Stanford Radio

  • Author: Vários
  • Narrator: Vários
  • Publisher: Podcast
  • Duration: 245:56:46
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Synopsis

Podcast by Stanford Radio

Episodes

  • Lianna Holston & Siena Jeakle host the popular podcast Tossed Popcorn

    07/03/2022 Duration: 27min

    Full title: Lianna Holston & Siena Jeakle host the popular podcast Tossed Popcorn. They describe themselves as dear/old/close/funny-but-in-a-hot-way friends who have neither seen nor enjoyed that many films, particularly the Classics, adding "we're here to get the Classics off their pedestal with irreverent observations and outspoken confusion." Description: Join hosts Lianna Holston & Siena Jeakle, as they dish on their fun and cheeky film reviews from the "100 Greatest American Movies Of All Time" in their weekly Tossed Popcorn podcast. Originally aired on SiriusXM on March 5, 2022.

  • Covid-19, mask and vaccine mandates, and Continued Challenges Facing America’s Teachers

    28/02/2022 Duration: 27min

    Teacher burnout—and resignations—may be leading to a crisis in education. Join Laura Juran, Chief Counsel and Associate Executive Director of the California Teachers Association, for a discussion about the challenges the nation's teachers have faced during the pandemic, when they have been on the frontline during an unprecedented health crisis. Originally aired on SiriusXM on February 26, 2022.

  • The Closing of the American Mind? A Discussion about Critical Race Theory, Book Banning, and More

    28/02/2022 Duration: 27min

    Over 30 state legislatures across the country have introduced bills to limit the discussion of racial history in a wave prompted by the emergence of critical race theory as a subject of political fear-mongering. In this episode, Rich and Joe are joined by Professor Ralph Richard Banks, an expert in race and law, for a discussion about the politicization of critical race theory, book banning, and more. Originally aired on SiriusXM on February 26, 2022.

  • E172 | Why AI must embody the values of its users

    22/02/2022 Duration: 27min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E172 | Why AI must embody the values of its users Artificial intelligence has become increasingly important in our daily lives. A computer scientist explains what he’s doing to help ensure it’s working with us, not against us. You might not realize it, but AI-driven systems are integrated into virtually every aspect of our lives. But how can we be certain the values AI systems are striving for reflect what we want for ourselves and for society? And how can scientists and engineers do a better job of increasing people’s trust in AI? Stanford computer scientist Carlos Guestrin is a leading voice on how to advance and implement a more trustworthy AI. Learn about his work in this area, and his particular interest in AI and healthcare, on this episode of Stanford Engineering’s The Future of Everything, with host Professor Russ Altman. Listen and subscribe here.

  • E173 | A more thoughtful approach to technology can improve medical care

    18/02/2022 Duration: 28min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E173 | A more thoughtful approach to technology can improve medical care A professor of medicine and expert on organizational behavior explores how innovation and an integrated approach to healthcare can help tame some of its complexities. Anyone who’s ever been to a hospital knows that the healthcare system is extremely complex. Every patient has their own challenges – and they will typically see multiple physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and other healthcare practitioners, and come into contact with a slew of medical technologies, protocols, and billing and insurance systems. Sara Singer, a Stanford professor of medicine, is an expert on integrated care – the development of tools, technologies, and processes designed to improve the interactions among patients, clinicians, and other providers to lower costs and improve health outcomes. In this episode of Stanford Engineering’s The Future of Everything, she explains how new technology, and its improved integrati

  • SF Board Supervisor Matt Haney on the challenges of crime and homelessness in big cities

    14/02/2022 Duration: 27min

    Matt Haney, San Francisco Board Supervisor, joins Stanford Legal for a discussion about the challenges of homelessness and crime in cities, particularly since the start of the Covid pandemic. Originally aired on SiriusXM on February 10, 2022.

  • E171 | How do you build a better robot? By understanding people.

