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Thursday, March 11, 2021 Scientists have rarely played such a pivotal and public role in society, and certainly never before in the digital age. But the centrality of science is about much more than the pandemic. Todayâs Daily Dose explores scientists who do more than just keep us alive, from the climatologist who could become a president to researchers rectifying racial disparities and discovering the tunes that make sharks shout âThatâs my jam!â OK, so sharks donât really shout; they communicate with body language. We know this because, well, science. Nick Fouriezos, Associate Editor au naturel 1. Catarina Vila Pouca This Portuguese scientist doesnât just watch Shark Week; she lives it. Fascinated by the cartilaginous sea critters since childhood, she uses guppies from Trinidad to study how life as a predator can engineer the evolution of cognitive abilities more often associated with humanity â things like learning, remembering and problem-solving. Itâs the latest turn in a career thatâs âtaken me to different waters,â [as she writes]( from a lab in the Netherlands, including studying blue sharks off the North Atlantic and âcharismaticâ Port Jackson sharks in Australia. It was in the latter locale that she decoded their musical tastes: [Sharks like jazz](, it turns out, after associating it with food, but are confused by classical music. Honestly, same. 2. Segenet Kelemu You know youâre doing something right when Bill Gates calls you [one of his heroes](. After watching a near-biblical swarm of locusts destroy the crops in her Ethiopian village, Kelemu turned to science and changed the world. First as the [first woman from her region]( to get a college degree, which she earned from Addis Ababa University, then, while studying plant pathology and genetics at Montana State, Kansas State and Cornell University in the U.S. She [returned to Africa in 2007](, determined to keep farmers from devastating losses by better understanding the symbiotic relationship between plants and insects. The 63-year-old now leads the International Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology in Nairobi, which is at the forefront of global efforts to defeat food insecurity. 3. Kári Stefánsson The Icelandic researcher, 71, unraveled one of my childhoodâs biggest mysteries â why my mom and sisters always insisted I needed another dab of deodorant when I thought I smelled perfectly fine. My personal hygiene problems aside, the question is also one of humanityâs oldest questions, with scientists long wondering why some people donât smell body odors that most everybody else can. Turns out, there is a gene that helps people pick up certain smells, such as identifying when [something is fishy](. Stefánsson, a former Harvard professor, founded the Reykjavik-based deCODE Genetics in 1996, where he and his team have identified the genetic risk factors for dozens of ailments, from [cardiovascular disease]( to [cancer](. 4. Sonya Dyhrman The Columbia University environmental sciences professor is taking on the entire oceanic food chain by starting with its smallest link â the microbe. While the talk about food and climate change focuses on the visible world consumed by humans (meat, grains, etc.), she is showing how unseen organisms could have huge ramifications for our survival. And Dyhrman, 48, combines that microscopic gaze with an awareness of the bigger picture, developing ocean science literacy activities for physical classrooms and the virtual educational site Whyville that have [exposed more than 1 million children]( to the scientific process. [Read more on OZY]( [fun and interactive stem learning]( [Brilliant]( is the smartest way to [invest in your technical skills](, whether youâre at home or on the go. Using their website and app, you can add a productive [learning habit]( to your day and feel yourself getting smarter and smarter. [Start free trial]( âpoliticalâ scientists 1. Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo Sheinbaum was born to a family of scientists: a chemical engineer father, a biologist mother and a brother who became a physicist. And still, Sheinbaum, 58, has likely exceeded the wildest expectations of her brainy childhood dinner table. In 2006, the environmental engineer received the Nobel Peace Prize alongside Al Gore as a key part of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. And the scientist, whose motherâs family fled Europe during the Holocaust, is now the mayor of Mexico City. A [close ally]( and former environmental minister to President Andrés Manuel López Obrador, Sheinbaum could one day become Mexicoâs first female president. 2. Salim Abdool Karim The South African epidemiologist, 60, has outlasted his critics. He was [once branded a traitor]( by a health minister under Thabo Mbeki after criticizing the presidentâs anti-science comments on HIV/AIDS. Two decades and three presidents later, Karim was asked to lead South Africaâs health response to COVID-19. Despite its being one of the worst-hit countries on the African continent, Karim remains popular and in December won the John Maddox Prize for the defense of science, alongside [Dr. Anthony Fauci](. Karim and his wife (and research partner) also [won a 2020 global health award]( for a discovery crucial to HIV prevention efforts that is leading to infection reductions across Africa and the world.
