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Episodes
- Gobero: Preparing the Triple Burial
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
One of the most exquisite discoveries from Gobero is a triple burial which preserved an adult woman interred with two young children. The bodies were buried with their arms around each other and were holding hands. Paul Sereno's vision was to create something unique that would enable people to 1) view the burial from both sides and 2) preserve all of the scientific information in place: from the tiniest bones to the original position of the artifacts. He met with his staff at the University of Chicago Fossil Lab to make a plan. Paleoartist Tyler Keillor brought a "paleo-trifecta" of art, science and innovation to bear in order to help reconstruct this ancient scene. -- Written by Project Exploration - Gobero: An Interdisciplinary Discovery
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Paul Sereno, Professor in Organismal Biology & Anatomy, discusses an unexpected discovery he made while searching for dinosaur fossils in the Sahara desert in 2000. Sereno and his team uncovered a massive graveyard containing over 200 burials. By combining techniques from paleontology and archeology, the team was able to preserve a site that might otherwise have been lost. - The Secret Life of Shells: Looking into the ecological past
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Susan Kidwell, William Rainey Harper Professor in Geophysical Sciences, discusses a new tool for measuring human impact on marine ecosystems. By collecting data on the living organisms and the skeletal remains of those same organisms scientists can perform what is called a live-dead analysis. Large discrepancies in the ratio of living and dead organisms correlate with radical changes in the ecosystem. - Nudge: A Conversation with the Authors
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Thaler and Sunstein reminisce at their favorite Hyde Park lunch spot, Noodles, where they say they did some of their best work on the book. Noodles was so important to the creative process, it even made the acknowledgments. The two talk about what each brought to the project, the origin of the elephants on the book cover, their fear of forms, and their hopes for a new political consensus in the country. - Nudge: An Overview
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
University of Chicago Graduate School of Business Professor Richard Thaler gives an overview of his new book: "Nudge: Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness." He explains what nudges are and gives a few examples of how they can be useful. - Long-Term Consumption: A Microeconomic Approach to Studying Asset Pricing
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
A fundamental economic question is the tradeoff between investment and consumption and how it determines asset prices in the macroeconomy. New research studies the relationship between consumption and asset prices using microeconomic data. - Transparency and Political Relationships
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Since the 1990s, foreign capital has become an increasingly important source of financing for emerging market firms. Because companies that access global capital markets receive substantial benefits, it is difficult to understand why so few firms take advantage of foreign capital markets. - The Economics of Pricing: Can Higher Prices Stimulate Product Use?
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
The current practice of charging money for life-saving health products in developing countries is a source of controversy among policymakers. Opponents argue that the practice is unfair and that fees will result in goods only reaching the richest of the poor. Advocates of pricing, including non-governmental organizations, argue that free products will not be valued or used. New research suggests charging money for these products could lead to more intensive product use, and thus greater health benefits. - Insider Trading and Future Earnings
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Even though insider trading laws have become stricter over time, insiders are still trading their company's stock and making money from trades. New research examines how insiders limit trading their company's stock for fear of legal repercussions when future earnings reports are likely to become extremely positive or negative. - Discretion Meets Disclosure
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
It has long been suspected that fear of competition spurs managers to hide better-than-average business unit profit performance. However, a new study instead finds evidence that fear of increased oversight leads managers to hide less-than-average business unit performance. - Rational Revolutions
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
The widespread adoption of new technologies-from the automobile to the internet-tends to be accompanied by stock market booms and busts. Why do the stock prices of innovative firms tend to exhibit apparent "bubbles" during technological revolutions? - Reading the Fine Print
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
One of the key questions in corporate finance is how a firm's reliance on external finance affects its investment policy. New research suggests that creditors play a much more direct role in firm investment policy than has been previously recognized. - Collegial Connections
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Mutual fund managers tend to invest more heavily in companies headed by senior officers who attend the same universities as the fund mangers. Futhermore, those investments tend to be more fruitful than their holdings in firms with which they have no connection. - Blowing the Whistle
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
New research suggests that the best way to promote fraud detection is to extend the Federal Civic False Claims Act to corporate fraud. - One Bird, One Stone
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
How do we choose the means--that is, the actions, objects, or other resources--with which we attempt to achieve our goals? New research suggests that these choices are partly determined by the extent to which available means are only good for the specific goal we hope to accomplish. - Know What I'm Thinking?
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Much of everyday behavior is directed toward understanding, responding to, or attempting to change how we are seen by the people around us. We can be easily led astray, however, by common errors in these perceptions. New research shows us that when we want to better understand how others see us, we should start by changing the way we look at ourselves. - Howard T. Ricketts Laboratory: Overview and Tour
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Olaf Schneewind, M.D., Ph.D, Professor and Chair of the Department of Microbiology, and Joe Kanabrocki, Ph.D, Biosafety Officer for the Ricketts Biocontainment Laboratory, talk about a new state-of-the-art facility designed to develop new treatments, diagnostic tests and vaccines for emerging infectious diseases. The Howard T. Ricketts Laboratory (HTRL) will house research on microbial agents that are considered either Risk Group 2 (agents that cause mild to moderate symptoms in humans, but are not life threatening) or Risk Group 3 (agents that have the potential to cause lethal human infections, but have at least one effective treatment). The HTRL has been designed and built according to the strictest federal standards and incorporates multiple layers of safety and security to protect laboratory workers and the surrounding environment. - Thai Family Research Project: How entrepreneurship shapes economies
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Robert Townsend, co-director of the Thai Family Research Project, discusses the importance of individual entrepreneurs in shaping local and regional economies and reducing poverty. His findings draw on over 10 years of data collected from nearly 3,000 households throughout Thailand. This research contributed to the creation of The Enterprise Initiative, a new project funded by the John Templeton Foundation which focuses on wealth creation and poverty reduction in developing countries. - Chicago Assyrian Dictionary: The Final Chapter
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Martha Roth, Ph.D., Professor of Assyriology and Dean of Humanities, discusses the final volume of the Chicago Assyrian Dictionary, a comprehensive lexicon of ancient Akkadian dialects 86 years in the making. Roth has served as Editor-in-Charge of the project for the past 11 years. - The Empathy Switch: How Doctors Regulate Pain Perception
Author: cmig@listhost.uchicago.edu (Chicago Media Initiatives Group)
Jean Decety, Professor, Psychology and Psychiatry, explains his research into pain responses and how physicians learn to turn off the part of the brain that activates feelings of empathy. Decety co-authored "Expertise Modulates the Perception of Pain in Others," published in October 2007, which discusses the necessary ability of a doctor to regulate pain perception in order to better treat patients.

