12:33
That's Why Carbon Is A Tramp: Biology #1
And thus begins the most revolutionary biology course in history. Come and learn about cov...
published: 30 Jan 2012
That's Why Carbon Is A Tramp: Biology #1
And thus begins the most revolutionary biology course in history. Come and learn about covalent, ionic, and hydrogen bonds. What about electron orbitals, the octet rule, and what does it all have to do with a mad man named Gilbert Lewis? It's all contained within. Like Crash Course on...
published: 30 Jan 2012
author: crashcourse
17:11
Cell Biology
With amazing tools that peer deep into cells, cell biologists are beginning to understand ...
published: 13 Dec 2007
Cell Biology
With amazing tools that peer deep into cells, cell biologists are beginning to understand the structure, function and history of these highly organized, complex, chemical factories that are the building blocks of life. Voyage into the microscopic world of prokaryotic, eukaryotic cells, chloroplasts, and mitochondria. 17 minutes, color. direct link to purchase video: www.phoenixlearninggroup.com
published: 13 Dec 2007
author: phoenixfilmandvideo
9:09
Biology
Paul Andersen introduces the topic of Biology. He covers each of the four main ideas that ...
published: 24 Feb 2012
Biology
Paul Andersen introduces the topic of Biology. He covers each of the four main ideas that were developed by the College Board. These ideas revolve around the concepts of evolution, free energy, information and systems.
published: 24 Feb 2012
author: bozemanbiology
36:17
Lec 1 | MIT 7.012 Introduction to Biology, Fall 2004
Introduction (Prof. Robert A. Weinberg) View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu License: Cre...
published: 17 Jan 2008
Lec 1 | MIT 7.012 Introduction to Biology, Fall 2004
Introduction (Prof. Robert A. Weinberg) View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at ocw.mit.edu More courses at ocw.mit.edu
published: 17 Jan 2008
author: MIT
13:26
ATP & Respiration: Biology #7
In which Hank does some push ups for science and describes the "economy" of cell...
published: 12 Mar 2012
ATP & Respiration: Biology #7
In which Hank does some push ups for science and describes the "economy" of cellular respiration and the various processes whereby our bodies create energy in the form of ATP. Like CrashCourse on Facebook: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: www.twitter.com Special thanks go to Stafford Fitness (www.staffordfitness.net) for allowing us to shoot the gym scenes in their facilities. This video uses sounds from Freesound.org, a list of which can be found, along with the CITATIONS for this episode, in the Google Document here: dft.ba Table of Contents: 1) Cellular Respiration 01:00 2) Adenosine Triphosphate 01:29 3) Glycolysis 4:13 A) Pyruvate Molecules 5:00 B) Anaerobic Respiration/Fermentation 5:33 C) Aerobic Respiration 6:45 4) Krebs Cycle 7:06 A) Acetyl COA 7:38 B) Oxaloacetic Acid 8:21 C) Biolography: Hans Krebs 8:37 D) NAD/FAD 9:48 5) Electron Transport Chain 10:55 6) Check the Math 12:33 TAGS: crashcourse, biology, science, chemistry, energy, atp, adenosine triphosphate, cellular respiration, glucose, adp, hydrolysis, glycolysis, krebs cycle, electron transport chain, fermentation, lactic acid, enzyme, hans krebs, citric acid, ATP synthase
published: 12 Mar 2012
author: crashcourse
14:35
What is Biology - Part 1: Lecture 1.1
www.interactive-biology.com - This lecture goes into an introduction to what biology is, w...
published: 26 Aug 2010
What is Biology - Part 1: Lecture 1.1
www.interactive-biology.com - This lecture goes into an introduction to what biology is, what an organism is and the 5 characteristics of living things.
published: 26 Aug 2010
author: InteractiveBiology
35:02
Alternative Approaches to Molecular Biology | MIT 7.01SC Fundamentals of Biology
Alternative Approaches to Molecular Biology Instructor: Eric Lander View the complete cour...
published: 09 May 2012
Alternative Approaches to Molecular Biology | MIT 7.01SC Fundamentals of Biology
Alternative Approaches to Molecular Biology Instructor: Eric Lander View the complete course: ocw.mit.edu License: Creative Commons BY-NC-SA More information at ocw.mit.edu More courses at ocw.mit.edu
published: 09 May 2012
author: MIT
10:28
Plant Cells: Biology #6
Hank describes why plants are so freaking amazing - discussing their evolution, and how th...
