Back to Show
SciTech Now
Brain tissue crucial in understanding autism
More American children are battling autism than AIDS, diabetes and cancer combined, and scientists are working furiously to get to the bottom of it. But to really understand autism, scientists need to examine human brain tissue, which is in short supply. Now, a network of research institutions is working to change that.
Support Provided By
26:51
Synthetic humans, making an impact with STEM, tardigrades, and timber rattlesnakes.
26:46
A Tuvan Throat singing ensemble, artificial lungs, a NASA Astronaut, and wildlife.
26:51
Insect flight, how plants know which way is up? yawning, and a sustainable cemetery.
26:46
3D-printed food, NYC rats; a breakthrough telescope and blooms.
26:51
Timber, nuclear reactor, regenerative medicine, and re-envisioning the Houston Astrodome.
27:16
CineSpace, cybersecurity and 3D printing, the life of a chemist, and California Condors.
27:16
Training astronauts; hacking the human body; a middle school’s STEM Day and graphene.
27:17
A robotic arm, the Dead Sea, a rare wood collection, and the changing world of plants.
26:50
Crab species, warmer winters, 3D printing and medicine; and a regional STEM competition.
26:46
High-tech farming, fossil data and fish, nuclear waste, and a space shuttle mission story.
26:53
Saving songbirds, the lives of scientists, climate change and examining bones.
26:50
A lost colony, hope for the blind, what our devices reveal about us and a shared workspace