University at Albany

The Short Version

Science EN ↓ 21 episodes

Quick insights for busy people. We're helping you understand the world 15 minutes at a time. Recorded in Albany, New York, at the University at Albany, one of the most diverse public research institutions in the United States.

Author

University at Albany

Category

Science

Latest episode

May 6, 2026

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Episodes

Motor oil & blood: AI, photography and how we lie to ourselves about what we see 06.05.2026

The longer version:  In this episode, Danny recounts his experience as an expert witness in a murder trial evaluating two competing sets of crime scene photographs of blood stains. What the photos showed (or didn’t) was a potentially significant detail in the case.  More important for this conversation is the context: The photographs were originally shot on 35mm film and therefore theoretically be...

Grief tech: What AI, aura photos and 19th-century spirit photographs have in common 29.04.2026

The longer version: There were so many interesting threads to this conversation that we couldn't include in the final edit, including Erica's take on whether folks in the 19th century knew William Mumler might be a grifter (yes) — and whether that really matters (maybe not). Why do you think spirit photography took off? Were people not aware that technological trickery was being used? EF: It actua...

A more sustainable U: Ditching fossil fuels one concrete dorm at a time 22.04.2026

The longer version:  Sustainability conversations aren't just about high-minded principles of environmental stewardship. At their core, they are conversations about the mundane, largely unseen building systems that make our climate-controlled lives comfortable every day.. They’re also about policy choices and the political will to make important changes. UAlbany’s Central Plant, for example, provi...

The answers within us: Programmable DNA shapes and the future of biotech 15.04.2026

The longer version:  In this week’s episode, Arun discussed how DNA nanostructures can be used for biotech as well as data storage. We asked about other applications being explored in the broader field of nanotechnology. As it turns out, materials science is fertile territory. There’s also growing interest in developing DNA barcodes. ARC:  Imagine a store where vegetables, produce or other plant o...

Transcending the gloom boom: How climate fiction can help us imagine a different future 08.04.2026

The longer version:  On his syllabus for a course called Realism and Climate Fiction, Mike Hill includes two texts that don’t — on their face —seem like obvious choices for a class exploring the emergence of cli-fi as a literary genre. One is Cormac McCarthy’s 2007 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Road and the other is Robinson Crusoe , the 1719 novel about a shipwrecked sailor, which not only pre...

The power of possibility: Havidán Rodríguez on how higher ed can make its case for good 01.04.2026

The longer version:  If you’ve heard Havidán Rodríguez speak publicly, odds are you’ve heard him say the phrase, “it’s always a great day to be a Great Dane.” It’s his thing. But there’s another phrase he says a lot, often in connection with the story of how college transformed his life. “And this ,” he emphasizes as he concludes the anecdote, “is the power of higher education.” The point of telli...

Beyond Bad Bunny: Explaining the deeply entangled traditions of Puerto Rican music and politics 25.03.2026

The longer version:  If you’ve found your way to a podcast inspired partly by Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl halftime show and haven’t yet seen it, be sure to check it out so you can understand the full context of our conversation with José. And if you also missed the controversy swirling around the performance, Rolling Stone is a good place to start unpacking that. The Conversation also had a good explai...

Finding your fit: How to stay curious and launch a career from college 11.03.2026

The longer version:  We couldn’t interview the director of UAlbany’s Career Center without asking him for his top tips on how to approach career exploration — or re-exploration if you find yourself at a crossroads. Here’s Noah’s list of must-dos: Understand the flexibility and breadth of options that your major creates . What transferable skills does it develop? What careers have alumni pursued wi...

Decoding dementia: Learning the brain’s electric language 04.03.2026

  The longer version  Annalisa’s lab is working to understand how the brain processes spatial awareness — both to inform medical advances for dementia research and to advance technologies seeking to mimic the efficiency of the human brain. Here’s a look into how her team uses mouse models to answer these questions. AS : Genetically, mice are surprisingly similar to humans. In our studies, we allow...

Transactional intelligence: Can banks help stop the spread of nuclear weapons? 25.02.2026

The longer version:  The title of Bryan Early and Togzhan Kassenova ’s forthcoming book on the financing and proliferation of weapons of mass destruction is evocative: Banks and The Bomb. The bomb. As in, the atomic bomb. But wait… Is that something we’re still worried about? Is the spread of nuclear weapons still the biggest threat to global peace and security in 2026? Certainly, it’s been in the...

