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Lectures Archive

The Museum has hosted dozens of special lectures each year with speakers ranging from C3-PO to nanotechnologists to astronauts. Here is our online archive of these talks, many of which are still available via audio or video stream.


Babette's Feast (Lecture)

November 16, 2009
As part of its holiday menu, the Coolidge Corner Theatre serves art with a side of science with a special screening of the delectable Danish film Babette's Feast, paired with a talk on the science of taste. Set in a remote Danish fishing village in the late 19th century, this Academy Award-winning ... (details).
With: Guy Crosby, PhD, professor of food science and nutrition and science expert for Cook's Illustrated magazine and "America's Test Kitchen".
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Genes & Jazz (Lecture)

November 04, 2009
What do DNA and music have in common? Nobel Prize-winner Harold Varmus teams up with son Jacob Varmus, jazz trumpeter and composer, to explore the ways in which genes and notes affect complex organisms and compelling music. This father-son duo compares cell biology to musical development through a multimedia ... (details).
With: Harold Varmus, MD, Nobel Prize winner; president, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Jacob Varmus, The Jacob Varmus Quintet.


Music on My Brain: A Conversation with Daniel J. Levitin and Rosanne Cash (Lecture)

October 21, 2009
Listen: Click "open audio" to hear Rosanne Cash's "Sea of Heartbreak" with Bruce Springsteen, the first single from her new album, List, available online in the Museum shop. Please join us for this Reno Family Foundation Symposia event, part of the Celebrity Science Series. How does music evoke our ... (details).
With: Daniel J. Levitin, PhD, James McGill Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience, McGill University; director, Laboratory for Music Perception, Cognition, and Expertise; author, This is Your Brain on Music and The World in Six Songs; Rosanne Cash, Grammy Award-winning singer and songwriter; author.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Celebrity Science Series.


Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (Lecture)

October 19, 2009
Screen legend Spencer Tracy stars as the dual title role in this 1941 adaptation of Robert Louis Stevenson's classic horror tale. Dr. Henry Jekyll is a prominent, socially upstanding physician whose unorthodox theories alarm his older, more conservative colleagues. Jekyll believes that each man has two ... (details).
With: Anne Harrington, chair and professor, Department of the History of Science, Harvard University; John Durant, director, MIT Museum, adjunct professor, Science, Technology and Society Program, MIT, and executive director, Cambridge Science Festival.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Tuneful Treatments (Lecture)

October 02, 2009
Music not only energizes and calms us; research shows that it has powerful healing properties. Music can ease pain, lower blood pressure, and relieve anxiety and depression. It can even alleviate the symptoms of neurological disorders such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, mitigate the side effects of cancer, and help women in childbirth ... (details).
With: Suzanne Hanser, EdD, MT-BC, chair, Department of Music Therapy, Berklee College of Music; music therapist, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; visiting research associate, Brandeis University.


Uranium Wars (Lecture)

September 27, 2009
Named "one of our best science popularizers" by Publishers Weekly, Amir Aczel has penned a provocative history of the scientists who discovered atomic energy. Set against the darkening shadow of World War II, Aczel weaves a suspenseful story about the brilliant men and women who raced to harness the mysteries of radioactivity ... (details).
With: Amir D. Aczel, author, The Riddle of the Compass, The Mystery of the Aleph, and Fermat's Last Theorem.


Coma (Lecture)

September 21, 2009
The Coolidge Corner Theatre kicks off a new season of Science on Screen with a screening of the classic medical thriller Coma (1978), paired with a talk by special guest Robin Cook, MD, who wrote the best-selling novel on which the film is based. Something is not quite right at Boston Memorial Hospital ... (details).
With: Robin Cook, physician and author.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


An Evening with Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan (Lecture)

September 10, 2009
Ken Burns and Dayton Duncan present a sneak peek of their new six-part PBS documentary series The National Parks: America's Best Idea. Set against breathtaking backdrops, the film is the story of an idea as uniquely American as the Declaration of Independence and just as radical — that the most ... (details).
This presentation is part of the ongoing Celebrity Science Series.


Contemplating Creatures: Irene Pepperberg and the Hidden World of Animal Intelligence (Lecture)

May 27, 2009
Please join us for this Reno Family Foundation Symposia event, part of the Celebrity Science Series. In a revelatory discussion about exploring the animal "mind," WBUR Radio host Robin Young interviews Alex & Me author Dr. Irene Pepperberg, who has been studying the intelligence and reasoning abilities ... (details).
With: Irene Pepperberg, PhD, adjunct associate professor, Department of Psychology, Brandeis University; author, Alex & Me: How a Scientist and a Parrot Discovered a Hidden World of Animal Intelligence; interviewed by Robin Young, host of WBUR's daily news magazine, "Here and Now".
This presentation is part of the ongoing Celebrity Science Series.


