Apple, Fantasy Football, Yawning, Marine Life, Lab on a Chip

Apple, Fantasy Football, Yawning, Marine Life, Lab on a Chip

Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 140

  • Sep 14, 2015 6:00 am
  • 1:41:29 mins
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The Cult of Apple (1:02) Guest: Tim Bajarin, President of Creative Strategies, Inc. Recognized Consultants, Analysts and Futurists covering the field of personal computers and consumer technology.  If you’ve got a smartphone, and more than half of Americans do, there’s a 40% chance it’s an iPhone. Apple came out with a new version last week with something called 3D touch.  These Apple product launches inspire breathless anticipation. Devotees will soon be lining up at Apple Stores to get the latest iPhone. The fervor, the adoration, the loyalty Apple inspired is legendary. Why?  Fantasy Football (20:17) Guest: Grant Madsen, Ph.D., BYU History Professor  Pro-football is fully underway now, along with an increasingly popular side-culture in which some 30-million Americans pretend to be the owner of imaginary teams. It’s so ubiquitous, and it's likely a fantasy football player somewhere in your circle of family and friends. It’s become such a big deal that it’s now driving the NFL to record TV ratings.  Yawning and Psychopathy (36:04) Guest: Brian Rundle, Doctoral Student of Psychology and Neuroscience at Baylor University  Everybody knows yawning is contagious. Now, scientists have figured out the level of contagion in a yawn is tied to a person’s empathy. If you know or care about the yawner, you’re more likely to yawn when you see them doing it.   Conversely, if you are immune to contagious yawning, you just might be lacking on the empathy scale, and that just might mean you have the makings of a psychopath.  Reshuffling of Marine Life (50:56) Guest: Ben Halpern, Ph.D., Professor in UC Santa Barbara’s Bren School of Environmental Science & Management and an Associate at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)  Raging wild fires in the West and shrinking ice caps at the poles are two of the more visible effects of a changing climate. But two-thirds of the Earth is underwater, and life there is changing, too.  A group of scientists affiliated with UC Santa Barbara’s National

Episode Segments

Reshuffling of Marine Life

Sep 14, 2015
16 m

Guest: Ben Halpern, Ph.D., Professor in UC Santa Barbara’s Bren School of Environmental Science & Management and an Associate at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)  Raging wild fires in the West and shrinking ice caps at the poles are two of the more visible effects of a changing climate. But two-thirds of the Earth is underwater, and life there is changing, too.  A group of scientists affiliated with UC Santa Barbara’s National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) has set out to understand how. Their latest findings suggest that as ocean temperatures rise, marine life begins to search for more suitable conditions, which has consequences for biodiversity and for communities such as fishermen who live off the sea.

Guest: Ben Halpern, Ph.D., Professor in UC Santa Barbara’s Bren School of Environmental Science & Management and an Associate at the National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS)  Raging wild fires in the West and shrinking ice caps at the poles are two of the more visible effects of a changing climate. But two-thirds of the Earth is underwater, and life there is changing, too.  A group of scientists affiliated with UC Santa Barbara’s National Center for Ecological Analysis and Synthesis (NCEAS) has set out to understand how. Their latest findings suggest that as ocean temperatures rise, marine life begins to search for more suitable conditions, which has consequences for biodiversity and for communities such as fishermen who live off the sea.