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    MicrobeWorld Video HD

    A video podcast by the American Society for Microbiology that highlights the latest in microbiology, life science and biotechnology news. ASM is composed of over 42,000 scientists and health professionals with the mission to advance the microbial sciences as a vehicle for understanding life processes and to apply and communicate this knowledge for the improvement of health and environmental and economic well-being worldwide. For information about ASM and MicrobeWorld, visit us online at www.microbeworld.org.
    enAmerican Society for Microbiology100 Episodes

    Episodes (100)

    Microplastics in the Water and their Interaction with Microbes

    Microplastics in the Water and their Interaction with Microbes

    We may not see microplastics, but they are all around us. These microplastics play a role in shaping the microbial environment, and this talk will explain how.

    đź‘Ť Subscribe to ASM's YouTube channel at https://goo.gl/mOVHlK

    🔬 Learn more about the American Society for Microbiology at http://www.asm.org

    âś… Become a member today at http://www.asmscience.org/join

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enJanuary 29, 2020

    New Engaging Approaches for Science Communication

    New Engaging Approaches for Science Communication

    Science communication experts discuss creative ways (like variations of escape-the-room, the Up-Goer Five Challenge, or edible learning aids) to get people to interact with science.

    Jennifer Gardy, Kathryn (KT) Elliott, and Dave Westenberg discuss the inspiration for their creative approaches and tips for other who want to improve their scicomm skills.

    đź‘Ť Subscribe to ASM's YouTube channel at https://goo.gl/mOVHlK

    🔬 Learn more about the American Society for Microbiology at http://www.asm.org

    âś… Become a member today at http://www.asmscience.org/join

    📱 Interact with us on social at:

    Facebook
    Show your support and get updates on the latest microbial offerings and news from the ASM.

    http://www.facebook.com/asmfan

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enAugust 06, 2018

    Disease Detective - Anne Schuchat - Principal Deputy Director of CDC

    Disease Detective - Anne Schuchat - Principal Deputy Director of CDC

    CDC Principal Deputy Director Anne Schuchat has extensive experience in global health and science advocacy. Jennifer Gardy interviews Schuchat about emerging disease threats and what advice for early-career scientists Schuchat can offer.

    Schuchat talks about translating disease detective work into policies that decrease infection rates, citing the successes in decreasing group B Streptococcus infections, developing group A meningococcal vaccines, and halting the recent West African Ebola outbreak. Schuchat talks about her road from an Emerging Infectious Disease fellow to her role in preparing for emerging disease as Deputy Director, and her vision for a future of interdisciplinary collaboration for the greater benefit of global public health.

    đź‘Ť Subscribe to ASM's YouTube channel at https://goo.gl/mOVHlK

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enJuly 14, 2018

    MWV 111 - TWiM live at Microbe 2017: Rigor, lotteries, and moonshots

    MWV 111 - TWiM live at Microbe 2017: Rigor, lotteries, and moonshots

    At Microbe 2017 in New Orleans, the TWiM team speaks with Arturo Casadevall about his thoughts on the pathogenic potential of a microbe, rigorous science, funding by lottery, and moonshot science.

    Hosts: Vincent Racaniello, Michael Schmidt, Elio Schaechter and Michele Swanson.

    Guest: Arturo Casadevall

    Subscribe to TWiM (free) on iPhone, Android, RSS, or by email. You can also listen on your mobile device with the Microbeworld app.

    Become a patron of TWiM.

    Links for this episode

    Send your microbiology questions and comments (email or recorded audio) to twim@microbe.tv

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enJune 20, 2017

    MWV 110 - How to Create Agar Art Using Living Microbes

    MWV 110 - How to Create Agar Art Using Living Microbes

    Step inside the creative process with Agar Art 2015 winners Maria Peñil Cobo, Mixed Media Artist, and Mehmet Berkmen, PhD, Staff Scientist at New England Biolabs. During their multi-year collaboration, Maria and Memo have created astonishing works of art using living microbes. Find out how they meld science and art with this behind-the-scenes how-to video guide.

    Inspired? Submit your own agar art to ASM’s Agar Art 2017 contest through April 27, 2017 - http://www.asm.org/index.php/public-outreach/agar-art

    Prizes include up to $200 in Amazon gift cards and the chance for your art to be featured in the Agar Art Gallery at ASM Microbe 2017 (http://www.asm.org/index.php/asm-microbe-2017), June 1-5, 2017 in New Orleans, LA. Submissions must be high-resolution photos of an organism(s) growing on agar. Submitting artists must be ASM members ( http://asmscience.org/content/membership/all) or work with an official ASM Agar Art partner organization to create the submitted piece. Questions? Contact communications@asmusa.org.

     

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enMarch 01, 2017

    MWV 109 - The Never-ending Vaccine Race

    MWV 109 - The Never-ending Vaccine Race

    Veteran medical journalist Meredith Wadman discuses her book The Vaccine Race. It tells the timely, epic, and controversial story of the development of the first widely-used normal human cell line and, through it, important viral vaccines, including the vaccine for rubella (German measles). Far from being an instrument of history, vaccine development in the modern era is targeting new (and reemerging) infectious diseases, including Ebola, Zika, Influenza and Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV). Dr. April Killikelly, a scientist at NIH's Vaccine Research Center, discusses the latest tools and technologies used to design tomorrow’s vaccines.

