Wonderfest - Ask a Science Envoy: Tiny Galaxies; Eye Movements
Wonderfest Science Envoys are early-career researchers with enhanced communication skills and aspirations. Following short talks on provocative modern science topics, these two Science Envoys will answer questions with insight and enthusiasm:
- UC Berkeley neuroscientist Stephanie Reeves on The Horizontal Saccade Bias - Humans make eye movements to explore the visual environment. One type of involuntary eye movement, termed a saccade, occurs 2-3 times per second and is one of the fastest movements that the human body can make. New research challenges previous assumptions about how and why saccades arise.
- Stanford astrophysicist Viraj Manwadkar on Tiny Galaxies and Big Cosmic Mysteries - The very smallest galaxies shed light on fundamental questions in physics and astronomy: They play an intriguing role in the formation of cosmic ecosystems, and they even inform our attempt to understand dark matter, the utterly mysterious stuff that constitutes 80% of the material universe.
Tuesday, 04/15/25
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