One Giant Leap: Space Exploration and the New Pioneers (Lecture)

May 13, 2009
Could the key to future space exploration lie in revisiting where we have already been? NASA and private companies are using travel to the Moon as a way to expand the space frontier. Both the public and the private sectors will be essential for creating the necessary new technologies to accomplish this task ... (details).
With: Ken Davidian, "Encourage, Facilitate, and Promote" program lead, FAA Office of Commercial Space Transportation; Joanne Gabrynowicz, JD, director, National Center for Remote Sensing, Air and Space Law, The University of Mississippi; William Pomerantz, senior director for space projects, X Prize Foundation; Geoff Yoder, director for the Constellation Systems Division in the Exploration Systems Mission Directorate; Moderated by Spencer Reiss, contributing editor, Wired Magazine.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Lowell Lectures on Astronomy.


An Evening with Ray Kurzweil (Lecture)

May 11, 2009
The Coolidge Corner Theatre concludes the 2008-2009 season of its popular Science on Screen series with a special program, An Evening with Ray Kurzweil. The celebrated futurist, inventor and entrepreneur gives a multi-media presentation based on his best-selling book, The Singularity is Near, and shows ... (details).
With: Ray Kurzweil, author, The Singularity is Near.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


The Ultimate Hitchhikers (Lecture)

May 03, 2009
Did you know that not all bacteria are bad and that our health depends on having the right balance of these microorganisms within our bodies? Having too much Helicobacter pylori, for instance, can lead to stomach cancer, while having too little can cause chronic heartburn. Dr. Schauer discusses how our ... (details).
With: David B. Schauer, PhD, professor of biological engineering and comparative medicine, Department of Biological Engineering, MIT.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Forces That Change Us.


Radiolab Listening Party (Lecture)

April 29, 2009
Radiolab creator Jad Abumrad shares behind-the-scenes stories and excerpts from the program called "the most innovative show on radio" by public radio's Ira Glass. Tonight's focus: our endless fascination with outer space. Listen to surprising sounds and look up at the simulated sky as you are transported ... (details).
With: Jad Abumrad, Radiolab host and producer.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


Night of the Living Dead (Lecture)

April 13, 2009
Science on Screen at the Coolidge Corner Theatre takes a dark twist with a presentation of Night of the Living Dead, George A. Romero's 1968 genre-defying zombie horror film. When the reanimated corpses of the recently deceased begin to rise from the earth and seek human flesh as sustenance, a small ... (details).
With: Steven C. Schlozman, assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and lecturer in education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education..
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Aging: Can You Turn Back the Clock? (Lecture)

April 05, 2009
Imagine a preprogrammed clock ticking away from the day we are born, aging us along the way. Is there a way to slow this process down? Do diet and exercise help? Dr. Tissenbaum reveals these answers — and more — based on her research into the aging process. Find out what controls how and why ... (details).
With: Heidi Tissenbaum, PhD, associate professor, molecular medicine, gene function and expression programs, University of Massachusetts Medical School .
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Forces That Change Us.


Nova's Doctors' Diaries (Lecture)

March 31, 2009
Over the past 21 years, Nova has followed a group of seven doctors from their first day at Harvard Medical School in 1987. All young, bright, and accomplished, none of them could have predicted what it would take, personally and professionally, to become a member of the medical tribe. Join us for ... (details).
With: Paula S. Apsell, senior executive producer, Nova; Michael Barnes, writer, producer, director, "Doctors' Diaries"; Jane Liebschutz, MD, internal medicine, Boston Medical Center; Jay Bonnar, MD, psychiatrist.


Solving the Stradivarius Secret (Lecture)

March 25, 2009
Since the early 1700s, "Golden Age" Italian violins have been revered for their superior tone. Scores of scientists, artisans, and musicians have sought answers to the mystery of their sound, but none has been able to duplicate the magic created by these coveted instruments. Characterizing varnish, wood, ... (details).
With: William F. "Jack" Fry, physicist and professor emeritus, University of Wisconsin-Madison; Rose Mary Harbison, violinist and artistic director of the Token Creek Chamber Music Festival.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


Weaving Science into Sculpture (Lecture)

March 11, 2009
What do basket weaving, climate change, and sculpture have in common? Artist Nathalie Miebach literally weaves scientific data related to meteorology, climate change, and astronomy into brightly colored, three-dimensional sculptures. She describes how — and why — she creates these singular ... (details).
With: Nathalie Miebach, artist.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


A Matter of Taste (Lecture)

March 08, 2009
Ever wonder why you like salty or sweet foods but tend to avoid those that taste bitter? You're not being picky, you may be wired that way. Throughout human evolution, the ability to make these distinctions helped us to zero in on nutrients and stay away from toxins. Dr. Drayna discusses his recent research ... (details).
With: Dennis Drayna, PhD, chief, Systems Biology of Communication Disorders, Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, National Institutes of Health.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Forces That Change Us.