    About the Speakers

    Meredith K. Wadman, B.M., B.Ch., M.Sc.
    Staff Writer, Science

    Meredith Wadman is a neuroscience reporter at Science magazine in Washington, D.C. Before joining Science, Wadman was an editorial fellow at New America, a Washington, D.C. think tank. Prior to that, she was a reporter covering the medical research community for Nature for 17 years. She has also written on biotech and on biomedical policy issues for The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Time and Fortune magazine. Wadman is a graduate of Stanford University and completed medical school at Oxford, where she was a Rhodes Scholar. She also earned a master's degree at the graduate school of journalism at Columbia University.

    April Killikelly, PhD
    Postdoctoral Fellow, Vaccine Research Center, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, National Institutes of Health

    Dr. Killikelly is a Postdoctoral fellow working on a vaccine for Respiratory Syncytial Virus (RSV) with Dr. Barney Graham at the Vaccine Research Center (NIAID/VRC). April is also a special volunteer with the Outreach and Education office of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History. She is passionate about using outreach and education to place science in the broader context of culture and as drivers for societal change.

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enFebruary 27, 2017

    MWV 108 - My First Microscope

    MWV 108 - My First Microscope

    In late July, 2016 ASM ventured below the equator, joining public and private sector partners at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation’s (APEC) Women in Science (WiSci) STEAM Camp in Chaclacayo, Peru. ASM Young Ambassador to Uruguay, Dr. Paola Scavone, and ASM Program Coordinator Laetitia Diatezua led four microbiology workshops in Spanish at the camp, teaching 100 girls how to build a cell-phone microscope, plate bacteria, extract DNA, and view bacteria using their handmade microscopes. This year’s camp was a joint collaboration between private sector entities, and the White House’s Let Girls Learn Initiative, US Department of State, UN Foundation’s Girl Up, and APEC’s Women in the Economy focus.

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enNovember 17, 2016

    MWV 107 - The Necrobiome: Microbial Life After Death

    MWV 107 - The Necrobiome: Microbial Life After Death

    What happens to us after we die?  A decomposing corpse becomes its own mini-ecosystem, hosting insects, scavengers and multitudes of microbes.  Microbes from the environment, the corpse, as well as the insects and scavengers are blended together and work to recycle tissues back to their constituents.  Dr. Jennifer DeBruyn discusses the fascinating process of human decomposition, and how scientists are using that information to inform forensic science, livestock mortality management and fossilization. 

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enOctober 20, 2016

    MWV 106 - This Week in Virology - Boston Quammens

    MWV 106 - This Week in Virology - Boston Quammens

    Four years after filming 'Threading the NEIDL', Vincent and Alan return to the National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory BSL4 facility at Boston University where they speak with science writer David Quammen.

    Links for this episode

    This episode is brought to you by CuriosityStream, a subscription streaming service that offers over 1,400 documentaries and non­fiction series from the world's best filmmakers. Get unlimited access starting at just $2.99 a month, and for our audience, the first two months are completely free if you sign up at curiositystream.com/microbe and use the promo code MICROBE.

    This episode is also brought to you by Drobo, a family of safe, expandable, yet simple to use storage arrays. Drobos are designed to protect your important data forever. Visit www.drobo.com to learn more. Listeners can save $100 on a Drobo system at drobostore.com by using the discount code Microbe100.

    Send your virology questions and comments to twiv@microbe.tv

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enSeptember 25, 2016

    MWV 105 - Understanding the Pathogenesis of the Emerging Zika Virus

    MWV 105 - Understanding the Pathogenesis of the Emerging Zika Virus

    Dr. Michael Diamond, 2016 Elizabeth O. King Lecturer, has worked for the past two decades investigating how viruses work, with a goal of defining basic principles of pathogenesis and host immune restriction.

    His talk will focus on how his laboratory has studied three emerging mosquito-transmitted viruses (West Nile, Chikungunya, and Zika viruses) of global importance from a basic perspective, and how this information facilitates the development of diagnostics, therapeutics, and vaccines.

    Subscribe to ASM's YouTube channel at https://goo.gl/mOVHlK

    Learn more about the American Society for Microbiology at http://www.asm.org

    Become a member today at http://www.asmscience.org/join

    Interact with us on social at:

    Facebook
    Show your support and get updates on the latest microbial offerings and news from the ASM.

    http://www.facebook.com/asmfan

    ASM International Facebook Groups
    Join an ASM International Facebook Group and connect with microbiologists in your region.

    http://www.asm.org/index.php/programs/asm-international-facebook-groups

    Twitter
    Follow all the latest news from the Society.

    http://www.twitter.com/ASMicrobiology

    Instagram
    Outstanding images of your favorite viruses, fungi, bacteria and parasites

    http://www.instagram.com/asmicrobiology/

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enAugust 08, 2016

    MWV 104 - Can We Live in a World Without Microbes?

