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Screaming in My Mind

“I was screaming in my mind during most of the “Faith Healer” section of this show. You guys generally do a fantastic job of keeping things scientific and reasonable in your program, but I really wish there was a different point of view on this portion of the program.”
–Ben
Read Ben’s full comments about the “Faith Healers” segment in Placebo.

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Radiolab is a show about curiosity. Each episode is an investigation - a patchwork of people, sounds, stories all centered around one big idea. Radiolab comes out in seasons of 5 shows, and today is heard around the country on over 150 stations.

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The brand new season of Radiolab has arrived with episodes on Choice, Sperm, Race, Diagnosis, and Yellow Fluff and Other Curious Encounters. Take a listen!

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Why Can’t We Tickle Ourselves?

By Elizabeth Giddens

January 16, 2009

tickle_yourself.jpg
Scientific deliriums/Flickr

Aristotle puzzled over the great mystery of why it’s impossible to tickle oneself. Turns out it’s quite simple, really. Here’s a brief explanation by British neuroscientist Sarah Blakemore that appeared in Scientific American:

“The answer lies at the back of the brain in an area called the cerebellum, which is involved in monitoring movements. Our studies at University College London have shown that the cerebellum can predict sensations when your own movement causes them but not when someone else does. When you try to tickle yourself, the cerebellum predicts the sensation and this prediction is used to cancel the response of other brain areas to the tickle.
Two brain regions are involved in processing how tickling feels. The somatosensory cortex processes touch and the anterior cingulate cortex processes pleasant information. We found that both these regions are less active during self-tickling than they are during tickling performed by someone else, which helps to explains why it doesn’t feel tickly and pleasant when you tickle yourself. Further studies using robots showed that the presence of a small delay between your own movement and the resulting tickle can make the sensation feel tickly. Indeed, the longer the delay, the more tickly it feels.”

Comments [2] | Posted in: The Centrifuge

Parabolas (etc.)

By Radiolab

January 14, 2009

Special bonus of the week!

A video inspired by the mathematician, Steve Strogatz. At the age of thirteen, Steve was astonished to find that pendulums and water fountains had a strange relationship that had previously been completely hidden from him.

Directed by Will Hoffman with Director of Photography Derek Paul Boyle.

Comments [18] | Posted in: Podcasts

Yellow Fluff & Other Curious Encounters

By Radiolab

January 13, 2009

Yellow Fluffy Stuff

Ah, discovery. One of the great and noble pursuits of humankind. Also one of the most dangerous, frustrating, ego-driven, transcendent, sublime, dirty, long, demoralizing, inspiring……you get the idea. Why are inquiry and the pursuit of knowledge so seductive? In Yellow Fluff and Other Curious Encounters we take a grand tour of characters and their stories of love and loss in the name of science.

If you do not see flash audio player please install the latest flash player.

Comments [6] | Posted in: Podcasts | yellow fluff radiolab

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