Guess Who's Coming to Dinner (Lecture)

March 02, 2009
Science on Screen at the Coolidge Corner Theatre pairs Stanley Kramer's groundbreaking 1967 film about interracial marriage with a presentation on the science of prejudice by social psychologist Mahzarin Banaji, a pioneer in the study of unconscious bias. Made at a time when mixed-race marriage was ... (details).
With: Mahzarin Banaji, Richard Clarke Professor of Social Ethics, Department of Psychology, Harvard University.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


The Lost City of Z (Lecture)

February 25, 2009
In The Lost City of Z, author and adventurer David Grann steps into the hazardous Amazon jungle to retrace the footsteps of the great Colonel Percy Fawcett, who ventured there in 1925 in search of the fabled ancient kingdom of El Dorado, which he dubbed "Z." Hoping to answer decades-long questions about ... (details).
With: David Grann, journalist for The New Yorker, author of The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


Facial Recognition: The Creation of Expertise (Lecture)

February 08, 2009
Using computer technology, Dr. Balas works with infants and children to learn how we use visual information to make complex decisions about the world we see. Listen as he shares his research on how humans develop an expertise in processing faces of different racial groups, ages, genders, and even species ... (details).
With: Benjamin Balas, PhD, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Laboratories of Cognitive Neuroscience, Children's Hospital Boston and Harvard Medical School.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Forces That Change Us.


This Is Your Brain on Love: Why Him? Why Her? (Lecture)

February 04, 2009
Love is no longer blind, thanks to pioneering scientific research. Following her unique study of 40,000 men and women, Helen Fisher, one of the world's leading experts on romantic love, has identified four broad personality types, each governed by different chemical systems in the brain. Fisher explains ... (details).
With: Helen Fisher, PhD, chief scientific adviser to Chemistry.com; research professor, Department of Anthropology, Rutgers University; author, Why Him? Why Her? Finding Real Love by Understanding Your Personality Type.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series This Is Your Brain On....


Groundhog Day (Lecture)

February 02, 2009
Science on Screen at the Coolidge Corner Theatre celebrates the underappreciated holiday of Groundhog Day with a special presentation of -- appropriately enough -- Groundhog Day and a pre-screening talk by science historian and physicist Peter Galison. Director Harold Ramis's offbeat modern comedy ... (details).
With: Peter Galison, Joseph Pellegrino University Professor of physics and the history of science, Harvard University.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey (Lecture)

January 19, 2009
Science on Screen at the Coolidge Corner Theatre delves into the world of electronic music with a screening of Theremin: An Electronic Odyssey, the 1994 documentary about the unusual electronic instrument and the strange life of Leon Theremin, its inventor and namesake. In 1918, using newly discovered ... (details).
With: Tod Machover, composer, inventor, and MIT professor of music and media; Dalit Hadass Warshaw, orchestral thereminist.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Light, Sleep, and Space (Lecture)

January 11, 2009
A day on Mars last 24 hours and 37 minutes, but humans have not evolved to cope with the extra half hour. Using light, Dr. Barger works with NASA astronauts and space personnel to help them adjust to these unusual "space days." Learn about the genetics behind circadian rhythms and how we might prepare for a trip to outer space ... (details).
With: Laura Barger, PhD, associate physiologist, Division of Sleep Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Forces That Change Us.


Contact (Lecture)

December 01, 2008
Science on Screen at the Coolidge Corner Theatre focuses on the possibility of life beyond Earth with a screening of Contact, the 1997 big-screen adaptation of Carl Sagan's novel of the same name. In Robert Zemeckis's adaptation of the novel, Dr. Eleanor "Ellie" Arroway (Jodie Foster) is a free thinker ... (details).
With: Paul Horowitz, astrophysicist and Harvard University professor.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Innovation in Hollywood: Past, Present & Future (Lecture)

November 12, 2008
Did you know that we wouldn't have VCRs were it not for Bing Crosby? That Technicolor, the company that brought a "magic rainbow" to the silver screen in The Wizard of Oz and Gone with the Wind, was founded in Boston in an old railroad car? Or that Thomas Edison invented the forerunner of the video iPod? ... (details).
With: Scott Kirsner, Boston Globe columnist; author, Inventing the Movies: Hollywood's Epic Battle Between Innovation and the Status Quo.


