Science Amplified

Science Amplified with Rachel Marsh

25 min · 5. kesä 2025
jakson Science Amplified with Rachel Marsh kansikuva

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Today we talk to Dr. Rachel Marsh, Irving Philips Professor of Medical Psychology (in Child Psychology) at Columbia University Medical Center and the Director of MRI Research at New York State Psychiatric Institute. Dr. Marsh specializes in fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) in children and in dyads (mother-baby pairs). She studies how psychiatric disorders develop during childhood, and how long-term health outcomes may be intergenerational. Today we talk about her pioneering research with Dr. Dani Dimitriu on mother-baby dyads who were exposed to COVID during pregnancy and their outcomes. This research has been halted due to current funding cuts aimed at both COVID-related research specifically and Columbia University funding in general. In this episode we discuss how these funding cuts impact the next generation of scientists most of all and why this research actually has very little to do with COVID itself, and much more to do with understanding how prenatal stress impacts children. All that and more on this episode of Science Amplified.

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jakson Science Amplified with Rachel Marsh kansikuva

Science Amplified with Rachel Marsh

Today we talk to Dr. Rachel Marsh, Irving Philips Professor of Medical Psychology (in Child Psychology) at Columbia University Medical Center and the Director of MRI Research at New York State Psychiatric Institute. Dr. Marsh specializes in fMRI (functional magnetic resonance imaging) in children and in dyads (mother-baby pairs). She studies how psychiatric disorders develop during childhood, and how long-term health outcomes may be intergenerational. Today we talk about her pioneering research with Dr. Dani Dimitriu on mother-baby dyads who were exposed to COVID during pregnancy and their outcomes. This research has been halted due to current funding cuts aimed at both COVID-related research specifically and Columbia University funding in general. In this episode we discuss how these funding cuts impact the next generation of scientists most of all and why this research actually has very little to do with COVID itself, and much more to do with understanding how prenatal stress impacts children. All that and more on this episode of Science Amplified.

5. kesä 202525 min
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Science Amplified with Ya'el Courtney

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Today we talk to Dr. Paul Bieniasz, PhD. Dr. Bieniasz is the Purnell W. Choppin Professor Investigator at the Rockefeller University and an Investigator at the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. We discuss Dr. Bieniasz's scientific journey, and specifically why he decided to come to the United States to pursue his scientific career. We also discuss how his scientific research shifted during the pandemic from primarily studying HIV biology to also looking at SARS-CoV-2. We talk about why his research on coronaviruses is important for preparing for the next pandemic and why the SARS-CoV-2 became an important tool for virologists to understand how viruses evade antibodies and keep making us sick. We touch on his intuition on the lab leak theory, and his opinions on why the public has lost trust in science and what can be done to get that trust back. Finally, we talk about the difference between applied and fundamental research, and why reducing scientific funding for fundamental research will impact the US's place at the forefront of scientific advances.

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