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A Conversation with Irven DeVore
In this conversation presented by the Annual Review of Anthropology Dr. Peter Ellison talks with Dr. Irven DeVore about his career in anthropology including his time studying the social behavior of baboons in Africa. (Recorded May 22 2012)
An Interview with Nevin Young
Nevin Young Professor of Plant Biology and Plant Pathology at the University of Minnesota St Paul and Author of the 2012 Annual Review of Plant Biology talks to Anna Rascouët-Paz about his article Genome-Enabled Insights into Legume Biology which he co-wrote with Arvind Bharti of the National Center for Genome Resources. He tells us how the Whole Genome Duplication event that occurred 58 million years ago as a consequence of the same environmental stress that may have caused the extinction of dinosaurs resulted in nodulation and symbiosis in Medicago truncatula and other papilionoids. This piece of information could be significant in the quest for natural fertilizers. (Posted May 17 2012)
An Interview with Susan A. Gelman
Susan A. Gelman Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor and Author of the 2009 Annual Review of Psychology and the 2011 Annual Review of Anthropology talks to Anna Rascouët-Paz about her articles Learning from Others: Children's Construction of Concepts and Concepts and Folk Theories which she co-wrote with Christine H. Legare. She explains that all of us are born with an essentialist bias a useful tool for learning and categorizing concepts but one we must avoid applying to social constructs such as race and gender. (Posted May 11 2012)
A Lecture in Plant Biology: Cytokinin Signaling Networks
Annual Review of Plant Biology author and Harvard Medical School professor Jen Sheen talks about cytokinin signaling networks in this short lecture related to the article titled "Cytokinin Signaling Networks" that she co-wrote with fellow authors Ildoo Hwang and Bruno Muller for the Annual Review of Plant Biology Vol. 63.
An Interview with Pamela Ronald
Pamela Ronald Professor of Plant Pathology at UC Davis and Author of the 2012 Annual Review of Plant Biology talks to Anna Rascouët-Paz about her article Plant Innate Immunity: Perception of Conserved Microbial Signatures which she co-wrote with Benjamin Schwessinger. She discusses the role of receptors in plant immune systems how they react to bacterial quorum sensing and how she and her team found a way to make rice more resistant to diseases and flooding. She also talks about the importance for farmers to adopt a thoughtful integrated approach to controlling pests and diseases using a variety of appropriate technologies. (Posted May 3 2012)
An Interview with Thomas Widiger
Thomas Widiger Professor of Psychology at the University of Kentucky and Associate Editor of the Annual Review of Clinical Psychology talks to Anna Rascouët-Paz about his most recent article for the journal "Psychiatric Diagnosis: Lessons from the DSM-IV Past and Cautions for the DSM-5 Future" co-authored with Allen Frances of Duke University. In it they list the lessons learned in the making DSM-IV and warn the makers of the fifth edition of the DSM against potential pitfalls. In the podcast Professor Widiger discusses this article as well as the five-factor model a dimensional model of general personality structure that he believes should be a tool for the diagnosis of personality disorders. (Posted March 29 2012)
A Conversation with Aaron T. Beck
The Annual Review of Clinical Psychology presents Aaron T. Beck President Emeritus of the Beck Institute for Cognitive Behavior Therapy and Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania and his daughter Judith S. Beck President of the Beck Institute and Clinical Associate Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania. In this interview they talk about his life and career and how he went from having no interest in psychiatry to creating Cognitive Behavior Therapy. This method initially developed for patients with depression and anxiety challenges the subject to question his own negative beliefs which act as prisms and cause distortions in the way events are perceived. Later research showed that Cognitive Behavior Therapy was also effective in the treatment of schizophrenia. In the future Aaron T. Beck says psychotherapy must be firmly rooted in scientific evidence.
A Conversation with Michael Walzer
Michael Walzer Professor Emeritus of Social Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) talks about his life and career with Nancy Rosenblum Professor of Ethics in Politics and Government at Harvard University and Associate Editor of the Annual Review of Political Science. Growing up in a "family of lefties" during World War II Professor Walzer began writing about politics as a child and for the rest of his career he toed the line between professorship and militancy. For over 30 years he has co-edited Dissent a magazine about politics and culture founded in 1954. He wrote 27 books and over 300 articles about topics ranging from Just War Theory to religion and civil society. This interview was recorded on March 12 2012.
Translation of Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging Technologies: Emerging Clinical Applications: Supplemental Video 1
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by E.M. Sevick-Muraca "Translation of Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging Technologies: Emerging Clinical Applications" from the Annual Review of Medicine.
Investigational NIRF images of the normal function of lymphatics in the arm of a healthy volunteer.
Translation of Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging Technologies: Emerging Clinical Applications: Supplemental Video 2
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by E.M. Sevick-Muraca "Translation of Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging Technologies: Emerging Clinical Applications" from the Annual Review of Medicine.
Stimulation of lymphatic propulsion in the foot and calf of a normal healthy volunteer before and during manual lymphatic drainage. The fluorescence from the indocyanine green (ICG) becomes scattered by tissues as the lymphatic vasculature drains into deeper vessels. The shadow on the ankle arises from black plastic that covers the injection site so that the ICCD (intensified charged coupled device) camera is not oversaturated. Reproduced with permission from Reference 25.
Translation of Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging Technologies: Emerging Clinical Applications: Supplemental Video 3
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by E.M. Sevick-Muraca "Translation of Near-Infrared Fluorescence Imaging Technologies: Emerging Clinical Applications" from the Annual Review of Medicine.
Investigational NIRF images of the lymphatics in the anteriolateral territory of the right upper arm and left hand in a 67-year-old male with grade I lymphedema presenting approximately six months after carpal tunnel syndrome surgery. Imaging was performed 11 months after onset of symptoms. Lymphatics are contrasted by IGC and show active lymphatic propulsion to the axilla. Analysis of the video demonstrates that the tortuous lymphatic vasculature drains from the edematous regions of the anterior upper arm into the medial lymph bundle. Because the lymphatics cannot be conventionally imaged with the temporal and spatial resolution shown herein it is not known whether tortuous lymphatic vessels are the result or the cause of edema.
A Conversation with P. Roy Vagelos
Pathogenesis of NUT Midline Carcinoma: Supplemental Video 1
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Christopher A. French "Pathogenesis of NUT Midline Carcinoma" from the Annual Review of Pathology: Mechanisms of Disease.
Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves: Supplemental Video 1
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Kenneth T. Kiger and James H. Duncan "Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Video corresponds to Figure 5a2 in the review.
Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves: Supplemental Video 2
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Kenneth T. Kiger and James H. Duncan "Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Video corresponds to Figure 5b2 in the review.
Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves: Supplemental Video 3
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Kenneth T. Kiger and James H. Duncan "Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Video corresponds to Figure 5c in the review.
Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves: Supplemental Video 4
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Kenneth T. Kiger and James H. Duncan "Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Video corresponds to Figure 5d in the review.
Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves: Supplemental Video 5
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Kenneth T. Kiger and James H. Duncan "Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Video corresponds to Figure 5e in the review.
Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves: Supplemental Video 6
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Kenneth T. Kiger and James H. Duncan "Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Video corresponds to Figure 5f in the review.
Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves: Supplemental Video 7
A supplemental video from the 2012 review by Kenneth T. Kiger and James H. Duncan "Air-Entrainment Mechanisms in Plunging Jets and Breaking Waves" from the Annual Review of Fluid Mechanics.
Video corresponds to Figure 5g in the review.