Bigfoot, Sea Serpents, and Cryptozoology (Lecture)

October 29, 2008
Could hair samples be used to verify the existence of Bigfoot? Are unexplained animal droppings evidence of a new species? Do footprints hold the key to unlocking the mystery of the yeti? World-renowned cryptozoologist Loren Coleman has spent decades researching the existence of fantastical creatures ... (details).
With: Loren Coleman, leading cryptozoologist, author of The Field Guide to Bigfoot, Yeti, and Other Mystery Primates Worldwide and Cryptozoology A to Z.


Parallel Worlds, Parallel Lives (Lecture)

October 15, 2008
The film Parallel Worlds, Parallel Lives follows Mark Oliver Everett, lead singer of the cult band the Eels, on his quest to learn about his father, Hugh Everett III, a physicist who gave birth to one of science's most bizarre and influential theories. Everett's "many worlds" interpretation of quantum ... (details).
With: Max Tegmark, associate professor, department of physics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Paula Apsell, senior executive producer, Nova, WGBH.


Marnie (Lecture)

October 13, 2008
The Coolidge Corner Theatre continues its fall season of Science on Screen with a presentation of Alfred Hitchcock's classic psychological thriller, Marnie. Marnie Edgar (Tippi Hedren) is a habitual thief who uses her ample charm and good looks to gain the trust of her employers, only to rob them ... (details).
With: psychiatrist Phillip Freeman, MD.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Sustaining Life: A Conversation (Lecture)

October 03, 2008
Please join us for this Celebrity Science Series event, part of the Reno Family Foundation Symposia. The Earth's biodiversity — the rich variety of life on our planet — is disappearing at an alarming rate. And while human health depends, to a larger extent than we might imagine, on biodiversity, ... (details).
With: Eric Chivian, MD, founder, director, Center for Health and the Global Environment, Harvard Medical School; Nobel Peace Prize Laureate; author, Sustaining Life: How Human Health Depends on Biodiversity; moderated by Noel Michele "Missy" Holbrook, PhD, Charles Bullard Professor of Forestry and professor of biology, Harvard University.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Celebrity Science Series.


Raiders of the Lost Ark (Lecture)

September 01, 2008
The Coolidge Corner Theatre introduces a new season of its popular Science on Screen series with a special showing of Steven Spielberg's adventure classic, Raiders of the Lost Ark. Harrison Ford stars as Dr. Jones, a world-renowned professor of archaeology hired by the U.S. government to track down ... (details).
With: Curtis Runnels, professor of archeology, Boston University.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


The Spaceman on the Art and Science of Pitching (Lecture)

August 09, 2008
Nicknamed the Spaceman for his free-spirited personality, Bill Lee is one of the best left-handed pitchers ever to don a Boston Red Sox uniform — and one of the most unforgettable characters ever to play the game. On November 7, 2008, Lee will be inducted into the Red Sox Hall of Fame as the team ... (details).
With: Bill "Spaceman" Lee," former Red Sox pitcher (1969-1978), author, and star of the 2006 documentary film, Spaceman in Cuba.


Babe Ruth and Ted Williams: Behind the Legends (Lecture)

August 02, 2008
Babe Ruth was the Sultan of Swat. The Wizard of Whack. The Bambino. To his teammates, he was simply the Big Bam. However, he was more than baseball's original superstar — for 85 years, he has remained baseball's reigning titan. Ted Williams was The Kid. The Splendid Splinter. Teddy Ballgame. ... (details).
With: Leigh Montville, former Boston Globe columnist, former senior writer at Sports Illustrated, and author of The Big Bam: The Life and Times of Babe Ruth and Ted Williams: The Biography of an American Hero.


Fenway and the New Generation of Ballparks (Lecture)

July 22, 2008
Fans have a magical connection to ballparks, and no baseball venue is more beloved than Fenway, the oldest park in the major leagues. Janet Marie Smith is directing the revitalization of Fenway Park and was involved in the planning and development of Atlanta's Turner Field and Baltimore's Camden Yards, ... (details).
With: Janet Marie Smith, Senior Vice President of Planning and Development, Boston Red Sox.