[3. Armen Sarkissian]( Politics, like the universe, is relative. Thatâs the belief of Sarkissian, the physicist-turned-president of Armenia who uses quantum physics as a helpful guide to the turbulent geopolitics his nation faces. âThe world is changing, rapidly,â he told Russia Today in 2019. âAnd [all] politicians will come and go.â Sarkissian, 67, wasnât always so serious: Also a computer scientist, he helped design the popular â90s Tetris spinoff Wordtris. But his nod to mortality may be the result of his country standing on the brink of a war that, he [warned the international community](, could turn Armeniaâs Caucasus region into âanother Syria.â With his country [also facing a domestic crisis](, Sarkissian is counting on the administration of U.S. President Joe Biden â perceived as friendly to the Armenian cause â to boost international solidarity efforts. [Read more on OZY]( 4. Melanie Stansbury The New Mexico state representative is a former ecology educator and White House and Senate aide who became the first 2022 federal candidate [endorsed by 314 Action](, a group that backs candidates with scientific backgrounds and spent $25 million in the 2020 elections. Stansbury, 42, a Democrat, is running to replace Rep. Deb Haaland, expected to be confirmed as President Bidenâs secretary of the interior. She has [helped shepherd]( more than a dozen bills into law during her first term in Santa Fe, including efforts to modernize the electricity grid and better manage the stateâs water, so look for her to bring an environmental eye to Washington, if she makes it through. [the perfect sweater weather find]( March weather is always unpredictable. Luckily, we found the perfect menâs sweater for the 2021 sweater weather season. Donât look any further: [Outerknownâs Nostalgic Sweater]( puts a modern twist on the iconic â70s style and perfectly combines comfort, style and warmth. The [Nostalgic Sweater]( sold out fast last year, so donât miss it while it lasts â and [use code OKOZY for 20 percent off](! [Buy Now]( Looking for some inspiration in your life? Join Good Morning America co-anchor Robin Roberts and American Family Insurance Chief Operating Officer Telisa Yancy for an unforgettable discussion on March 18 about overcoming obstacles and staying true to your dreams â while lifting up the next generation. [Sign up here]( for this special virtual event with American Familyâs DreamBank to hear from these trailblazing women. [Learn More]( keeping you kicking 1. Susana López Charretón This Mexican virologist wants to save you some baby wipes. A leading researcher into rotaviruses â the double-stranded RNA viruses that are the leading cause of diarrhea in children under 5 around the globe â Charretón, 63, and her team [identified the mechanism]( by which they reproduce in the small intestine, leading to explosive results. 2. Jingmei Li âResearch is a lot like diving,â says Li, 37, who does some of her [best thinking]( strapped to an oxygen tank beneath the sea. Both disciplines are about searching for things hiding in plain sight, something she often does while sifting through reams of information to identify the risk factors shared by women with breast cancer. While much progress has been made through discoveries of gene-related predictors and examining lifestyle factors like obesity, Li takes the groundbreaking additional step of examining breast density through mammograms. Now based at the Genome Institute of Singapore, Li is becoming a global leader on the most common cancer for women worldwide. 3. Yakeel Quiroz I began writing in part because I feared what I will one day forget. Thankfully, this Harvard scientist and others are working to ease that fear in the future. Quiroz was part of a global team last year that created a blood test that could possibly enable doctors to forecast Alzheimerâs disease a [full two decades before symptoms appear](, a critical discovery that could aid in slowing and curbing the diseaseâs debilitating effects. The MedellÃn native benefited from going back to her roots, beginning her research with a [rural Colombia clan]( where nearly half the population develops the brain disorder by their mid-40s. 4. Xiaoliang Sunney Xie For now, peers call the Beijing-born scientist a âfounding fatherâ of single-molecule biophysical chemistry. But he could soon be helping fathers worldwide. The 58-year-old [Peking University professor]( pioneered genetic innovations that have made in vitro fertilization safer by helping doctors identify traits that could lead to the transmission of genetic disorders in newborns. But as with so much of cutting-edge biomedical science, Xieâs work could also give way to controversial applications. Some fret that prenatal gene identification will lead to [discriminatory abortions]( (in the United States, the termination rate for those with the Down syndrome gene is around 67 percent; in Iceland and Denmark, itâs nearly 100 percent). Regardless, Xieâs discoveries are crucial to understanding why some are born with such afflictions â and without them, the chances of creating preventative cures is slim.
