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Showing episodes and shows of
Rachael Moeller Gorman
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Socializing with Scientists
Happy Thanksgiving!
I'm thankful for all of you, and for the scientists who make this podcast possible! I hope you have a relaxing and peaceful Thanksgiving.If you'd like to email us with comments or suggestions, we'd love to hear them at socializingwithscientists@gmail.com .Find us on the Socializing with Scientists website, or follow us on Instagram or Bluesky.Thanks for listening!
2025-11-26
03 min
Socializing with Scientists
Brad Nelson makes tiny robots that deliver medicine to the body (he's an engineer)
Brad grew up in small town Illinois, playing outside all summer, building go-karts and tree houses in the woods. He went to the University of Illinois to study engineering and Carnegie Mellon for robotics. Later, he shrunk his focus: he began building tiny robots the size of a grain of sand.Now, Brad Nelson, PhD, is a Professor of Robotics and Intelligent Systems at ETH Zurich. He just published research in which he and his team navigated tiny robots to a precise spot in a large animal, where the robot released a drug. The idea is to s...
2025-11-20
59 min
Socializing with Scientists
Melissa Harrison explores the foundations of human life, in fruit flies (she's a biologist)
Melissa was born into a family of scientists, but she always wanted to be a historian. As she grew up, however, she realized that science allowed her to satisfy her infinite curiosity and desire for discovery, and so she "went into the family business."Melissa Harrison, PhD, is now a molecular biologist at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and she studies how human cells turn particular genes on and off, developing from a single cell into a full-grown person. She uses the fruit fly as an easy, inexpensive model. Her latest research with UW colleague Peter Lewis, PhD, u...
2025-11-13
52 min
Socializing with Scientists
Case van Genuchten turns arsenic waste into a valuable raw material (he's an environmental engineer)
Case was a regular California kid: he skateboarded, he surfed, and he also liked math. He tried a few different majors in college, but finally found his calling: environmental engineering. He went to graduate school, and a lucky encounter during the first week changed his whole life.Case van Genuchten, PhD, now works for the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) and just published research showing that arsenic from drinking water waste can be changed into a valuable commodity. He has studied how to remove arsenic from drinking water for years, but now, in this new...
2025-11-06
1h 12
Socializing with Scientists
Cassia Low Manting observes the brain on music (she's a neuroscientist)
Ever since she was a little girl, Cassia has loved playing the piano. Her mother made sure she had music lessons, and Cassia felt like she was fulfilling her mother's dream learning the instrument. But she also loved science and math, and after her undergrad years she found herself searching for a research field and a graduate program that inspired her. She happened to read a few studies linking neuroscience with music, and was hooked.Now, Cassia Low Manting, PhD, is a neuroscientist at Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, studying how the brain pays attention to m...
2025-10-30
49 min
Socializing with Scientists
Charlotte Stagg reaches deep into the brain using ultrasound (she's a neuroscientist)
Charlie grew up in England, surrounded by books. At age 11, she declared that she wanted to be a research scientist. When she was a teenager, however, she started gravitating towards helping people more directly and went to medical school at age 18. After graduating, though, she realized her heart wasn't in medicine, and a remembered lecture from years earlier on post-stroke brain recovery inspired her to follow her childhood dream of doing research. Charlotte Stagg, MBChB, PhD is now a neuroscientist at the University of Oxford. She studies motor function in humans, and was part of a team t...
2025-10-23
55 min
Socializing with Scientists
Bradley Smith watches dingos, and also Bluey (he's a comparative psychologist)
Bradley grew up in suburban Australia, fascinated by the scientists in movies like Jurassic Park. He also eagerly read biographies and memoirs, and his love of animals and people soon grew into a successful career as a comparative psychologist.Bradley Smith, PhD, now teaches and researches at Central Queensland University in Australia, spending much of his time thinking, learning, and talking about dingoes. Dingoes are controversial creatures in Australia. Bradley explains why this is, how dingoes feature in aboriginal culture, where they came from, and why it all matters to the government. He also talks e...