Chasing WIMPs: Inside the hunt for dark matter with astroparticle physicist Cecilia Levy 18.02.2026

The longer version:  Lately, Cecilia Levy ’s contributions to LUX-ZEPLIN’s hunt for direct evidence of dark matter come in the form of computational physics — that is, the extraordinarily complex analysis of the data coming out of the dark matter detector. (As a postdoc, Levy also contributed to its assembly and commissioning.) Cecilia's data analysis work begs a more fundamental question: How wou...

Playing it safe: How turning disaster prep into a game can save lives 11.02.2026

The longer version  Beyond her research on emergency management and technology, DeeDee also works on enhancing climate resiliency in coastal regions.  In 2023, DeeDee was selected by the National Science Foundation (NSF) to  serve as Ocean Decade Champion, which led her to attend the 2024 IOC/UNESCO Ocean Decade Conference in Barcelona. The summit spotlighted research that integrates natural, soci...

Space to thrive: How colleges are cultivating belonging amid an epidemic of American loneliness 04.02.2026

The longer version:  Michael Christakis has led UAlbany’s Division for Student Affairs and Enrollment as vice president for 11 years. But he’s been part of the unit for going on 27, and he started in the same way many people do — through Residential Life.  Mike was a graduate hall director at Alumni Quad, which, when it comes to creating a sense of belonging —the topic of this week’s episode — may...

What if we're wrong about money? Tally sticks, taxes and what archaeology can teach us about modern economics 28.01.2026

Our conversation with Robert Rosenswig was prompted by an article he published last year in the Journal of Economic Issues , “ Ancient Tally Sticks Explain the Nature of Modern Government Money .” The journal prioritizes “contributions that examine the political economy of food, healthcare, energy, telecommunications, transportation, education, or recreation provisioning.”  One of the fascinating...

In the fly of the beholder: Brains, vision & AI with Max Turner 21.01.2026

The longer version:  Max Turner is among many UAlbany faculty members whose work blends artificial intelligence tools with other scientific disciplines — in his case, fly neurobiology focused on understanding how vision works in the brain.  Max was among more than two-dozen AI-focused faculty members recruited to UAlbany with the help of new state funding several years ago as part of the largest c...

The weather machine: Kara Sulia on what AI can (and can't) tell us about weather 03.12.2025

The longer version:  For many people drawn to careers in atmospheric science, their curiosity is kindled by a formative weather event during their youth — a blizzard or flood that leaves such an impression that they spend their adult lives chasing the mysteries in the clouds and wind. But for Kara, it was as much about the math. “I knew I liked math. I knew I liked science. And I thought, ‘Meteoro...

EXTRA SHORT: Taylor Philippi on how actors are helping train social workers 24.11.2025

The longer version:  When we spoke with Taylor, he had already completed his first field practicum, a core component of the Master of Social Work program, at the  Pride Center of the Capital Region . The Albany-based non-profit is dedicated to serving the LGBTQ+ community, offering counseling, peer-led support groups and events. They also offer trainings, which became a focal point of Taylor's exp...

Brain as blueprint: Morgan Sammons on what computers can learn from evolution 19.11.2025

The longer version:   Morgan spoke to us as a representative of a larger cluster of scientists and scholars at UAlbany thinking about how the next generation of computers can take inspiration from the human brain.  His work with that team of biologists, psychologists, mathematicians and nanoscale engineers underscores a truth many scientists have long understood: the problems we care most about, s...

Bad chips: Sanjay Goel on the insidious threat of hardware trojans 12.11.2025

The longer version:   In 2018, Bloomberg Businessweek published a stunning scoop [subscription required] alleging that server hardware designed and sold by the California company Supermicro to more than two-dozen major tech and government clients was compromised with malicious chips installed at the behest of Chinese intelligence. Those hardware trojans, the scoop alleged, gave China backdoor acce...

EXTRA SHORT: To infinity, and beyond, with Michael Yeung's spicy molecules 05.11.2025

The longer version:  We asked Michael Yeung about his favorite bits of boron lore. He did not disappoint. Even if the first one may be apocryphal, it would make a great techno spy thriller.    "There was an old story that I heard about how we had a spy in the Soviet Union who was monitoring their rocket launches, and how they noticed that all the rocket plumes were green. The CIA immediately concl...

Inside Omar Yaghi's Nobel-winning chemical construction sites with Jeremy Feldblyum 05.11.2025

The longer version:  Jeremy Feldblyum is not just an accomplished chemist and teacher; he holds a bachelor of music from the University of Maryland in piano performance. The intermingling of science and art — and the possibility of one inspiring the other — carries poetic potential too strong to ignore. So of course, we had to ask: Is tuning a MOF like tuning a piano? Here's what Jeremy said: "Man...

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