Voices of the Game (Lecture)

July 12, 2008
Joe Castiglione is in his 26th season as the voice of the Boston Red Sox and previously handled play-by-play on television for the Cleveland Indians and the Milwaukee Brewers. Curt Smith, former presidential speechwriter, GateHouse Media columnist, and author of Voices of The Game and other acclaimed ... (details).
With: Joe Castiglione, Red Sox radio broadcaster and author; Curt Smith, author, columnist, and television / radio host.


On The Mound: A Conversation with Two Baseball Insiders (Lecture)

June 19, 2008
Part of the Celebrity Science Series: A Reno Family Foundation Symposium Whether you're passionate about baseball statistics or simply get a thrill from the sound of a ball leaving the park, don't miss this chance to hear from two of baseball's premier historians and analysts. By pioneering sabermetrics ... (details).
With: George William "Bill" James, baseball writer, historian, statistician, and Red Sox executive; Rob Neyer, senior writer for ESPN.com and author.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Celebrity Science Series.


Superman (Lecture)

May 12, 2008
The Coolidge Corner Theatre wraps up this season's Science on Screen series with Superman, the original superhero blockbuster starring Christopher Reeve. Clark Kent is a reporter for the Daily Planet -- at least part of the time. Born Kal-El of the planet Krypton, Kent has a secret identity: he's ... (details).
With: Max Tegmark, associate professor of physics at MIT.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


WaterFire and the Public Art of Barnaby Evans (Lecture)

May 09, 2008
Combining science and art, natural elements and soundscapes, Barnaby Evans is renowned for his category-defying multimedia public art installations. He created WaterFire, a sculpture/performance/social phenomenon that comprises one hundred bonfires burning from sunset to midnight in the rivers of downtown Providence, RI ... (details).
With: Barnaby Evans, multimedia artist.


The Search for the USS Grunion (Lecture)

May 01, 2008
On April 11, 1942 the USS Grunion, a Gato-class submarine, was commissioned into service for the US Navy. By July 30 of that year, the Grunion would make its final communiqué and disappear without a trace. Among the missing was the ship's commander, Lt. Cmdr. Mannert L Abele, who left behind three sons: Bruce, John, and Brad ... (details).
With: John and Bruce Abele.


Physics of the Impossible (Lecture)

April 30, 2008
One hundred years ago, lasers, televisions, and computers seemed physically impossible. Today, teleportation and invisibility seem equally far-fetched. Renowned physicist Michio Kaku explores how mind reading, the routine use of force fields, and other feats that are currently science fiction may become commonplace tomorrow ... (details).
With: Michio Kaku, co-founder of string field theory, professor of physics, and author of Physics of the Impossible.


Vertigo (Lecture)

April 21, 2008
Science on Screen at the Coolidge Corner Theatre continues in April with a special presentation of the Alfred Hitchcock classic, Vertigo. During a rooftop chase, police detective John "Scottie" Ferguson (James Stewart) is grossly overcome by his acrophobia (a deep fear of falling), which ultimately brings about the death of a fellow officer ... (details).
With: Catherine Kimble, MD.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Darwin's Nightmare (Lecture)

March 17, 2008
Darwin's Nightmare is Hubert Sauper's harrowing documentary about the devastating effects that a "globalized" economy has on the residents of a Tanzanian fishing village. Some time in the 1960s, the Nile perch was introduced into Africa's Lake Victoria as a scientific experiment. This voracious predator ... (details).
With: Les Kaufman, professor of biology, Boston University marine program.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


BrainGate (Lecture)

March 12, 2008
Matthew Nagle can change the channels on his television, adjust the volume, open and close a hand, and read his email. These feats may not sound impressive, but they are miraculous for Nagle, a quadriplegic paralyzed in 2001 by a knife wound that severed his spinal cord. Thanks to a system called BrainGate, ... (details).
With: John P. Donoghue, PhD, Henry Merritt Wriston Professor and director, Brain Science Program, Brown University; co-founder, chief scientific officer and director, Cybernetics, Inc..


Once Upon A Tide (Lecture)

March 05, 2008
The Harvard Center for Health and the Global Environment presents a screening of their recent film Once Upon A Tide, a modern-day fable that helps people understand the vital connection between the ocean environment and human health. Narrated by Academy Award winner Linda Hunt, the ten-minute film uses ... (details).
With: Paul R. Epstein, MD, associate director, and Kathleen Frith, assistant director, Center for Health and the Global Environment, Harvard Medical School .