published: 05 Mar 2012
Plant Cells: Biology #6
Hank describes why plants are so freaking amazing - discussing their evolution, and how their cells are both similar to & different from animal cells. Like CrashCourse on Facebook: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: www.twitter.com This video uses sounds from Freesound.org, a list of which can be found, along with the CITATIONS for this video, in the Google Document here: dft.ba Table of Contents annotations: 1. Re-watch the whole video 0:00 2. Introduction 0:00 3. Plant Evolution 0:56 4. Eukaryotic vs. Prokaryotic Cells 2:33 5. Cellulose and Lignin 3:58 6. Plastids and Chloroplasts 7:05 7. Central Vacuole 8:10 TAGS: crashcourse, biology, hank green, plants, plantae, chemistry, energy, learn, course, lycophyte, scale tree, carboniferous, angiosperm, eukaryotic, nucleus, prokaryotic, membrane, cytoplasm, organelle, cellulose, lignin, energy, photosynthesis, plastid, chloroplast, central vacuole, turgor pressure
published: 05 Mar 2012
author: crashcourse
12:52
Big Guns: The Muscular System - CrashCourse Biology #31
Hank tells us the story of the complicated chemical dance that allows our skeletal muscles...
published: 27 Aug 2012
Big Guns: The Muscular System - CrashCourse Biology #31
Hank tells us the story of the complicated chemical dance that allows our skeletal muscles to contract and relax. Like CrashCourse: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse: www.twitter.com Table of Contents 1) Cardiac, Smooth, & Skeletal Muscles 01:09 2) Muscle Anatomy 02:03 a) Muscle Fibers...
published: 27 Aug 2012
author: crashcourse
14:33
Molecular Biology
Paul Andersen explains the major procedures in molecular biology. He starts with a brief d...
published: 30 Apr 2012
Molecular Biology
Paul Andersen explains the major procedures in molecular biology. He starts with a brief description of Taq polymerase extracted from the hot pools of Yellowstone Park. He then uses the analogy of the ransom note to explain each of the processes that are required in genetic engineering. He explains how DNA is cut using restriction enzymes and glued using hydrogen bonds. He explains how gel electrophoresis can be used to sort DNA according to length and how the Polymerase Chain Reaction can be used to copy DNA. He finishes with a brief description of DNA sequencing.
published: 30 Apr 2012
author: bozemanbiology
11:31
Simple Animals: Sponges, Jellies, & Octopuses - CrashCourse Biology #22
Hank introduces us to the "simplest" of the animals, complexity-wise: beginning ...
published: 26 Jun 2012
Simple Animals: Sponges, Jellies, & Octopuses - CrashCourse Biology #22
Hank introduces us to the "simplest" of the animals, complexity-wise: beginning with sponges (whose very inclusion in the list as "animals" has been called into question because they are so simple) and finishing with the most complex molluscs, octopuses and squid. We differentiate them by the number of tissue layers they have, and by the complexity of those layers. Like CrashCourse on Facebook: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: www.twitter.com Table of Contents: 1) Porifera 1:33 2) Cnidaria 2:36 a) Diploblasts 2:48 3) Platyhelminthes 3:33 a) Triploblasts 3:56 b) Coelom 4:36 4) Biolography 5:36 5) Nematoda 7:26 6) Rotifera 7:57 7) Molusca 8:33 References for this episode can be found in the Google document here: dft.ba crash course, biology, anatomy, animal, simple, complex, tissue complexity, tissue, sponge, development, porifera, multicellular, eukaryotic, eukaryote, species, cnidaria, jellies, anemone, hydra, coral, germ layer, body cavity, endoderm, ecotoderm, dipoloblast, stinging cell, cnidocyst, platyhelminthes, fluke, triploblast, coelom, acoelomate, biolography, cambrian explosion, adaptation, fossil, evolution, diversity, nematoda, pseudocoelomate, hookworm, rotifera, mollusca, chitin, snail, bivalve, octopus, squid, visceral mass, foot, mantle, radula, gastropod, cephalopod
published: 26 Jun 2012
author: crashcourse
14:09
Biological Molecules - You Are What You Eat: Biology #3
Hank talks about the molecules that make up every living thing - carbohydrates, lipids, an...
