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The podcast series 'Science and Us' explains how we understand science around us and how it impacts us every single day. It will demystify scientific concepts and explain the scientific logic behind them.

 'Science and Us' explains the understanding of scientific principles in history and culture and also help bust myths about commonly held beliefs in cultures.

Science & Us Suno India

    • 科学

The podcast series 'Science and Us' explains how we understand science around us and how it impacts us every single day. It will demystify scientific concepts and explain the scientific logic behind them.

 'Science and Us' explains the understanding of scientific principles in history and culture and also help bust myths about commonly held beliefs in cultures.

    Why this simple solution helps prevent diarrhoeal deaths

    Why this simple solution helps prevent diarrhoeal deaths

    On October 16, 2022, Dr Dilip Mahalanabis died in Kolkata. In 1971, he pioneered the use of oral rehydration therapy in refugee camps near Kolkata saving many lives. This was the first time it was used in a crisis setting. 

    In this episode of Science and Us, Suno India’s Menaka Rao speaks to Dr Rajib Dasgupta about the scientific mechanism of oral rehydration therapy and why it works to save lives during acute diarrhoea. Dr Rajib describes the twists and turns which led to the final acceptance of oral rehydration therapy for diarrhoea treatment at the global level. The show is co-hosted by Rakesh Kamal. 

    References

    Dilip Mahalanabis: The ORS pioneer who helped save millions of lives | The Indian ExpressMAGIC BULLET: THE HISTORY OF ORAL REHYDRATION THERAPYORAL MAINTENANCE THERAPY FOR CHOLERA IN ADULTS - The LancetOral fluid therapy of cholera among Bangladesh refugees[1] Mahalanabis D, Choudhuri A B, Bagchi N G, Bhattacharya A K, Simpson T WOral rehydration therapy: the simple solution for saving lives | The BMJDr. Bharati Pravin Pawar launches Intensified Diarrhoea Control Fortnight – 2022 aimed at zero child deaths due to childhood diarrhoea 

     

    Exploring intra-household factors for diarrhoeal diseases: a study in slums of Delhi, India
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    • 33分
    Forensic archeology helps unravel mystery of skeletons found in Punjab

    Forensic archeology helps unravel mystery of skeletons found in Punjab

    In 2014, skeletons were found in the well in a Gurdwara in Ajnala area of Punjab. Who do the skeletons belong to? While historical records said that these could be Indian soldiers killed by the British during the 1857 armed uprising, there were several other theories about it. How did scientists go about investigating this mystery? We spoke to Dr J S Sehrawat, a forensic anthropologist from Panjab University. This podcast is the story of the fascinating world of forensic anthropology. 

    Reporting and research - Menaka RaoCo-host and audio editing - Rakesh Kamal

    Additional Reading:

    Short fieldwork report. Human remains from Ajnala, India, 2014Forgotten, Discovered and Then Forgotten Again: The 1857 Martyrs in Punjab's AjnalaCarbon dating, the archaeological workhorse, is getting a major rebootAspartic acid racemization of root dentin used for dental age estimation in a Polish population sample - PMC.Forensic odontological sex determination of Ajnala skeletal remains based on the statistical equations generated from the odontometrics of known teeth - ScienceDirectDental Age Estimation of Ajnala Skeletal Remains: A Forensic Odontological StudyPinpointing the Geographic Origin of 165-Year-Old Human Skeletal Remains Found in Punjab, India: Evidence From Mitochondrial DNA and Stable Isotope Analysis
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    • 34分
    Why are cloudbursts the new normal?

    Why are cloudbursts the new normal?

    In the past couple of decades, we have been hearing of cloudbursts in some part of the country or another. How is the Indian Meteorological Department studying this phenomenon? Why are these incidents increasing over a period of time, and what can be done to minimize the damages cloudbursts cause, both to life and property?To understand this phenomenon, we spoke to Roxy Mathew Koll, a climate scientist at the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology in Pune studying climate change research, and extreme weather events such as heavy rainfall, floods, heat waves, and cyclones among others.
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    • 33分
    How climate change makes lightning our enemy as the no.1 natural killer

    How climate change makes lightning our enemy as the no.1 natural killer

    At 2000 deaths on an average per year, lightning kills more people than any other natural event or disaster. In this episode of Science & Us, we find out how climate change leads to an increase in lightning strikes, why it is not notified as a national disaster, and how we can protect ourselves from it. Our reporter Suryatapa Mukherjee speaks to Colonel Sanjay Srivastava, chairman of the climate resilient Observing System promotion Council (CROPC) and convenor of the Lightning Resilient India campaign. She also speaks to Arun Kundu, Secretary of Smart Future Foundation in West Bengal, about his work of visiting villages to make them lightning resilient. Our Contributing Editor Menaka Rao co-hosts this episode.

    Annual Lightning Report 2021-2022  Lightning occurrences and intensity over the Indian region: long-term trends and future projectionsProjected increase in lightning strikes in the United States due to global warming.Lightning kills more Indians than any other natural disaster. Can those deaths be prevented?
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    • 30分
    Want to speak with autistic kids? Make it musical

    Want to speak with autistic kids? Make it musical

    In this episode of Science and Us, we explore how music helps autistic children communicate with others.Suno India’s Menaka Rao speaks with Dr Nandini Chatterjee Singh, senior national programme officer, with Unesco Mahatma  Institute of Education for Peace and Sustainable Development (MGIEP) which works towards developing programmes and products that promote social and emotional learning and with the National Brain Research Centre in Manesar, Haryana. Dr Nandini conducted experiments with autistic children using functional MRI which gives us some understanding of how music and sung speech can open new frontiers for communication in autistic children. We also spoke to Meera Balachander, parent of an autistic man, Krishna Kumar to understand the role of music in his life.The show is co-hosted by Suryatapa Mukherjee.
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    • 29分
    India's delay in dealing with nuclear waste could be costly

    India's delay in dealing with nuclear waste could be costly

    This April, Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Stalin met Prime Minister Narendra Modi in Delhi demanding that the spent fuel from India’s largest nuclear power plant in Tamil Nadu be dealt with. What has been the Indian government’s way of handling nuclear waste? How does it correspond with the way other countries are dealing with their nuclear waste? Independent journalist, Hariprasad Radhakrishnan reports on this issue and explains it threadbare. Co-hosting this episode is Suno India’s Rakesh Kamal. 

    For this episode, Hariprasad spoke to Dr TR Govindarajan, a retired professor of theoretical physics at the Institute of Mathematical Sciences who is also a part of the Tamil Nadu Science Forum. He also spoke to environmental activists, G. Sundarrajan, an anti-nuclear activist who runs an NGO named Poovulagin Nanbargal or Friends of Earth and SP Udayakumaran, who was the face of the anti-nuclear protests in Kudankulam.
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    • 25分

科学のトップPodcast

超リアルな行動心理学
FERMONDO
佐々木亮の宇宙ばなし
佐々木亮
サイエントーク
研究者レンとOLエマ
早稲田大学Podcasts 博士一歩前
早稲田大学広報室
科学のラジオ ~Radio Scientia~
ニッポン放送
BBC Inside Science
BBC Radio 4