Body Heat (Lecture)

February 11, 2008
As part of its ongoing Science on Screen series, the Coolidge Corner Theatre presents a special Valentine's Day-themed program with a screening of Lawrence Kasden's steamy, contemporary film noir, Body Heat. In one of his most memorable roles, William Hurt plays a Florida lawyer unwittingly drawn ... (details).
With: Michael Baum, PhD, professor of biology at Boston University.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


SEAMLESS: Computational Couture (Lecture)

January 30, 2008
Fashionistas and techies unite at SEAMLESS, a fashion show and celebration showcasing emerging designers from around the globe and functional creations that push the boundaries of wearable technology. The Museum transforms into a catwalk for "computational couture" as models strut groundbreaking clothing ... (details).
With: sosolimited; DJs Eddie O. and Mike Uzzi of Zero G Sounds.


Sleeper (Lecture)

January 21, 2008
The Coolidge Corner Theatre kicks off a new season of Science on Screen with Woody Allen's comedy classic Sleeper. When cryogenically preserved Miles Monroe (Woody Allen) is awakened 200 years after a hospital mishap, he discovers the world is ruled by an evil dictator: a disembodied nose. Miles ... (details).
With: Brock Reeve, executive director of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


The Man Who Fell to Earth (Lecture)

November 26, 2007
The Man Who Fell to Earth is a daring exploration of science fiction as an art form. Walter Tevis's novel about an alien on an elaborate rescue mission provides the launching pad for director Nicolas Roeg's visual tour de force, an adventurous examination of alienation and cultural dislocation in contemporary life ... (details).
With: Cultural Anthropologist Robert Weller.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Exit to Freedom (Lecture)

November 07, 2007
In 1983, Calvin C. Johnson Jr. stood in a courtroom and was sentenced to life in prison for a rape and burglary he said he did not commit. "With God as my witness, I have been falsely accused," Johnson told the judge, "I'm an innocent man." After 16 years in prison, Johnson was exonerated with the help ... (details).
With: Calvin C. Johnson, Jr., national board of directors, Innocence Project; chairman of the board of directors, Georgia Innocence Project; former Innocence Project client; and author.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Crimes, History and Mystery.


Pulse (Kairo) (Lecture)

October 29, 2007
Kiyoshi Kurosawa's Pulse (Kairo) tells the story of a group of young friends rocked by the sudden suicide of one of their own, and his subsequent, ghostly reappearance in grainy computer and video images. The mysterious floppy disk they find in the dead man's apartment could provide a clue, but instead ... (details).
With: Alan Lightman, author and adjunct professor of humanities at MIT.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Superstition, Science, and Sherlock Holmes (Lecture)

October 17, 2007
Sherlock Holmes may be a fictional character, but he had a very real influence on the development of criminalistics during the Victorian Era. E. J. Wagner is the author of the Edgar®-award-winning book The Science of Sherlock Holmes, which describes the real forensic science behind the legendary sleuth ... (details).
With: E.J. Wagner, crime historian and author.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Crimes, History and Mystery.


From the Crime Scene to the Court Room (Lecture)

October 10, 2007
As founder and head of the FBI's Investigative Support Unit, legendary profiler John Douglas tackled the most baffling violent crimes, describing the perpetrators' habits and predicting their next moves. His new book, Inside the Mind of BTK, is an in-depth look at Dennis Rader, the church president, ... (details).
With: John Douglas, former FBI special agent; criminal profiling expert; and author.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Crimes, History and Mystery.


Deep Ancestry: Inside the Genographic Project (Lecture)

September 28, 2007
Join us for the inaugural program of the Reno Family Foundation Symposia to find out about our collective deep ancestry and how you can trace your own individual genetic journey. This program is made possible by generosity of the Reno Family Foundation and Barbara and Malcolm L. Sherman. Where do ... (details).
With: Dr. Spencer Wells, population geneticist, National Geographic explorer-in-residence and director of National Geographic and IBM's Genographic Project.


Everything's Cool (Lecture)

September 24, 2007
A hot documentary about global warming, Everything's Cool follows the struggle of a group of extremely dedicated, sometimes depressed, but always passionate global-warming messengers. Their journey provides a snapshot of the fight to end global-warming denial in the United States and create the political ... (details).
With: Adam Wolfensohn, co-producer of Everything's Cool; Ross Gelbspan, veteran journalist and bestselling author of The Heat Is On and Boiling Point; Beth Daley, environmental reporter for The Boston Globe; Kathleen Frith, assistant director of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at Harvard Medical School.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (Lecture)

June 18, 2007
Admiral Kirk meets his nemesis Khan in the action-packed modern sci-fi classic, Star Trek 2: The Wrath of Khan. The genetically superior Kahn seeks revenge upon Kirk for having been imprisoned on a desolated planet. Their battle ensues over control of the Genesis device, a top-secret Starfleet project ... (details).
With: Dr. Jeffrey A. Hoffman, MIT professor and former NASA astronaut.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


The Wild Trees (Lecture)

May 09, 2007
From Richard Preston, author of the #1 bestseller The Hot Zone, comes the spellbinding story of Steve Sillett, Marie Antoine, and a group of botanists and amateur naturalists who discovered a mysterious world hidden above California. The Wild Trees: A Story of Passion and Daring is the gripping tale ... (details).
With: Richard Preston, journalist for The New Yorker and bestselling author.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Revolutionary Science.


