This video is a short summary of the 5th ISCB Student Council Symposium which was held in Stockholm on June 27, 2009. More information on the symposium website symposium.iscbsc.org
If scientists could take advantage of the awesomely complex and beautiful functioning of biologys natural molecular machines, their potential for application in many disciplines would be incalculable. Nobel Laureate and Director of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Steve Chu explores Possible solutions to global warming and its consequences. Series: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Summer Lecture Series [2/2006] [Science] [Show ID: 11023]
Solving First-order Linear ode’s; Steady-state and Transient Solutions. View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at ocw.mit.edu More courses at ocw.mit.edu
Autism is a brain development disorder that disrupts communication and social interaction. Signs can begin as early as three years old. Autism has a strong genetic basis, although the genetics of Autism are complex. It is not clear if autism spectrum disorders are multigene or rare mutations.
This video was uploaded with the written permission of Gresham College. • The Empiricist Turn, Part 2 of 6 • Date/Time: 14/02/2008 Speaker: Professor Keith Ward. Professor Ward has a BA from the University of Wales, an MA from the University of Cambridge, an MA and B Litt from the University of Oxford, a DD from Cambridge and a DD from Oxford. This lecture is about Hume and the grounding of knowledge in human experience, the conflict of reason and common sense. The lecturer raises a thought-provoking question: Hume was wrong about science – was he wrong about religion too? For more information, other lectures, transcripts, downloadable audio and video. Please visit the Gresham College website for this lecture: www.gresham.ac.uk
This is a mirrored video in appreciation of “shrunkensimon” channel uploaded video June 17, 2008. A brief summary of a scientific exploration of our universe; yes, in opposition to the mainstream mathematical hypothetical “Big Bang” cosmology myth. Time to return to real science and the brave exploration of the unknown as opposed to blindly believing in a disconnected, mechanical Newtonian dogma and abstract theoretical math.. It is a wise practice to re-examine (question) what you think you know and understand periodically… Visit thunderboltsproject.com or www.holoscience.com www.electric-cosmos.org public.lanl.gov www.plasmaresources.com www.plasmacosmology.net www.knowledge.co.uk Free your mind and enjoy
This lecture discusses how to integrate vector fields over curves, better known as “line integrals”. Dr Chris Tisdell defines the concept of a line integral and presents some examples on their calculation. Special attention is given to the applications of line integrals such as: calculating work done by a variable force on a particle moving over curved paths; fluid flow (flux) over closed curves; circulation and flow integrals. Plenty of examples are presented.
This is the 2nd lecture on Green’s theorem and it’s use. In this lecture we explore some interesting applications of Green’s theorem and present several examples. Also some proofs are discussed.
The history of math symbols stems from Ancient Roman and Greek culture. Learn about math symbols with tips from a mathematics instructor in this free video on math history. Expert: Steve Jones Bio: Steve Jones is an experienced high school mathematics and science teacher. Filmmaker: Paul Volniansky
Google techtalks January 25, 2006 Dr. Rupak Biswas and Dr. Chris Henze Dr. Rupak Biswas is currently the Acting Chief of the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division at NASA Ames Research Center. Dr. Biswas received his Ph.D. in Computer Science from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 1991 and has been at NASA ever since. Chris Henze is the lead of the Visualization Group in the NASA Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division at Ames Research Center, in which capacity he supervises research and development activities in data analysis and visualization. Dr. Henze received his Ph.D. in computational biology from the University of Arizona in 1993.