2025-10-16
56 min
Socializing with Scientists
Samuel Dicken ponders ultraprocessed food (he's a clinical scientist)
As a child, Samuel enjoyed eating "potato smileys" and "turkey dinosaurs," even though most of his meals were homemade. As he grew up, he played sports and became interested in optimizing his nutrition to improve performance. But his first day on the job at a sports nutrition company convinced him to apply to graduate school to study nutrition, not sell it. Now, Samuel Dicken, PhD, is a research fellow at University College London, studying the foods people eat and how they affect their health and weight. In a new study published in Nature Medicine, he gave 55 people e...
2025-10-08
51 min
Socializing with Scientists
Fadi Lakkis is a kidney match-maker (he's a physician scientist)
Fadi Lakkis grew up in Lebanon during a time of political unrest, which led him to perpetually question the world around him. Once he became a nephrologist with a speciality in immunology and transplantation, this questioning pushed him to do better science, as well as approach research from unexpected angles.Now, Fadi Lakkis, MD, is a professor at Stanford University, and he's working to help better match donor's kidneys with the people who need them, as well as determine which immunosuppressive drugs work best in which patients. His new paper in Science Translational Medicine elaborates on this...
2025-10-02
1h 13
Socializing with Scientists
Allison Brager helps soldiers survive, and thrive (she's a U.S. Army neurobiologist and sleep scientist)
Allison grew up during a tumultuous time in a city bruised by crime. Playing sports helped secure a kid's reputation, so she focused on athletics, eventually becoming the first female pole-vaulter in the state of Ohio. Division I universities recruited her (she was also class valedictorian), and she settled into life at an Ivy League college. Then, she started studying sleep.Now, Major Allison Brager, PhD, is a neurobiologist working to keep soldiers safe by understanding their sleep, because not getting enough can cause "a cognitive lapse that is the difference between life and death." Her many...
2025-09-24
53 min
Socializing with Scientists
August Update!
We have several great episodes in the works! I can't wait to share them, starting in September.
2025-08-13
01 min
Socializing with Scientists
Lidya Yurdum studies whether singing helps babies feel good (she's a social psychologist)
Raised in a bilingual household in Istanbul, Lidya had lots of questions. She was keenly interested in people, and, on top of that, wondered things like, does her personality change when she speaks a different language? This led to her pursuing psychology in college to study human behavior in many different contexts.Now in graduate school at the University of Amsterdam, Lidya Yurdum's fascination with language has led to an interest in music (language "is surprisingly close to music in many ways," she says), and she is currently focusing on babies: Lidya's work on whether a parent...
2025-07-30
52 min
Socializing with Scientists
Katie Amato wonders what it means to be human (she's a biological anthropologist)
As a child, Katie thrived in her suburban Chicago backyard, reading The Boxcar Children and leading her little brother on adventures. A second grade unit on Jane Goodall cemented her curiosity about primates, and two fantastic high school teachers excited her about biology. But it wasn't until college that she thought science could be a career.Now, Katherine Amato is a biological anthropologist at Northwestern University in Chicago. She studies how humans evolved, looking at their microbiome and the microbiome of primates, trying to figure out if bugs in our guts helped direct human evolution. She was...
2025-07-24
57 min
Socializing with Scientists
Jenna Alley finds the good in parents (she’s a developmental health psychologist)
Jenna was never really interested in school. She loved theater and the arts, but academically, she struggled. She had dyslexia, and "always felt like I was failing...never thought I was very smart," she said.It wasn't until her sophomore year of college that things started to turn around: she discovered an academic field that truly excited her. Jenna had always been observant - nosy, even - wondering why people behaved the way they behaved, but her undergraduate mentor, David Frederick, "literally changed everything for me. He was an amazing teacher, introduced me to psychological science, gave me...