[5. Gagandeep Kang]() What does it take to earn the [nickname âvaccine godmotherâ]( of India? It helps to start work early: Kang built her first home lab at just 12 years old (her experiments making hydrogen nearly blew off their roof). The first female Indian scientist to be elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London, Kang, 58, is also a board member of one of the key groups administering the World Health Organizationâs global coronavirus vaccine project, COVAX, which has committed to equitable distribution. Co-authoring a new book in India, Kang is among the most prominent experts battling COVID-19 vaccine misinformation in the worldâs second-most populous nation â which is to say, there is no post-pandemic world without India getting on board. 6. Kizzmekia Corbett One of few African American women scientists at the National Institutes of Health, Corbett, 35, [was a critical part of Fauciâs team]( that worked with Moderna to bring its novel COVID-19 vaccine to fruition. The North Carolina native also was [unafraid to call out]( then-President Donald Trump for a lack of diversity among the scientists on his coronavirus task force. The Food That Built America After suffering through bankruptcy and imprisonment in his early 20s, a young entrepreneur named Henry Heinz made his own version of a popular sauce known as ketchup. His tasty brand would change Americansâ food preferences for generations. Based on the HISTORY channel documentary series, OZY and HISTORY are proud to bring you your new podcast obsession:Â The Food That Built America. Hear about the bold visionaries behind some of the most recognizable brands on the planet. Listen now on [Apple Podcasts](, [Spotify](, [Stitcher](, or wherever else you get your podcasts. changing the norm 1. Omololu Akin-Ojo The Nigeria native wants to [stem the African brain drain](. As founding director of a new research institute in Rwanda, heâs on a mission to rebrand East Africa as a hub for quantum physics. As a university student in Nigeria in the late â90s, he learned how to code by hand â writing computer scripts on paper because he didnât have access to a computer. Despite dearly wanting to stay in Africa, those limitations caused him to travel to the University of Delaware to continue his studies in the U.S. His efforts will be boosted by the Rwanda governmentâs goals to raise the percentage of students in STEM fields [by 90 percent in the next decade](. 2. Abasi Ene-Obong People of Caucasian descent constitute less than 15 percent of the worldâs population, yet they make up 78 percent of human subjects in genome research. That skews drug research. Ene-Obong, a 35-year-old Nigerian doctor, is trying to fix that. His startup, 54gene, named after Africaâs 54 countries, is building the worldâs first bank of African genes to support research that the West has long ignored. It doesnât hurt that Ene-Obong also has a masterâs degree in business and management, helping him [secure $15 million]( from a fund backed by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to bankroll his gene bank dream.
[3. Ranga Dias]() Letâs just say heâs good under pressure. The Sri Lankan physicist led a team at the University of Rochester in developing the worldâs first room-temperature superconductor â electrical current-carrying substances used in everything from the magnets that power MRIs to particle accelerators. Of course, doing so required an environment roughly equivalent to [2.6 million times]( the Earthâs atmospheric pressure at sea level. Still, Dias and his colleagues believe their findings can be recreated in letâs just say âslightlyâ less high-pressure situations, particularly if they can change the chemistry of their shocking invention. If successful, their carbonaceous semiconductor could greatly improve energy transfer efficiency, giving everyone a jolt.
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