunting ancient viruses in the Arctic, and how ants build their nests to fight disease

First up on the podcast, Contributing Correspondent Kai Kupferschmidt takes a trip to Svalbard, an Arctic archipelago where ancient RNA viruses may lie buried in the permafrost. He talks with host Sar...

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