Did you know that speaking about yourself using positive language and telling good stories about yourself can literally make you feel SO much better? ?
Karen Curry Parker, the host of the Quantum Revolution podcast, reveals that speaking about yourself with a positive attitude can actually help you create HIGHER states of wellness, higher states of immunity, and help you value yourself more!
Having a higher sense of self-worth, Karen explains, can inspire you to take more sustainable actions towards improving your well-being. And it can start with anything – from skipping junk food to getting off the couch to take walks at home – these small actions will definitely compound over time and help you build a sustainable and better life. ?
CHECK OUT THE COMPLETE EPISODE ?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t6P_55H7lFo
Can you believe that the pandemic pushed this into the mainstream?! ?
In this video, Joshua Earl Arnold, a professor of sustainable agriculture at Warren Wilson College, talks about how the pandemic pushed people to see the value of urban gardening. ?
According to Joshua, the pandemic is partly responsible for the MASSIVE boom in urban gardening due to food shortages that the world saw during the event. ?
Check out the website in my profile to learn more.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a3VZRdFSlUg
For the first time, chemistry can be observed in real-time. Turn a magnetic field off, watch cellular fluorescence dim; turn the magnetic field back on, and watch the cellular fluorescence get brighter.
Tune in to learn more from the lead researcher, including:
A likely explanation for how some animals use magnetic fields for navigation Why all cells fluoresce when a light is shined on them, and what determines the degree to which this happens What HeLa cells are, and why they are so useful for this and many other types of research Jonathan R. Woodward is a professor of environmental sciences at the University of Tokyo, where he’s conducting experiments involving the use of light and magnetic fields for the observation of real-time intracellular chemistry.
When a light is shined on cells, the molecules in the cells undergo a photochemical reaction that proceeds through short-lives species called radical pairs, which Woodward says are at the heart of why cells become sensitive to magnetic fields.
In Woodward’s lab, the goal is to figure out what is happening inside cells, both mechanically and molecularly, during and after the magnetic response. Once a solid understanding has been formed, he and his team can begin asking questions like whether there are any downstream biological effects or health implications of the magnetic response, whether positive or negative.
Woodward dives deep into the details of his experiments, as well as how the science behind it is viewed from the background of quantum biology vs. chemistry vs. physics. He also explains the kinetic isotope effect, electron spin, how free radicals are formed, the two types of angular momentum of the Earth, the Pauli principle in quantum mechanics, evidence of bacterial and non-human animal uses of magnetic fields, and more.
Learn more at http://opes.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp/spinchem/. Episode also available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/30PvU9C
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3mmLZhAwl0
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Joining us today is Andrew Hammermeister, the Director of the Organic Agriculture Centre of Canada (OACC) and Associate Professor in the Faculty of Agriculture at Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, Canada. He sits down to discuss his history in the field, and the lesser-known intricacies of organic farming.
Dr. Hammermeister has worked with the OACC since 2002 and has been involved in the research of grain and vegetable cropping rotations/systems, soil amendments, low-till organic production, and more. What has he uncovered in his years of work as an expert in organic farming? Tune in now to find out…
Offer:
We all know we should be eating less sugar. But we’re constantly bombarded with drinks and snacks loaded with refined sugar might not be as harmless as we thought. Enter Oobli, who JUST launched the world’s first beverages to satisfy your sweet tooth with protein! Oobli gives brand new sweet iced teas with sugar-like sweetness without the impact to your health. Get 20% off your Oobli order with promo code GENIUS at oobli.com and try all three delicious, craft-brewed sweet iced teas: lemon, peach, and mango yuzu.
In this conversation, we cover:
1. What led Dr. Hammermeister’s interest in organic agriculture research.
2. Common misconceptions connected with organic farming.
3. What organic farmers are often criticized for.
4. The key ecological approaches associated with organic gardening.
To learn more about Dr. Hammermeister and his work, click https://www.organic-center.org/andy-hammermeister now!
Episode also available on Apple Podcasts: http://apple.co/30PvU9C
#OrganicAgriculture #SustainableFarming #OrganicResearch #FarmToTable #OrganicFarmingBenefits #EcoFriendlyFarming #OrganicFood
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p77mSAWezf0
Did the treatment you got for your mental health fail? ?
