

Science, Spoken
WIRED
Get in-depth coverage of current and future trends in technology, and how they are shaping business, entertainment, communications, science, politics, and society.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Aug 22, 2016 • 7sec
The Feds Just Made It Easier to Do Research on Weed
According to the US government, marijuana is one of the most dangerous drugs in existence; a Schedule 1 narcotic, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration. Like heroin, LSD, and ecstasy, cannabis has no accepted medical use, is highly addictive, and harmful. Oh, you don’t agree? Disprove it.
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Aug 19, 2016 • 8min
How to Succeed in the Asteroid Business Without Really Mining
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Aug 18, 2016 • 6min
If You Want a Superstar Horse, Start by Hacking Its DNA
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Aug 17, 2016 • 4min
How Can California Cut Methane Emissions if Cows Keep Cutting the Cheese?
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Aug 16, 2016 • 5min
The Price of Zika? About $4 Million Per Child
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Aug 11, 2016 • 6min
How That Chucklehead Climbed Trump Tower Without Splattering
I’m not sure how they got the name “human fly” for this guy climbing Trump Tower. It appears he was using suction cups for his climbing device, so maybe a name like “Suction Cup Boy” would work better. Also, I’m not sure of his motive—but I’m sure it was super important. Whatever the reason for this crazy Gecko Man stunt (that’s what I’m going to call him), there’s still some cool science here.
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Aug 10, 2016 • 11min
The Untold Story of Neuroscience’s Most Famous Brain
Like most famous patients in the history of neuroscience, Henry Molaison—or HM, as he was known among scientists—was famous because his brain was defective. Unlike the other patients, his case was not an accident but the deliberate work of a surgeon. In 1953, a neurosurgeon suctioned out two slivers from brain Henry’s skull, hoping to cure him of epilepsy. The surgery helped the seizures, if not completely, but it made Henry unable to form any new memories.
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Aug 9, 2016 • 6min
Sorry, Folks. The LHC Didn’t Find a New Particle After All
The last thirty years of particle physics have been a little disappointing. A scientist’s job is to prove themselves wrong, but despite their best efforts, despite recreating the conditions of the Big Bang, particle physicists just keep being correct. Aside from a few unexplained observations [1] (meddling neutrinos [2]!), the Standard Model, which describes interactions between all known particles, has exactly predicted the outcome of every experiment in the history of particle physics.
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Aug 8, 2016 • 6min
Crafty Ideas to Make Drone Deliveries Work for Everybody
Someday soon, you'll stand on your front lawn, tapping your toe impatiently, waiting for a pair of shoes to fall from the sky. You’ll hear a distant buzzing, then see a brightly colored aircraft come over the trees, its falcon wings arcing out gracefully from the body, four blades whirring intently to ease the aircraft into a steady hover. It’ll touch down at your feet, and you’ll be able to reach in, grab your new kicks, and head off on your vacation.
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Aug 5, 2016 • 7min
Germs Are Magic and Other Things We Learned From Ed Yong’s New Book
We tend to describe our immune systems with military metaphors. Pathogens invade our bodies, knock down our defenses, and try to kill us dead. We fight back with hand sanitizer and mild germ-related panic. Or we go nuclear and blast them with antibiotics. Ed Yong [1]’s beautiful, smart, and sometimes shocking new book I Contain Multitudes [2]: The Microbes Within Us and a Grander View of Life will make you take a deep breath.
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