    10/02/2022 Duration: 27min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E171 | How do you build a better robot? By understanding people. A computer scientist discusses the growing field of human-robot interaction. Whether it’s autonomous vehicles or assistive technology in healthcare that can do things like help the elderly do core tasks like feeding themselves, some of the most challenging problems in the field of robotics involve how robots interact with humans, with all of our many complexities. Drawing from fields as varied as cognitive neuroscience, psychology, and behavioral economics, Stanford computer scientist Dorsa Sadigh is exploring how to train robots to better understand humans – and how to give humans the skills to more seamlessly work with robots. Learn more on this episode of Stanford Engineering’s The Future of Everything, with host Professor Russ Altman. Listen and subscribe here.

  • TINX, POPULAR TIK TOK STAR AND STANFORD ALUM

    07/02/2022 Duration: 27min

    Full Title: TINX, POPULAR TIK TOK STAR AND STANFORD ALUM TALKS HER RISE TO BECOMING A TOP AND AUTHENTIC INFLUENCER. Description: Tinx, Los Angeles–based content creator with over 1.2 million followers on her success in pop-culture commentary, daily vlogs, and the power behind her personal recommendations .

  • Phil Halperin talks about how to make a difference in education through philanthropy and advocacy

    31/01/2022 Duration: 28min

    Originally aired on Sirius XM on January 29, 2022.

  • Dr. Yvonne 'Bonnie' Maldonado on what parents and children can expect from Covid in 2022

    31/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    Originally aired on SiriusXM on January 29, 2022.

  • Roberta Katz, Author and Stanford alum explains who Gen Z is...

    24/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    Full title: Roberta Katz, Author and Stanford alum explains who Gen Z is, and what we can learn from their impacts on work culture and trends. Description: Author Roberta Katz talks about the most diverse generation yet in her latest book, Gen Z, Explained; The Art of Living in a Digital Age. Originally aired on SiriusXM on January 22, 2022.

  • E170 | James Zou: Trust is AI’s most critical contribution to health care

    20/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E170 | James Zou: Trust is AI’s most critical contribution to health care AI can reveal remarkable medical insights, but only if patients and doctors have faith in it. Thus, trust has become AI’s singular goal, says this expert in the field. Among the many areas James Zou might have chosen to apply his considerable knowledge of artificial intelligence, he opted for health care. It was the most interesting, the most complex and the most impactful area of study. In short, it was the most exciting outlet for his expertise. Since that epiphany, Zou has gone on to publish influential studies that have improved the patient experience, shaped basic research and sped the development of new drugs. Among his most important contributions, Zou says, are efforts to expose and overcome bias in the data and algorithms. His latest project, Pathfinder, uses anonymized, real-world medical records to allow researchers to conduct synthetic clinical trials on fictional (but realistic

  • Pandemic Vaccine Mandates at the Supreme Court with guest William B. Gould IV

    17/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    Just as pandemic fatigue is setting in and the Omicron variant is sweeping across the nation—putting a tremendous strain on America’s healthcare infrastructure—the Supreme Court heard arguments in challenges to the Biden administration’s authority to combat the COVID-19. Labor law expert Professor William B. Gould IV joins Joe and Rich to discuss challenges to the administration’s efforts to impose vaccine mandates—and trends in the American labor market during the pandemic. Originally aired on SiriusXM on January 15, 2022.

  • SCOTT REISS, STANFORD ALUM & VOICE OF THE STANFORD CARDINALS

    10/01/2022 Duration: 28min

    Full title: SCOTT REISS, STANFORD ALUM & VOICE OF THE STANFORD CARDINALS TALKS #1 BESTSELLER THAT DEPICTS THE CAREERS OF 15 National TV SPORTS BROADCASTERS Descripton: SCOTT REISS ASKS BROADCASTERS TO DETAIL THEIR CAREERS IN NEW BOOK "WHERE THEY WERE THEN: SPORTSCASTERS"

  • E169 | Martin Fischer: AI and virtual reality can help society build better

    06/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E169 | Martin Fischer: AI and virtual reality can help society build better. Harnessing the latest tools of computer science, an engineer hopes to reshape one of the oldest fields of human endeavor — construction. For a profession that has existed essentially since the beginning of human civilization, few people fully appreciate the importance of construction in our everyday lives, but Martin Fischer does. To build the key infrastructure of society, he says, requires intimate understanding of human nature, the environment, the materials and the ever-evolving techniques of building things. Fischer has grown frustrated with the present state of his profession and decided to change its trajectory using artificial intelligence and virtual reality to redefine what construction will look like in the future. It’s an effort he hopes will unite the profession in creating more efficient, safer and more livable homes, buildings, airports, bridges and more. Fischer muses all