2025-07-03
55 min
Socializing with Scientists
Shannon Curry is in charge of a spacecraft orbiting Mars (she’s a planetary scientist)
The first time she looked through a telescope, Shannon lost her breath. A self-proclaimed "science camp kid," she learned early that she wanted to do research, and that space would be her subject.Shannon Curry, Ph.D. is now the director of NASA's MAVEN mission, a spacecraft that has been orbiting Mars since 2014. She and her team at the University of Colorado, Boulder are trying to determine how Mars lost its atmosphere, in order to reveal why all the ancient lakes and rivers on Mars disappeared. Their new research provides the first direct observation of a phenomenon...
2025-06-25
36 min
Socializing with Scientists
Scott MacIvor wants people to enjoy green spaces in cities (he's an urban ecologist)
When he was a child in Kitchener, Ontario, Scott MacIvor would go on urban walks with his mom. He had a bucket, and was allowed to bring home one piece of nature each day: a snake, or a bumblebee, a caterpillar. He loved examining them all.Now Scott is an urban ecologist at the University of Toronto, working to connect people with the nature that's hidden all over the places where humans live, especially cities. He uses drones, thermal imaging, and other cutting edge technologies to study urban ecosystems to see how they’re doing and how th...
2025-06-18
1h 05
Socializing with Scientists
Heather Mefford hunts down unruly genes (she’s a human geneticist)
When she was a kid in Iowa, Heather didn't know what she wanted to be when she grew up. She loved solving problems and adored science and math, and when she went to college, she majored in chemical engineering. Then she had an internship: it soon became clear to her that engineering was not the right career choice. So, after college, she moved to Seattle. Heather worked in a human genetics research lab for a year, and decided to apply to MD/PhD programs. She got in, the physician/researcher combo fitting her like a glove.
2025-06-11
55 min
Socializing with Scientists
SUMMER 2025 UPDATE!
The first eight episodes of Socializing with Scientists Season 1 have been a blast! Next Wednesday we'll publish another interview, but this week we're taking a little breather. I wanted to talk about what's coming up, to say thank you to the scientists who have spoken with me, and to tell the listeners who have been tuning in each week how much I appreciate you: There are so many other things you could be doing with your time, the fact that you're lending me your brains for an hour means so much!There are two hidden scientist gems...
2025-06-04
06 min
Socializing with Scientists
Scott Krayenhoff helps hot cities cool off (he's an urban climatologist)
Scott has always been a deep thinker. Dinner table conversations on his family's homestead on Vancouver Island instilled in him a strong environmental ethic, and a love for math and science pushed him to excel in college.But when a professor posed the question, how much cooler would Toronto's summer climate be if half the rooftops were green and plant-based? his imagination took off, and he dove into the field of atmospheric science.Scott Krayenhoff is now an associate professor at the University of Guelph's School of Environmental Sciences and recently published a research paper...
2025-05-28
1h 01
Socializing with Scientists
Jan Gogarten is searching for the next deadly germ (he’s a wildlife disease ecologist)
Jan was born in Germany, but he grew up in the US: his parents moved after Chernobyl, because their lab Geiger counter showed high radiation levels despite being hundreds of miles from the reactor. His parents were scientists, but after high school, Jan wanted to forge his own path. He took random gigs - balcony welder, tree planter. During college, one of his professors suggested he try field research. Jan went to Panama to study electric river fish, and was hooked. "That was sort of my first experience of being a biologist for hire," he said.
2025-05-21
48 min
Socializing with Scientists
Cédric Girard-Buttoz learns the language of chimps (he's an evolutionary biologist)
When he was six years old, Cédric wanted to be Tarzan, following monkeys around the forest and studying their behavior.He has pretty much made his dream come true. Cédric Girard-Buttoz has researched lemurs in Madagascar, macaques in Indonesia, and chimpanzees at the Taï Chimpanzee Project in Taï National Park in Côte d'Ivoire, and he has also studied bonobos and great apes. He is an evolutionary biologist at ENES, the bioacoustics research lab at the University of Saint-Etienne, France. With then-graduate student Tatiana Bortolato and others, he published a fascinating new study showing how chimp...