Was it really USELESS… ?
Or did something PREVENT you from getting the results you and your care provider were working to achieve??
According to Henry Emmons, you may encounter a lot of hindrances in your journey to recovery. These hindrances can come in the form of stressors for patients and stall them from making further progress despite the doctor’s best efforts. ?
Would you agree with this statement from Henry? Let me know in the comments.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dz3nE02_ac
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Timestamps:
00:00 Guest Introduction
2:57 FGP Introduction
4:00 Guest working history
9:00 Why people feel Anxiety & Specific probiotic strains,
14:30 what kind of different diseases are there for worry about
20:00 find out different ways to be alive
30:00 techniques and experience of navigating cancer treatment options
40:10 Find out more about guest work
Today we connect with Dr. Noelle Patno, a microbiome scientific educator that has cultivated a distinct approach to nutritional research. Dr. Patno has a Ph.D. in Molecular Metabolism and Nutrition, and a Master’s in Translational Science from the University of Chicago. Utilizing her years of education and experience, she is on a mission to “advance effective and safe therapies for patients facing difficult healthcare decisions.”
Dr. Patno has dealt with her share of health difficulties, and this has played a major role in informing her approach to wellness and medicine. Most recently, she has focused her research on nutritional ingredients – primarily in probiotics and the microbiome.
Offer:
Increased stress is linked with teeth grinding and clenching, which causes poor sleep, jaw pain and headaches. But did you know that 1 in every 4 adults grind or clench their teeth while sleeping?
A Remi Custom Night Guard can protect your teeth from grinding and clenching while saving you hundreds of dollars compared to the dental office.
Use code GUARD20 for 20% off your order. Visit ShopRemi.com now.
Click play now to explore:
1) Dr. Patno’s studies regarding the gastrointestinal system.
2) The factors that influence peoples’ response to prebiotics and fiber.
3) The importance of affecting the overall diversity of gut bacteria when it comes to intestinal health.
The human digestive system is incredibly complex and affects so many other parts of the body. Want to know more about what researchers like Dr. Patno are doing to uncover solutions to gut health problems? Join us in this episode to find out!
To learn more about Dr. Patno and her work, visit linkedin.com/noelle-patno-phd now!
#anixety #bacteria #probiotic
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IbSYj9OqCZc
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A Canadian physician has taken an historical approach to examining surgery, from ancient Greece to modern medicine and surgery. He started a podcast called Legends of Surgery and talks about some of the most interesting tidbits in this episode.
He discusses
1. Historical markers such as the sickness that lead to hand washing and why Europeans call the operating room "theater,"
2. The ways modern surgical procedures, step-by-step, have evolved over thousands of years, and
3. How modern surgery technology may evolve with robotic surgeries and other advancements.
Tyler Rouse specializes in anatomical pathology as a physician but has always been a history buff, especially regarding surgery. He spends his free time researching the specific histories behind surgery and has made an entertaining and enlightening podcast about his more significant finds. For example, he's examined the horrors of J. Marion Sims, long considered the father of modern gynecology, who performed cruel experiments on slaves.
He discusses big leaps in surgery such as an important connection one doctor made about hand washing: Ignaz Semmelweis noticed that women were developing infections at a high rate after delivering their babies. He found out that medical students delivered babies right after working in the morgue, giving the women terrible infections. While the medical community shunned him, his findings eventually led to the vital practice of hand washing.
He also discusses modern surgery techniques, such as impediments to improvement, risky types of surgery, and how the hardest decision a surgeon makes is typically when to operate. He and Richard talk about how to assess whether a surgeon is capable or not and other ways to navigate the system.
He examines the attitudes toward the classification of surgery and medicine, how ancient medicine precluded any questioning and therefore any forward movement. He notes that while we now are better about not being limited by the "dogma" of tradition, we still could use a more open approach toward adopting advancements. Listen in for more interesting stories about the history of surgery.
Legends of Surgery is available through most podcast sites and is on Facebook and Twitter.
