Scienceline

Scienceline

Science EN ↓ 103 episodes

The Scienceline podcast is produced by the Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program in the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute at New York University. For more information, e-mail us at scienceline@gmail.com.

Author

Scienceline

Category

Science

Podcast website

scienceline.org

Latest episode

Apr 14, 2026

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Episodes

Interview with Girardin Jean-Louis, PhD 16.09.2015

An interview with Girardin Jean-Louis, a behavioral sleep scientist at NYU, produced by Katherine Ellen Foley. Image credit: Lauren J. Young.

An Interview With Nelson Dellis on Memory 11.05.2015

Nelson Dellis wears many hats. He’s a software developer, mountaineer and runs a charity that raises money for Alzheimer’s research. But most famously, he’s a memory athlete: He’s won the USA Memory Championships four times, and routinely places in the top 10 at the world competition. Katherine Foley sat down with him to learn more about how he got into the memory business, and what techniques he...

Mental Feats: The 2015 USA Memory Championships 11.05.2015

For 18 years now, the USA Memory Championships have challenged competitors — “mental athletes” — to stretch the limits of their minds to memorize and recall names and faces, random digits and words and decks of cards. Each year, competitors break each others’ previous records, and the competitive air is almost palpable. But what’s at stake in memory competitions anyway? Who goes to them, and why?...

KatherineFoley MarieRosettie 17.03.2015

KatherineFoley MarieRosettie by

Swamp Sparrow Song 14.01.2015

These audio files feature a male swamp sparrow’s trill, which consists of the same syllable rapidly repeated over and over again. The first file is the trill at normal speed, and the second file is the trill slowed down 5x. Each syllable in the trill contains the same sequence of three notes: a short initial note that drops rapidly in pitch, a flat middle note and a long final note with a slower f...

Swamp Sparrow Song — Slowed Down 5x 14.01.2015

These audio files feature a male swamp sparrow’s trill, which consists of the same syllable rapidly repeated over and over again. The first file is the trill at normal speed, and the second file is the trill slowed down 5x. Each syllable in the trill contains the same sequence of three notes: a short initial note that drops rapidly in pitch, a flat middle note and a long final note with a slower f...

The modern days of internet fame 09.06.2014

Most media is now hosted online. So how does that change the process of gaining fame and staying famous? By Rebecca Cudmore and Amy Lu

What's the deal with jet lag? 16.05.2014

Anyone who travels knows that feeling — the disorienting, sleepy-awake feeling, like you've been hit by a bus. It's jet lag. But why do we get it, and what can we do to offset it? Kathryn Free speaks to a researcher who may have the answer, and a pilot who fills us in on how people in his profession fight jet lag.

Why so serious? 30.04.2014

Since Freud, psychologists and other social scientists have endlessly pondered over why humans laugh, and what exactly causes us to perceive certain situations and actions as "humorous”. In a special episode for WNYU’s The Doppler Effect program, Becca Cudmore and Neel Patel find out from scientists and humor professionals what makes something worthy of laughs. Listeners will hear insights from Ro...

Sensory Deprivation 03.04.2014

Sensory Deprivation by

Health gets hip(hop) 09.07.2013

Health gets hip(hop) by

Inhale, exhale, repeat. 28.01.2013

Inhale, exhale, repeat. by

Marathon running for dummies 17.01.2013

Marathon running for dummies by

Lend me your ears 17.10.2012

If you were a band geek, an orch dork or a member of the choir cult, you may have heard about “perfect pitch.” The people who have it are sometimes seen as exemplary musicians who will go on to study music in college, get a job as a professional musician and blow the classical scene away. Unfortunately, it’s not something that people can learn whenever they want. If you’re more than 10 years old,...

Speaking Pigeon 21.05.2012

Keeping up with New York City's feathered underdogs

Touring the Universe 23.03.2012

Touring the Universe by

Laughing out loud 09.02.2012

Laughing out loud by

Nuclear weapons 26.01.2012

Nuclear weapons by

Urban Kayaking 06.01.2012

Urban Kayaking by

Tumbleweed.v2 13.12.2011

Tumbleweed.v2 by

DNA 23.11.2011

DNA by

The Cell 07.11.2011

Kelly Slivka looks into where the word cell came from, and how it's used.

It's a bird, it's a plane, it's... an earthquake? 14.09.2011

It's a bird, it's a plane, it's... an earthquake? by

Space Sounds 22.07.2011

Space Sounds by

Repeat after me 31.05.2011

Chances are you've chanted before. Whether you were in the streets protesting, at church praising, or just in your living room rooting for your favorite team, there's something about chanting that we just can't resist. But what is it? And what makes one chant better than another?

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