2025-05-14
1h 08
Socializing with Scientists
Soumya Acharya conjures up clever new medical gadgets (he's a biomedical engineer)
Soumya has always been a tinkerer and inventor. He cobbled together a homemade radio as a 5th grader in northern India, and soon after that he started an electronics club in his dad's garage. He later graduated from medical school, but couldn’t shake a love of technology, and so he decided to go to graduate school for engineering in the US. He now combines both loves as a biomedical engineer, inventing better medical devices for not only patients in the US, but also those in countries without regular access to the latest medical technology, or even consistent electricity an...
2025-05-08
46 min
Socializing with Scientists
Desirée Plata wants to keep bad chemicals out of your water (she's an environmental chemist)
When Desirée was little, she'd roam around her grandmother's neighborhood in Maine, "kind of eavesdropping on people," she said. She began to notice a troubling pattern: many of the neighbors, and some of her family members, were suffering from odd neurological conditions and cancers. Desirée began to think that something in the air or water must be causing these illnesses. Desirée Plata, PhD, is now an environmental chemist at MIT studying the fate of chemicals that have escaped into the environment. She's trying to improve the world by studying new technologies and materials that also...
2025-05-01
50 min
Socializing with Scientists
Lauren Osborne labors to soothe mothers' brains (she's a reproductive psychiatrist)
Lauren Osborne grew up in New York City and rural Vermont; she was born into a family of actors and artists. After college, she worked in book publishing.But once she had kids, she started to develop a strong interest in medicine; after several years of focused work she became a reproductive psychiatrist at Weill Cornell Medicine. She recently conducted a fascinating study looking at the body and brain during postpartum depression, sussing out whether the condition can predicted during pregnancy with a blood test. Learn why she chose medicine later in life, how she c...
2025-04-23
49 min
Socializing with Scientists
Louis Bont is trying to save ALL the children (he's a pediatrician)
Louis had an uneventful childhood: Born and raised in Amsterdam, he was a normal kid who liked playing with friends and reading books. But his mother had a strong social justice bent, and she inspired Louis to live a life dedicated to helping others. Dr. Louis Bont is now a world-renowned respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) researcher and pediatrician who heads the Department of Pediatrics at Wilhelmina Children's Hospital at University Medical Center Utrecht in the Netherlands. He helped found ReSViNET, a non-profit foundation trying to reduce the RSV burden on kids all over the world. Lo...
2025-04-16
46 min
Socializing with Scientists
Michela Mariani digs ancient wildfires (she's a paleoecologist)
As a child, Michela got lost in the mountains of Italy foraging for mushrooms. Adult Michela digs under deep Australian lakes searching for remnants of wildfire and ancient people, while raising her family in England. How does this feisty paleoecologist get it all done? Dr. Michela Mariani is an associate professor at the University of Nottingham in the UK, and she recently published a paper in the journal Science exploring how ancient people in Australia prevented devastating wildfires. It's called, "Shrub cover declined as Indigenous populations expanded across southeast Australia." In the first episode of So...
2025-04-09
50 min
Generous Girl
Rachael Adams - The simplicity of significance -S3- Ep. 45
We're joined by Rachel Adams, host of The Love Offering podcast and author of "Everyday Prayers for Love: Learning to Love God, Others, and Even Yourself." Rachel shares her journey from feeling insignificant in her small Kentucky town to discovering her true purpose and impact through God's love. In this episode, Rachel discusses overcoming feelings of inadequacy, the power of small acts of love, and her inspiring path to book publishing and podcasting. Whether you're a mom feeling unseen or someone seeking new purpose, Rachel's story offers encouragement and insight. Grab a cozy spot and join us as we...
2025-02-18
43 min