Cinema, Science, and Invention (Lecture)

May 04, 2007
A vital new framework for invention is arising. Worlds created for movies spring from real-world science research, and in turn, science and what is built in the real world are influenced by the movies. John Underkoffler has been at the heart of this feedback loop with the human-machine interfaces he's ... (details).
With: John Underkoffler, founder and chief scientist of Oblong Industries, Inc., and science and technology advisor to Minority Report, The Hulk, Aeon Flux, and other film productions.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


The Art of Living a Second Life (Lecture)

April 25, 2007
Called "the biggest digital art installation in the world" by Warren Ellis, Second Life is a highly imaginative, online, 3-D rendered environment populated with avatars (graphic representations of people). In Second Life, you can teleport, fly, live in a house, go to clubs, take classes, make and view art, or just "hang out ... (details).
With: Wagner James Au, embedded journalist in Second Life; Pathfinder Linden, community manager for Linden Lab; John (Craig) Freeman, artist in Second Life; moderated by Eric Gordon, assistant professor of new media, Emerson College.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


Live from the North Pole Observatory: Searching for Signs of Climate Change (Lecture)

April 24, 2007
Last month marked the beginning of the 4th International Polar Year, a period of intensive Arctic and Antarctic exploration. Scientists from around the world have been preparing to spend the last two weeks of April at the North Pole Environmental Observatory, deploying instruments to study climate change ... (details).


Pulse Pool Installation (Lecture)

April 23, 2007
During the Cambridge Science Festival and the Boston Cyberarts Festival, the Museum of Science, Boston and New Radio and Performing Arts, Inc. present "Pulse Pool." Bridging art and human biology via technology — as well as two capital cities: Boston and Oklahoma City — Pulse Pool is an interactive ... (details).
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


New Horizons Mission to Pluto (Lecture)

April 18, 2007
Unmanned spacecraft have visited all of the planets except for Pluto, but that is about to change. The New Horizons robotic spacecraft was launched in January 2006 and is en route to Pluto and the outer solar system. What do astronomers expect to learn from this mission, and will it further change our ... (details).
With: Richard Binzel PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Lowell Lectures on Astronomy.


Pluto and the Outer Solar System (Lecture)

April 11, 2007
Even after Pluto was discovered in 1930, astronomers continued their search for an elusive tenth planet. Decades of exploration along with advances in technology led to the discovery of icy objects more distant and sometimes even larger than Pluto. What are these objects that dwell in the outer solar ... (details).
With: Michael Brown, PhD, California Institute of Technology.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Lowell Lectures on Astronomy.


Evolution's Discoverers: Charles Darwin & Alfred Russel Wallace (Lecture)

April 06, 2007
Harvard University professors Janet Browne and Andrew Berry share a remarkable story: how two naturalists independently developed their own ideas on the theory of evolution, and why, today, one is a big name and the other has been relegated to relative obscurity. One of the most remarkable aspects ... (details).


Planetary Perils in Prague (Lecture)

April 04, 2007
By the end of the twentieth century, it was common knowledge that there were nine planets in our solar system. However, a group of international astronomers gathered in Prague last year and reorganized our understanding of our solar system. Pluto was put into a category different from the other planets ... (details).
With: Owen Gingerich PhD, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Lowell Lectures on Astronomy.


The Evolution of Sex: Rethinking the Y Chromosome (Lecture)

March 27, 2007
Over the last few decades, the male-specific Y chromosome, the runt of the genomic litter, has been diagnosed as terminally ill. Some scientists declared that in another 10 million years or so the Y will be gone altogether, taking males along with it. However, Dr. Page and his colleagues have found that ... (details).
With: David Page, PhD, director, Whitehead Institute; department of biology, MIT; Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator .
This presentation is part of the ongoing Whitehead Institute Lecture Series.