published: 13 Feb 2012
Biological Molecules - You Are What You Eat: Biology #3
Hank talks about the molecules that make up every living thing - carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins - and how we find them in our environment and in the food that we eat. Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: www.twitter.com Like CrashCourse on Facebook: www.facebook.com Resources for this episode in the Google Document here: dft.ba TAGS: biological molecules, carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids, food, biolography, william prout, urea, energy, monosaccharides, glucose, fructose, disaccharides, sucrose, polysaccharides, simple sugars, cellulose, starch, glycogen, glycerol, fatty acid, triglyceride, phospholipid, steroid, cholesterol, enzymes, antibodies, hormones, amino acids, nitrogen, polypeptides, protein synthesis, biology, molecule, crashcourse, hank green
published: 13 Feb 2012
author: crashcourse
42:34
The New Biology
This documentary film features the wave of cutting-edge technologies that now provide the ...
published: 31 Oct 2011
The New Biology
This documentary film features the wave of cutting-edge technologies that now provide the opportunity to create predictive models of living systems, and gain wisdom about the fundamental nature of life itself. The potential impact for humanity is immense: from fighting complex diseases such as cancer, enabling proactive surveillance of virulent pathogens, and increasing food crop production.
published: 31 Oct 2011
author: PacificBiosciences
Vimeo results:
3:30
Bruce - by Tom Judd
Graduation film from the Royal College of Art, 2009.
Bruce is an award winning animation ...
published: 30 Jun 2009
Author: Tom Judd
Bruce - by Tom Judd
Graduation film from the Royal College of Art, 2009.
Bruce is an award winning animation that explores how advances in open-source synthetic biology allow a young man to grow his very own action hero.
www.twitter.com/animadetv
www.animade.tv
0:13
Motion silences awareness of color changes
This is a demonstration of silencing, described in:
Suchow, J.W., & Alvarez, G.A. (2011). ...
published: 22 Dec 2010
Author: Jordan Suchow
Motion silences awareness of color changes
This is a demonstration of silencing, described in:
Suchow, J.W., & Alvarez, G.A. (2011). Motion silences awareness of visual change. Current Biology. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2010.12.019
Instructions: Keep your eyes fixed on the small white mark in the center. At first, the ring is stationary and it's easy to tell that the dots are changing. A few seconds later, the ring begins to rotate and the dots suddenly appear to stop changing.
But play the movie again, this time looking directly at one of the dots and following it as the ring rotates. You will see that, in fact, the dots had been changing the whole time, even during the rotation—you just didn’t notice it. This failure to detect that moving objects are changing is silencing.
The full set of demos, and a reprint of the paper, is available at http://visionlab.harvard.edu/silencing/.
3:39
Speeding Up Science
In January 2011, Oregon State University ichthyologist Brian Sidlauskas led a research exp...
published: 05 Sep 2012
Author: Facebook Stories
Speeding Up Science
In January 2011, Oregon State University ichthyologist Brian Sidlauskas led a research expedition into the little-known Cuyuni River region of Guyana in South America. His team documented more than 5,000 fish, but Guyana’s immigration policies required them to identify and catalog every specimen they wanted to bring back—a nearly impossible task, especially on a tight schedule. Sidlauskas uploaded his research photos to Facebook and tagged members of the scientific community who were able to identify almost all of the photos in under 24 hours.
Youtube results:
11:44
Evolution: It's a Thing - Crash Course Biology #20
Hank gets real with us in a discussion of evolution - it's a thing, not a debate. Gene...
published: 11 Jun 2012
Evolution: It's a Thing - Crash Course Biology #20
Hank gets real with us in a discussion of evolution - it's a thing, not a debate. Gene distribution changes over time, across successive generations, to give rise to diversity at every level of biological organization. Like CrashCourse on Facebook: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: www.twitter.com Table of Contents 1) The Theory of Evolution 1:49 2) Fossils 2:42 3) Homologous Structures 4:36 4) Biogeography 7:02 5) Direct Observation 8:52 References for this episode can be found in the Google document here: dft.ba evolution, theory, biology, science, crashcourse, genetics, gene, facts, fossil, fossil record, dinosaur, extinct, extinction, organism, dorudon, rodhocetus, vestigial, structure, similarity, homologous structure, related, relationship, morganucodon, fore limb, hind limb, vertebrate, molecule, DNA, RNA, chimpanzee, fruit fly, biogeography, marsupial, finches, direct observation, drug resistance, resistance, selective pressure, italian wall lizard
published: 11 Jun 2012
author: crashcourse
12:16
Taxonomy: Life's Filing System - CrashCourse Biology #19
Hank tells us the background story and explains the importance of the science of classifyi...
