The Story of Bob and Jim
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Introduction to Biofluid Dynamics (Low Reynolds Number)
This is one of the Boulder Summer School 2011 lecture videos.
The lecturer is Professor Anette (Peko) Hosoi from MIT.
You can find the lecture notes on the BSS2011 website under the link of "Lecture Notes":
http://boulder.research.yale.edu/Boulder-2011/index.html
Why Does a Stone Sink In Water? Let's Make Sense of it with Science
Ever wonder why a stone sinks in water? Let's make sense of it with science. If you've ever tossed a stone into a lake, you know what happens next-it sinks. Let's find out why. Key vocabulary words are density, volume, sink, float, natural force, gravity, upward force, and weight. This is a great resource to help build background knowledge for students and would work well in conjunction with a lesson/unit or reading non-fiction texts on properties of waters, oceans, physics, etc. (01:46)
Schizophrenia III from the course Clinical Psychology
Clinical Psychology - Fall 2006. This course offers theoretical and empirical approaches to the explanation of psychological dysfunction. The relation between theories of psychopathology and theories of intervention. A critical evaluation of the effects of individual, family, and community approaches to therapeutic and preventive intervention. Thematic focus of the course may change from year to year. See department notices for details.
Otis Art History 12 - Medieval Culture
From the Caves to Romanticism, take a journey through centuries of art and learn about the role of art in culture and the place of the artist in society. This series of five-minute podcasts from Otis College of Art and Design features sumptuous images and informative texts. Presented by Dr. Jeanne Willette, faculty at Otis College of Art and Design.
Dr Ed Bertram - Profile
Dr Ed Bertram is Australian Director of the China-Australia Centre for Phenomics Research at the John Curtin School of Medical Research
The China-Australia Centre for Phenomics Research is a joint centre between China and Australia. Ed talks of the exciting developments surrounding the collaboration and the research undertaken in the centre.
Historicizing Sex and Sexuality
Social and Behavioral Sciences - Spring 2007. Being a mother, a father, a son or daughter: these are universal human conditions, yet in every human society they are experienced differently. Grounded in universals of human sexual variation, this course takes experiences of people of different sexes at many points in history as a lens to explore how history, art history, and anthropology make arguments about human beings in the past. Archaeological case studies are used to explore masculinity, mot
Embodied Lives - Performance and Precedent in Past Societies
Social and Behavioral Sciences - Spring 2007. Being a mother, a father, a son or daughter: these are universal human conditions, yet in every human society they are experienced differently. Grounded in universals of human sexual variation, this course takes experiences of people of different sexes at many points in history as a lens to explore how history, art history, and anthropology make arguments about human beings in the past. Archaeological case studies are used to explore masculinity, mot
Inside the News: U.S. debt takes back seat to growth worries
Aug 2 - Asset markets shrug off the first of two Washington votes needed to approve the U.S. debt deal -- the focus is squarely on downgrade and growth risks.
The US and Iran - US Foreign Policy After 9/11
US Foreign Policy after 9/11 - Spring 2006. Lecture - Dariush Zahedi, Lecturer in Political Economy of Industrialized Societies. This course provides an opportunity to study and discuss issues and events having recent international impact and/or interest. The course will present a multidisciplinary perspective on specific subjects with the intent of linking students with the scholars and scholarship involved in understanding and explaining current international issues, events, and crisis. The su
"Functional MRI of High-Level Vision, Fall 2007"
" We are now at an unprecedented point in the field of neuroscience: We can watch the human brain in action as it sees, thinks, decides, reads, and remembers. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is the only method that enables us to monitor local neural activity in the normal human brain in a noninvasive fashion and with good spatial resolution. A large number of far-reaching and fundamental questions about the human mind and brain can now be answered using straightforward applications
Otis Art History 18 - Iconography in Northern Renaissance Art
From the Caves to Romanticism, take a journey through centuries of art and learn about the role of art in culture and the place of the artist in society. This series of five-minute podcasts from Otis College of Art and Design features sumptuous images and informative texts. Presented by Dr. Jeanne Willette, faculty at Otis College of Art and Design.
Concordia Shuffle 22
http://concordia.ca/shuffle
There are many reasons to participate in Concordia University's Shuffle 22 on Friday, September 16, 2011.
Introduction - CS 61C Machine Structures Fall 2007
Machine Structures - Fall 2007. The CS61 series is an introduction to computer science, with particular emphasis on software and on machines from a programmer's point of view. The first two courses considered programming at a high level of abstraction, introducing a range of programming paradigms and common techniques. This course, the last in the series, concentrates on machines and how they carry out the programs you write. The main topics of CS61C involve the low-level system software and th
Processor Pipelining I Fall 2007
Machine Structures - Fall 2007. The CS61 series is an introduction to computer science, with particular emphasis on software and on machines from a programmer's point of view. The first two courses considered programming at a high level of abstraction, introducing a range of programming paradigms and common techniques. This course, the last in the series, concentrates on machines and how they carry out the programs you write. The main topics of CS61C involve the low-level system software and th
Performance I - CS 61C Machine Structures Fall 2007
Machine Structures - Fall 2007. The CS61 series is an introduction to computer science, with particular emphasis on software and on machines from a programmer's point of view. The first two courses considered programming at a high level of abstraction, introducing a range of programming paradigms and common techniques. This course, the last in the series, concentrates on machines and how they carry out the programs you write. The main topics of CS61C involve the low-level system software and th
Twisted TV
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Unit 2 Podcast #4
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Lego Land
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Hibbs - considerations.mp4
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