The Next Gold Rush: Bioprospecting, Medicine & The Environment (Lecture)

March 21, 2007
We are at a crossroads. The latest scientific discoveries give us the ability to manipulate life, but does this mean that we should? And, when genetic materials are gathered from rain forests and oceans, who should reap the financial benefits? In a program that is part panel discussion, part forum conversation, ... (details).
With: Mark J. Plotkin, president, Amazon Conservation Team; Jay Short, CEO, E.O. Wilson Biodiversity Foundation; Janet Browne, author of Charles Darwin: Voyaging and Charles Darwin: The Power of Place; Dan Dillon, PhD, researcher for the GoodWork Project directed by Howard Gardner.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Revolutionary Science.


An Unexpected Interface: Protein Folding Driving Evolutionary Change (Lecture)

March 20, 2007
Learn about Dr. Lindquist's recent work, which suggests that the forces that govern protein folding (when strings of amino acids fold into a functioning protein structure) exert a profound effect on how genetic information is translated into phenotypic traits. This folding process allows organisms to ... (details).
With: Susan Lindquist, PhD, department of biology, MIT; Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator; member and former director, Whitehead Institute.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Whitehead Institute Lecture Series.


An Inconvenient Truth Film Screening (Lecture)

March 14, 2007
In what Larry King labeled "one of the most important films ever," Al Gore makes an engaging and passionate argument that global warming be viewed as a moral dilemma rather than as a political issue. In the film, Gore outlines the effects of global warming on natural environments, plant and animal life, ... (details).
With: Kevin Knobloch, president of the Union of Concerned Scientists; Leith Sharp, director of the Harvard Green Campus Initiative.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series Global Warning.


Evolution as a Tool Kit for Understanding Human Disease (Lecture)

March 13, 2007
Comprehensive studies of genes and proteins from many organisms are giving us an extraordinary documentation of the history of life. We share thousands of individual genes and proteins with other eukaryotes (organisms with nucleated cells), all as a result of our common evolutionary history. Dr. Lodish ... (details).
With: Harvey Lodish, PhD, department of bioengineering, MIT; founding member, Whitehead Institute.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Whitehead Institute Lecture Series.


STREB: Extreme Action In a Hard Core World (Lecture)

February 20, 2007
Recipient of a MacArthur Foundation 'Genius' award and once called the Evil Knievel of dance, Elizabeth Streb intertwines extreme sports, circus arts, Hollywood stuntwork, and dance in her unique choreography, called POPACTION. In this lecture, she takes on the physics of kinetic energy to show how humans ... (details).
With: Elizabeth Streb, Director & Choreographer, STREB Dance Company.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


Nature Is an Incredible Nanoengineer: The Story of Seashells (Lecture)

February 17, 2007
Find out about the state-of-the-art in nanotechnology research on the CS&T stage at one of several special guest researcher presentations! Super-tough synthetic materials created by mimicking nature's design are becoming a reality thanks to the work of MIT Professor Christine Ortiz and graduate student Benjamin Bruet ... (details).
With: Professor Christine Ortiz, MIT; Benjamin Bruet, MIT.


YPTRATRPY (You Play The Robot And The Robot Plays You) (Lecture)

January 27, 2007
Ensemble Robot is a Boston-based organization of musicians, engineers, and programmers working together to create an orchestra of robotic musical instruments and music for them. On the afternoon of Saturday, January 27, Ensemble Robot will present an interactive exhibit featuring Giles Hall's YPTRATRPY ... (details).
With: Ensemble Robot.
This presentation is part of the ongoing series When Science Meets Art.


So Much, So Fast (Lecture)

January 22, 2007
The critically acclaimed new documentary So Much, So Fast is a gripping, refreshingly candid chronicle of one family's remarkable battle with the paralyzing neural disorder ALS (Lou Gehirg's disease). Diagnosed with the disease at just 29 years old, Stephen Heywood resolves to carry on with his life's plans in spite of an uncertain future ... (details).
With: Jamie Heywood, founder, ALS TDF.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.


The Andromeda Strain (Lecture)

September 04, 2006
Decades before Spielberg's splashy dinosaur flick made Michael Crichton's name synonymous with summer blockbusters, there was The Andromeda Strain (1971), a taut, cerebral thriller adapted from Crichton's novel of the same name. When an army satellite falls to earth near a small New Mexico town, ... (details).
With: Dr. Alfred DeMaria, chief medical officer and the state epidemiologist, Massachusetts Department of Public Health; director, Center for Laboratories and Disease Control; director, Bureau of Communicable Disease Control; acting director, Massachusetts State Laboratory Institute and the Bureau of Laboratory Sciences.
This presentation is part of the ongoing Science on Screen Series.
 

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