How does your body know what time it is? - Marco A. Sotomayor
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Being able to sense time helps us do everything from waking and sleeping to knowing precisely when to catch a ball that’s hurtling towards us. And we owe all these abilities to an interconnected system of timekeepers in our brains. But how do they work? Marco A. Sotomayor details how human bodies naturally tell time.
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People subjected to this desynchronization can have a number of health issues, including metabolic diseases such as diabetes and insulin resistance. In a dramatic example, a series of experiments show that the hour of chemotherapy administration in cancer treatment can dramatically alter the response and toxicity of cisplatin.
To further complicate this time-induced variability, our endogenous rhythms vary from one person to the next; scientists usually split people in two categories, “larks” or early risers and “night owls.” These two groups are radically different. The former rise near dawn, are most productive early in the morning, and go to bed early, while the ones of us that fall in the second category are most productive late at night, go to sleep late, and also wake up late. The category where we belong is determined in part by our genes.
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Meet The Creators
- Educator Marco A Sotomayor
- Director Hector Herrera
- Script Editor Emma Bryce
- Producer Pazit Cahlon
- Composer Adam Harendorf
- Sound Designer Adam Harendorf
- Narrator Addison Anderson