Record-shattering weather
Unexpected Elements
BBC
4.4 • 568 Ratings
🗓️ 8 August 2021
⏱️ 66 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
July 2021 saw temperatures in the western US and Canada smash previous records by 5 degrees. And that’s what we should expect, according to a study prepared much earlier but published, coincidentally, just a few days later. A hallmark of rapid climate change, says author Erich Fischer of ETH Zurich, will be an accelerating number of record-shattering, and socially disruptive, events.
A large new study on communications and hierarchy across a large range of our ape and monkey relatives has just been published. Lead author Katie Slocombe of the University of York explains the findings: like us, the primates live socially in groups, and there are leaders, but the more tolerant ones are also the more communicative ones. In species with ‘despotic’ leaders, order seems to be maintained with more menacing silence.
The double helix of all DNA on earth twists in one direction. But researchers at Tsinghua University in China have made some important steps towards making mirror life, in which the DNA twists in the opposite direction. Chemistry journalist Mark Peplow discusses the significance of this discovery with Roland Pease.
One of the benefits of science’s ability to read normal DNA has been to compare human genomes from across the globe – for example in the Human Genome Diversity Project –for what they reveal about both our health – and our past. But sequences from the Middle East have been sadly lacking. The Sanger Institute’s Mohamed Almarri and colleagues have just rectified that, saying that the Middle East played such a key role in the human story.
Today, up to 3 billion people around the world play video games, from candy-based mobile puzzles to virtual battlegrounds filled with weapons. Many people have turned to gaming during the pandemic as a way of staying connected – but what does science really say about the impact of gaming?
Does playing violent video games lead to violence in the real world? Do brain training apps really work? How much gaming is too much – can video games really be addictive? And how can video games help us to explore difficult issues like death, grief and loss?
Alex Lathbridge and Anand Jagatia look at the evidence and play some games along the way, speaking to psychologists, doctors and game designers about the power of video games to change us - for better or worse.
(Photo By Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images)
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | In 2019, we began investigating the disappearance of Dr. Ruzha Ignatva. |
| 0:08.0 | I believe we are a very special network. |
| 0:10.0 | A scammer who stole billions from investors around the world. |
| 0:15.0 | She's on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted list. |
| 0:18.0 | And now, we have some unmissable updates. She has money and when you have |
| 0:23.0 | money you have power. Join me, Jamie Bartlett, as the hunt for the missing crypto queen continues. |
| 0:29.5 | Listen first on BBC Sounds. Thank you for downloading the science hour from the BBC World Service |
| 0:35.6 | with me, Roland Pease. In half an hour, |
| 0:38.5 | crowd science immerses itself in some virtual violence. |
| 0:46.3 | Okay, Alex, I'm scared. Are they behind me? |
| 0:50.4 | Gets the adrenaline going, but does it alter player psychology? |
| 0:54.5 | Answers on crowds arts later in the podcast. |
| 0:58.0 | Before that on Science and Action, we hear why Backchat may have been good for human evolution. |
| 1:04.4 | We look through the looking glass into a world of mirror biology. |
| 1:09.6 | Ting Zoo and his team stored some of their mirror DNA in some local pond water, |
| 1:15.3 | and they found that they could amplify it and sequence it after a year. |
| 1:18.3 | No problem at all, whereas if you used normal DNA, it had gone off. |
| 1:23.0 | We hear what genetics tells us about the out-of-Africa picture of human origins |
| 1:27.3 | and the first |
| 1:28.7 | Middle Eastern civilizations. First, the idea of scientists studying record-shattering climate |
| 1:35.8 | extreme seems to be blunt, rather shoddy. Yes, we expect and have seen temperature records |
| 1:42.5 | rising, but record-shattering? It's the language of |
... |
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