    MWV 104 - Can We Live in a World Without Microbes?

    Written and Produced by Erika Shugart, PhD

    Narration by Chaseedaw Giles

    Filmed and Edited by Sam Mandl and Chris Condayan

    Production Supervisor Katherine Lontok, PhD

    Additional Video Footage by
    NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

    Photography and Illustrations from
    http://iStockphoto.com
    http://wikimedia.org
    http://epa.gov
    http://cdc.org/phil

    Royalty Free Music by
    "Fearless" by Reaktor Productions
    "Easy Does It" by Olive Musique
    "Green Fever" by Flash Fluharty
    "Where I am From" by Topher Mohr
    and Alex Elena
    "Back of the Room Hang" by Jingle Punks

    Additional Photography

    "Nitrogen Defeciency in Wheat"
    by CIMMT on Flickr
    Creative Commons
    Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported

    "Material Girl" Madonna Parody

    Performed by Chaseedaw Giles

    Music track courtesy of Karaoke Version
    and Tency Music
    http://www.karaoke-version.com
    http://www.tencymusic.com

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enMay 20, 2016

    MWV 103: A plague of pathogens - TWiM #121 Live at ASM Biodefense

    MWV 103: A plague of pathogens - TWiM #121 Live at ASM Biodefense

    Filmed live at ASM Biodefense 2016 with special guests: Rebekah Kading and Wyndham Lathem.

    From the ASM Biodefense and Emerging Diseases Research meeting, Vincent Racaniello speaks with Rebekah and Wyndham about their work on Rift Valley Fever virus and other vector-borne pathogens, and the evolution and pathogenesis of Yersinia pestis, the agent of plague.

    Links for this episode 

    Music used on TWiM is composed and performed by Ronald Jenkees and used with permission.

    Don't miss an episode of MicrobeWorld Video. Subscribe for free using iTunes or help support our work by purchasing the MicrobeWorld podcast application for iPhone and Android devices in the iTunes or Android app stores.

    Send your microbiology questions and comments (email or mp3 file) to twim@twiv.tv, or call them in to 908-312-0760. You can also post articles that you would like us to discuss at microbeworld.org and tag them with twim.

    Subscribe to TWiM (free) on iTunes, Stitcher, Android, RSS, or by email. You can also listen on your mobile device with the Microbeworld app.

    MWV 102 - Missing Microbes with Dr. Martin Blaser

    MWV 102 - Missing Microbes with Dr. Martin Blaser

    Why are obesity, juvenile diabetes and asthma increasing? Is it something in the environment or in our modern lifestyle? Dr. Martin Blaser thinks that it may be due to changes in our microbiome – the ecosystem of tiny microscopic creatures that live in and on us. Learn about his hypothesis that some of the greatest medical advances in the 20th century – antibiotics, C-sections and antiseptics- may be having unintended consequences. 

    Dr. Martin Blaser has studied the role of bacteria in human disease for over 30 years. He is the director of the Human Microbiome Program at NYU. He founded the Bellevue Literary Review and has been written about in newspapers including The New Yorker, Nature, Science, The New York Times, The Washington Post, and The Wall Street Journal. His more than 100 media appearances include The Today Show, The Daily Show, Fresh Air (NPR) GMA, the BBC, The O'Reilly Factor, and CNN. He lives in New York City.

     

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enJanuary 29, 2016

    MWV 101: TWiM 115 - Profiling the Poglianos

    MWV 101: TWiM 115 - Profiling the Poglianos

    Vincent visits the laboratories of Kit and Joseph Pogliano on the campus of the University of California, San Diego, where he learns about their work on the bacterial cytoskeleton, sporulation, and the effects of antibiotics on bacterial cells.

    Visit microbeworld.org/mwv for complete shownotes including links mentioned in this episode.

    MWV 100 - Milestones in Blue: TWiM 114 live at the University of Michigan

    MWV 100 - Milestones in Blue: TWiM 114 live at the University of Michigan

    The This Week in Microbiology team, Vincent, Elio, and Michele meet with Harry Mobley, Mary O’Riordan, and Vince Young at the University of Michigan, during the designation of the Department of Microbiology and Immunology as a Milestones in Microbiology site. They discuss how the laboratory has advanced the science and teaching of microbiology, and discuss faculty work on uropathogenic E. coli, induction of stress by bacterial infection, and the gut microbiome.

    MWV 98 - TWiM #113: Waves of Change

    MWV 98 - TWiM #113: Waves of Change

    Vincent meets up with Romney and Duncan at the 79th annual meeting of the Southern California branch of the American Society for Microbiology, where they talk about emerging technologies for antimicrobial susceptibility testing, and next generation sequencing and advanced molecular diagnostics.

    Visit microbeworld.org/twim for complete shownotes including links mentioned.

    MicrobeWorld Video HD
    enOctober 23, 2015