published: 04 Jun 2012
Taxonomy: Life's Filing System - CrashCourse Biology #19
Hank tells us the background story and explains the importance of the science of classifying living things, also known as taxonomy. Like CrashCourse on Facebook: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: www.twitter.com References for this episode can be found in the Google document here: dft.ba Table of Contents 1) Taxonomy 0:00 2) Phylogenetic Tree 1:24 3) Biolography 2:26 4) Analogous/Homoplasic Traits 3:48 5) Homologous Traits 4:03 6) Taxa & Binomial Nomenclature 4:56 7) Domains 5:48 a) Bateria 6:04 b) Archaea 6:44 c) Eukarya / 4 Kingdoms 6:54 -Plantae 7:56 -Protista 8:23 -Fungi 8:56 -Animalia 9:31 taxonomy, classification, classifying, evolution, filing, science, biology, life, organism, relationship, ancestor, ancestry, evolutionary tree, phylogenetic tree, tree of life, biolography, carl von linnaeus, linnaeus, botanist, botanical name, morphology, homologous traits, systema naturae, taxa, groups, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species, binomial nomenclature, latin, domain, archaea, eukarya, division, autotrophs, heterotrophs, protist, fungi, animalia, animal, cat, kitty
published: 04 Jun 2012
author: crashcourse
13:15
Photosynthesis: CrashCourse Biology #8
Hank explains the extremely complex series of reactions whereby plants feed themselves on ...
published: 19 Mar 2012
Photosynthesis: CrashCourse Biology #8
Hank explains the extremely complex series of reactions whereby plants feed themselves on sunlight, carbon dioxide and water, and also create some by products we're pretty fond of as well. Like CrashCourse on Facebook: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse on Twitter: www.twitter.com This video uses sounds from Freesound.org, a list of which can be found, along with the CITATIONS for this episode, in the Google document here: dft.ba Table of Contents: 1) Water 1:16 2) Carbon Dioxide 1:32 3) Sunlight/Photons 1:43 4) Chloroplasts 1:57 5) Light Reaction/Light-Dependent 2:42 a. Photosystem II 3:33 b. Cytochrome Complex 5:54 c. ATP Synthase 6:16 d. Photosystem I 7:06 6) Dark Reactions/Light-Independent 7:55 a. Phase 1 - Carbon Fixation 8:50 b. Phase 2 - Reduction 11:31 c. Phase 3 - Regeneration 12:02 tags: photosynthesis, biology, science, crashcourse, plants, light, calvin cycle, respiration, water, carbon dioxide, sunlight, xylem, time lapse, stomata, chlorophyll, photon, plastid, chloroplast, oxygen, thylakoid, grana, lumen, stroma, chemistry, fusion, photoexcitation, photosystem II, electron transport chain, protein, cytochrome complex, carbon fixation, rubisco, phosphoglycolate, reduction, regeneration, glyceraldehyde 3-phosphate, G3P, glucose, cellulose, starch, life
published: 19 Mar 2012
author: crashcourse
13:11
The Skeletal System: It's ALIVE! - CrashCourse Biology #30
Hank introduces us to the framework of our bodies, our skeleton, which apart from being th...
published: 20 Aug 2012
The Skeletal System: It's ALIVE! - CrashCourse Biology #30
Hank introduces us to the framework of our bodies, our skeleton, which apart from being the support and protection for all our fleshy parts, is involved in many other vital processes that help our bodies to function properly. Like CrashCourse: www.facebook.com Follow CrashCourse: www.twitter.com Table of Contents 1) Endoskeleton 2:03 2) Biolography 3:27 3) New Bone Formation 6:36 4) Bone Structure 8:00 5) Bone Remodeling 9:48 References: Campbell Biology, 9th ed. faculty.fmcc.suny.edu www.cod.edu www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov www.shwachmandiamondamerica.org www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov en.wikipedia.org projectskeletal.tripod.com crash course, crashcourse, biology, skeleton, skeletal system, organ, anatomy, physiology, vertebrate, chordate, hydrostatic skeleton, exoskeleton, endoskeleton, bone, skull, biolography, adries van wesel, osteology, andreas vesalius, doctor, medicine, human dissection, de humani corporis fabrica, illustration, cartilage, chondrocyte, collagen, osteoblast, ossification, calcium phosphate, bone matrix, marrow, hematopoeisis, diaphysis, epiphysis, pituitary gland, growth hormone, remodeling, osteoclast, resorption, parathyroid, thyroid
published: 20 Aug 2012
author: crashcourse