Category: Lecture

School of Medicine's Dean's Lecture Series - Michael Specter

Michael Specter, Staff Writer, The New Yorker | Dean’s Lecture Series 2017 Michael Specter has been a staff writer at The New Yorker since 1998 and focuses on science, technology, and public health. Since joining the magazine, he has written about the global AIDS epidemic, avian influenza, malaria, the world’s diminishing freshwater resources, synthetic biology,… Read more School of Medicine's Dean's Lecture Series - Michael Specter

Cafe Scientifique: The Rise and Fall of Cigarette Smoking

While tobacco use remains the number one killer of Americans, smoking prevalence is at a modern low. Learn how and why this happened, best practices for smoking cessation, the vaping alternative, how smoking has become a social justice issue, and whether there are relevant lessons for the obesity epidemic. Café Scientifique is an international network… Read more Cafe Scientifique: The Rise and Fall of Cigarette Smoking

Big Data in Biomedicine: Sumbul Desai

Bringing together thought leaders in large-scale data analysis and technology to transform the way we diagnose, treat and prevent disease. Visit our website at http://bigdata.stanford.edu/.

YCHU - Binge Eating in Teens

In honor of National Eating Disorders Week, the Divisions of Adolescent Medicine and Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, together with the Comprehensive Eating Disorders Program at Stanford is hosting their annual community lecture for families, physicians, teachers and other practitioners caring for those with eating disorders. Dr. Kara Fitzpatrick will provide an update on Bulimia Nervosa… Read more YCHU - Binge Eating in Teens

CWOQ: Tony Wyss-Coray “Young Blood for Old Brains”

Every culture and civilization had its dreams about eternal youth, but what if there was something to it? Professor Wyss-Coray will share an amazing development in aging research that could revolutionize how we understand aging and treat age-related diseases. Tony Wyss-Coray is a professor of neurology and neurological sciences. Classes Without Quizzes are presented by… Read more CWOQ: Tony Wyss-Coray “Young Blood for Old Brains”

CWOQ: Giancarlo Aquilanti

“Why the Opera Changed the Course of Music” Operas—those beautiful melodies that stick in our brain for us to sing all week after a show. Are you aware that this started about 400 years ago, thanks to a small group of artists in the city of Florence? Professor Aquilanti shares how they radically changed the… Read more CWOQ: Giancarlo Aquilanti