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    • Mashup Score: 14
      Why your body fights weight loss - 6 month(s) ago

      Why does losing weight often feel like an uphill battle? Physician Katherine Saunders unpacks how our bodies are wired to store fat, revealing that obesity isn’t simply a lack of willpower — it’s a complex, chronic disease rooted in evolutionary biology. She shares the science behind the latest breakthroughs in treatment, from lifestyle interventions to powerful new medications.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Endocrinology
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      • Profile photo of 	ObesitySociety
        ObesitySociety

        #TOSMember Spotlight: Katherine Saunders did a Ted Talk on "Why your body fights weight loss." Watch now https://t.co/q3MyGm3alP

    • Mashup Score: 16
      What we don't understand about trust - 7 month(s) ago

      Trust is on the decline, and we need to rebuild it. That’s a commonly heard suggestion for making a better world … but, says philosopher Onora O’Neill, we don’t really understand what we’re suggesting. She flips the question, showing us that our three most common ideas about trust are actually misdirected.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Infectious Disease
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      • Profile photo of 	JulieLeask
        JulieLeask

        Lots of talk about trust last week after release of the Covid inquiry report. Here’s one of the best analyses of trust. “Onora O'Neill: What we don't understand about trust” https://t.co/p49Hu99jdX

    • Mashup Score: 70
      Can AI catch what doctors miss? - 8 month(s) ago

      AI could propel the biggest transformation in the history of medicine, says physician-scientist Eric Topol. He explains how sophisticated AI models can interpret medical images as well or better than human experts can — and, beyond that, even pick up things that human eyes can’t see. Learn all the ways AI is poised to make a difference for both patients and doctors.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Expert Picks
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      • Profile photo of 	EricTopol
        EricTopol

        This new report adds to the richness of retinal information "seen" by #AI machine eyes, but not perceptible by humans, as I reviewed in my @TEDTalks https://t.co/p6NmsaOGQR https://t.co/Lr5FaNTUCQ

    • Mashup Score: 0
      There Are Words - 8 month(s) ago

      After Bevin lost her son in a traumatic drowning incident, almost everyone who hoped to offer her comfort said, “I don’t know what to say. There are no words.” It’s true, most of us don’t know how to comfort someone in grief, and because we are afraid of saying the wrong thing, we often default to saying nothing. But loss is a guaranteed part of life, and healing doesn’t happen in isolation. “There Are Words” is a powerful talk where Bevin shares her Loss Journey learnings and finally teaches us the actual words to say to support someone in pain after the death of a loved one.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Cardiologists
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      • Profile photo of 	EstefaniaOS
        EstefaniaOS

        There Are Words (Bevin Mugford | TEDxBabsonCollege) https://t.co/6kW3LLLfmv via @TEDTalks

    • Mashup Score: 592
      This is your brain on air pollution - 10 month(s) ago

      Air pollution knows no borders — even in your own body, says public health expert María Neira. In this startling talk, she describes how the microscopic particles and chemicals you breathe affect all your major organs (including your brain) and calls on both the public and those in power to take action to stop the sources of pollution.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, General HCPs
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      • Profile photo of 	DrFerdowsi
        DrFerdowsi

        RT @DrMariaNeira: This is your brain on air pollution (María Neira | TEDSummit 2019) https://t.co/CkdZT4Lqru via @TEDTalks

    • Mashup Score: 0
      The courage to live with radical uncertainty - 10 month(s) ago

      When your future is uncertain, how do you keep moving forward? In this courageous talk, oncologist and cancer survivor Shekinah Elmore shares how she embraced life after a rare genetic diagnosis — and explains why she believes doctors have a duty to help their patients learn to live with radical uncertainty.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Hem/Oncs
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      • Profile photo of 	VonettaMW
        VonettaMW

        https://t.co/Rz8soqGlfc

    • Mashup Score: 577
      What is an AI anyway? - 11 month(s) ago

      When it comes to artificial intelligence, what are we actually creating? Even those closest to its development are struggling to describe exactly where things are headed, says Microsoft AI CEO Mustafa Suleyman, one of the primary architects of the AI models many of us use today. He offers an honest and compelling new vision for the future of AI, proposing an unignorable metaphor — a new digital species — to focus attention on this extraordinary moment. (Followed by a Q&A with head of TED Chris Anderson)

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Future of Medicine
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      • Profile photo of 	mustafasuleymn
        mustafasuleymn

        If someone did nothing but read 24 hours a day for their entire life, they'd consume about eight billion words. But today, the most advanced AIs consume more than eight trillion words in a single month of training. https://t.co/KLlvjFSL1y

    • Mashup Score: 172
      My quest to cure prion disease — before it's too late - 12 month(s) ago

      Biomedical researcher Sonia Vallabh’s life was turned upside down when she learned she had the genetic mutation for a rare and fatal illness, prion disease, that could strike at any time. Thirteen years later, her search for a cure has led to new insights about how to catch and prevent disease — and how to honor our grandest, most mysterious inheritance: our brains.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Future of Medicine
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      • Profile photo of 	dgmacarthur
        dgmacarthur

        Remarkable @TEDTalks by Sonia Vallabh about her journey with @cureffi to find a cure for genetic prion disease before it kills her. I first met Sonia and Eric just over a decade ago; it’s so exciting how close they are now to their goal. https://t.co/Xi1hgdkiaD

    • Mashup Score: 75
      Why your doctor should care about social justice - 1 year(s) ago

      In Zimbabwe in the 1980s, Mary Bassett witnessed the AIDS epidemic firsthand, and she helped set up a clinic to treat and educate local people about the deadly virus. But looking back, she regrets not sounding the alarm for the real problem: the structural inequities embedded in the world’s political and economic organizations, inequities that make marginalized people more vulnerable. These same structural problems exist in the United States today, and as New York City’s Health Commissioner, Bassett is using every chance she has to rally support for health equity and speak out against racism. “We don’t have to have all the answers to call for change,” she says. “We just need courage.”

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Infectious Disease
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      • Profile photo of 	syramadad
        syramadad

        Sound the alarm An amazing @TEDTalks by @DrMaryTBassett from 2015 Why your doctor should care about social justice https://t.co/TFRop92B2a

    • Mashup Score: 63
      With spatial intelligence, AI will understand the real world - 1 year(s) ago

      In the beginning of the universe, all was darkness — until the first organisms developed sight, which ushered in an explosion of life, learning and progress. AI pioneer Fei-Fei Li says a similar moment is about to happen for computers and robots. She shows how machines are gaining “spatial intelligence” — the ability to process visual data, make predictions and act upon those predictions — and shares how this could enable AI to interact with humans in the real world.

      Source: www.ted.com
      Categories: General Medicine News, Expert Picks
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      • Profile photo of 	EricTopol
        EricTopol

        In a recent @TEDTalks, my friend @drfeifei takes us from a "cat-astophe" to a paralyzed person's brain waves giving instructions to a robot for making a recipe. The evolution of spatial intelligence #AI https://t.co/8ok1uV2tJX https://t.co/g1gQ9OTnEv

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