16 episodes

The official podcast of The Scientist

TS Podcast: Consilience The Scientist

    • Science

The official podcast of The Scientist

    Hear an extinct cricket chirp

    Hear an extinct cricket chirp

    Stridulatory apparatus of Permostridulus, from Figure 1B in Béthoux, Olivier, André Nel, Jean Lapeyrie, and Georges Gand. “The Permostridulidae fam. n. (Panorthoptera), a new enigmatic insect family from the Upper Permian of France.” European Journal of Entomology 100 (2003): 581‒86.

    • 2 sec
    Waking Up

    Waking Up

    Scientists at the University of Geneva are probing the effect of music on brain development in infants who are born prematurely. Their results indicate that listening to music through headphones rather than just hearing ambient noise of the NICU may prompt the babies’ brains to develop more like those of full-term babies. Researchers partnered with an award-winning composer to create a series of soundscapes based on the instruments the infants preferred when they were waking up, falling asleep, or alert and active in their incubators.
    CREDIT: STEPHANE SIZONENKO

    • 8 min
    Alert and Active

    Alert and Active

    Scientists at the University of Geneva are probing the effect of music on brain development in infants who are born prematurely. Their results indicate that listening to music through headphones rather than just hearing ambient noise of the NICU may prompt the babies’ brains to develop more like those of full-term babies. Researchers partnered with an award-winning composer to create a series of soundscapes based on the instruments the infants preferred when they were waking up, falling asleep, or alert and active in their incubators.
    CREDIT: STEPHANE SIZONENKO

    • 6 min
    Falling Asleep

    Falling Asleep

    Scientists at the University of Geneva are probing the effect of music on brain development in infants who are born prematurely. Their results indicate that listening to music through headphones rather than just hearing ambient noise of the NICU may prompt the babies’ brains to develop more like those of full-term babies. Researchers partnered with an award-winning composer to create a series of soundscapes based on the instruments the infants preferred when they were waking up, falling asleep, or alert and active in their incubators.
    CREDIT: STEPHANE SIZONENKO

    • 8 min
    Adult Sea Gull Alarm Calls

    Adult Sea Gull Alarm Calls

    Yellow-legged gull (Larus michahellis) chicks have been shown to alter their development after hearing alarm calls from adults outside the egg that signal the presence of predators such as mink, according to researchers in Spain.
    CREDIT: ALBERTO VELANDO AND JOSE NOGUERA

    • 9 sec
    Zebra Finch Parental Heat Calls During Incubation

    Zebra Finch Parental Heat Calls During Incubation

    Researchers in Australia first noted in 2014 that zebra finches produce a form of vocal panting when exposed to heat. Although they sometimes make the call in the presence of other adults or when alone, they most often do it when incubating their young, leading researchers to suspect that the parents may be feeding information to their developing embryos. CREDIT Mylene Mariette

    • 2 sec

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