Available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/2Os0myK
#surgery #medicine #Findinggeniuspodcast
#doctor #surgeon #medical #health #doctors #Healthpodcast #InternalMedicinepodcast #Biosciencespodcast
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eX6m_KM3c_k
Controlling cancer depends on controlling tissue microenvironments, according to researcher James DeGregori. “There's going to be pressure on cells in the lungs of a smoker to adapt to that new environment,” he explains, “and by adapting to it, it can basically favor new phenotypes that could lead to a malignancy that could lead to the initiation of a cancer.” He and Richard discuss the initiation of cancer and cancer evolution, opening up an exciting path toward prevention. Listen and learn
How cancer development stems from our own cells "going rogue" in concert with selective pressures, like carcinogenic conditions, in their tissue environment, Why, therefore, random mutations are important in the initiation of cancer, but not enough to explain its growth, Why effective prevention of cancer lies with controlling tissue microenvironments, and How modulating inflammation affects carcinogenesis pathology and may be key in cancer prevention. James DeGregori is the Courtenay C. and Lucy Patten Davis Endowed Chair in Lung Cancer Research, which is part of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus. He explains that genetics, biochemistry, and cell biology work together to prepare the ground for cancer growth. While cancer diagnosis and therapeutics often begin further down the line followed by chemotherapy procedures, researchers like DeGregori are trying to reconfigure the conditions that allow its beginnings. He says it’s a matter of cells adapting to fit a changing tissue environment; therefore, staving off that change in environment looks to be essential. That means addressing chronic inflammation, inflammation that might come from smoking and lungs failure and other stressors.
But not all inflammation is created equal, and simply preventing it entirely can lead to the inability to fight off infections, for which inflammation is necessary. He adds that "there's two sides to every process, and while too much inflammation is bad, we do need inflammation to fight off infections, to repair our tissues, and other processes."He and colleagues are working on finding that balance as well as identifying which patients could benefit the most. Listen in for more about how researchers are arresting cancer growth through addressing cell stress, cell aging, and inflammation. Episode also available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/30PvU9C
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kzb0Xzi4NBg
Since 2016, Jacobs has interviewed nearly 3,000 genius-level researchers, practitioners, scientists, and entrepreneurs on various topics, ranging from cryptocurrency and artificial intelligence to sleep science and chronic diseases.
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9U17bphRyM
Our Website: https://www.findinggeniuspodcast.com/
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Where is that smell coming from?! It’s a question we’ve probably all exclaimed before tracking down the culprit…whether or not we want to. Scent detection is an important ability, but do we really understand how it even works?
Press play to discover:
1. How jet streams and the movement of people and animals through the atmosphere influence our sense of smell
2. How a better understanding of scent dispersal and detection could aid in the development of olfaction-based technologies
3. What reality would be like if it matched up with simple mathematical models of scent detection
Gerard McCaul is a postdoctoral research fellow at Tulane University who's taken on a side project on olfaction—the sense of smell.
He set out to determine what really enables scent tracking, and whether simple mathematical models, such as a pure diffusion model, can really account for it.
Unlike hearing and sight, the sense of smell is not well understood or described by mathematical modeling; diffusion simply can’t explain the ability to detect and track down the source of odors.
In fact, McCaul explains that, in order to find the source of an odor in a diffusive model, we’d basically have to be right on top of it. Clearly, this doesn’t match up with reality—with a dog’s ability to track scents located miles away, with a shark’s ability to detect a drop of blood in a great body of water, or with our own ability to, for example, follow the scent of freshly-baked cookies to the bakery a block or two away.
So, what gives?
McCaul sheds light on the absolutely necessary atmospheric and environmental pieces to the puzzle of scent tracking.
Tune in for all the details, and check out the paper on the topic, titled “Diffusion Fails to Make a Stink”.
Episode also available on Apple Podcasts: apple.co/30PvU9C
#Smell #olfaction #diffusion
#TheoreticalQuantumPhysics #TheoreticalPhysics #QuantumControl #OpenQuantumSystems #Findinggeniuspodcast #Healthpodcast #InternalMedicinepodcast #Biosciencespodcast
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T4AOoVh137Y