  • E167 | Johan Ugander: How misinformation spreads faster than truth

    06/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E167 | Johan Ugander: How misinformation spreads faster than truth An expert in the spread of misinformation talks about how we might at last conquer falsehood and the surprising new direction his work is taking him. Stanford professor Johan Ugander is an expert in making sense of messy data. Lately he’s been working to tell fact from fiction online, as news stories spread on social media. He comes at the question from a unique angle, using machine learning to study the differing patterns in how both types of information spread (or don’t). In so doing, Ugander has come to some interesting conclusions and, more important, suggests some novel strategies for preventing the spread of misinformation. False stories, he says, are more “infectious,” with wide-ranging consequences for how they spread. Strategies to slow or restrict this infectiousness range from increasing digital literacy to asking potential sharers to consider the factual accuracy of a story they are abo

  • E166 | Gill Bejerano: How cryptogenomics advances both science and privacy

    06/01/2022 Duration: 27min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E166 | Gill Bejerano: How cryptogenomics advances both science and privacy Uniting computer science, mathematics and genomics, one professor hopes to expand access to DNA while keeping it secret. Much of what the world knows about genetic diseases is learned by comparing the DNA of people with a shared disease against the DNA of otherwise healthy people to learn where the differences lie. This is all well and good except that, written into all that DNA, is a lot of other information that the subjects would rather keep private. And that’s where Gill Bejerano enters the scene. He’s an expert in cryptogenomics, a discipline that marries the fields of cryptography and genomics to essentially scramble the genetic code to researchers in such a way that they can still glean valuable information from it without revealing the donor’s entire genetic code. Bejerano’s efforts have been so successful he’s now applying a similar process to medical records, as he explains to ho

  • E168 | How to teach computer science

    13/12/2021 Duration: 28min

    The Future of Everything with Russ Altman: E168 | How to teach computer science A lecturer in Stanford School of Engineering's Department of Computer Science says that change must come to the classroom from the top and the bottom. As the field of computer science has evolved over the last half century, so too has the way in which computer science is taught and to whom it is taught. Stanford lecturer Cynthia Lee says she is encouraged by the diversity she sees as she looks out over her classroom. But that wasn’t always the case, particularly when she, a woman, was in college. Lee has since dedicated her career to changing that mindset from a fixed and rigid outlook to one that is more open and welcoming of diverse backgrounds and skills. Change, she says, can come from the top in how classes are structured and at the foundation in undoing preconceptions about who can excel in the field. Diverse faces, myriad skills and interests, fewer lectures and more hands-on, peer-to-peer collaboration are in order, L

  • Dan Grunfeld, former Stanford basketball star, shares his story of resilience.

    13/12/2021 Duration: 27min

    Two time Stanford graduate, Dan Grunfeld has played hoops both in Palo Alto and during his professional career abroad. The Stanford Graduate School of Business alum's new book, “By the Grace of the Game - The Holocaust, A Basketball Legacy and An Unprecedented American Dream” details how three generations of his family tackled various challenges using grit and determination. Originally aired on SiriusXM on 12/11/21.

  • Juliet Brodie, director of the Stanford Community Law Clinic with Lauren Zack

    22/11/2021 Duration: 28min

    When AG Garland put out a call to lawyers, law students, and law schools generally to suit up to deal with the "eviction tsunami" that many are predicting in the coming months, Juliet Brodie, director of the Stanford Community Law Clinic and an expert in tenants’ rights answered the call. In this episode, Joe and Rick discuss evictions, the challenges lower income Americans face in staying in their homes, and how the law has been innovating during Covid-19. Juliet is joined by Lauren Zack, a teaching and litigation fellow working on the eviction projects with the clinic. Originally aired on SiriusXM on November 20, 2021.

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