The National Academies: Advisers to the Nation on Science, Engineering, and Medicine
NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES NATIONAL ACADEMY OF ENGINEERING INSTITUTE OF MEDICINE NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
Quick Links
About the National Academies
Current Projects
News Office
Publications
For Congress
Members' Site
Marian Koshland
Science Museum
Giving to the National Academies
Directories
Contact Us
Conflict-of-Interest Policy
National Academies Study Process
Site Map
  Podcasts
  News Feeds
 Popular Searches
Evolution
Stem Cells
 Career Links
Employment
Fellowships & Postdoc
Career Guides
For Retirees
 Major Divisions
Division of Behavioral
and Social Sciences
and Education
Division on Earth
and Life Studies
Division on Engineering
and Physical Sciences
Institute of Medicine
Policy and Global
Affairs Division
Transportation
Research Board
Webcast
A 1947 RCA BK-11A microphone from the collection of Dan Timon. (National Academies Photo/Lauren 

 Morello)

Live Webcast Monday on Factors That Determine Our Health


Is biology destiny? Which has more influence, genes or the environment? What factors influence our health and how do these various factors interact? At a public symposium, part of the Institute of Medicine's 38th annual meeting, participants will discuss the biological, behavioral, and social determinants of health. Listen to the live audio webcast from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. EDT on Oct. 13.

Please refresh this page after 7:55 a.m. for a link to the webcast audio.


Top News
The latest news from the Academies

Data-based Counterterrorism Programs Should be Evaluated for Effectiveness, Privacy

© PhotoDisc

Oct. 7 -- All U.S. agencies with counterterrorism programs that collect or "mine" personal data -- such as phone records or Web sites visited -- should be required to evaluate the programs' effectiveness, lawfulness, and impacts on privacy, says a new report from the National Research Council. The report offers a framework agencies can use to evaluate programs, and urges Congress to consider new restrictions on how agencies can use data.

NAE President’s Annual Address to Members

President Charles M. Vest

Oct. 9 -- President Charles M. Vest delivered a speech at the NAE annual meeting that offers suggestions to the next U.S. President and discusses the Academy's recently announced Grand Challenges for Engineering. Vest called engineering "critical to meeting the fundamental challenges facing the U.S. economy, environment, health, security, and way of life in the 21st century."

Grand Challenges for Engineering Spur Discussion at NAE Annual Meeting

Oct. 6 -- Representatives of the presidential campaigns of Sens. Obama and McCain, journalists, and members of the National Academy of Engineering's committee on the "Grand Challenges for Engineering" participated in a lively discussion of how to encourage action on this century's greatest engineering challenges and opportunities. The participants agreed that if met, any of the 14 challenges would improve life around the world.

More Top News

Science in the Headlines
Breaking stories in science

Members Receive Two-Thirds of Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Nobel Prize Medal in Chemistry

Oct. 8 -- Martin Chalfie, a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and Roger Y. Tsien, a member of the Institute of Medicine and National Academy of Sciences, will each receive a third of the 2008 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery and development of the green fluorescent protein GFP. They will share the prize with Osamu Shimomura. [more]


NAS Member Shares Nobel Prize in Physics

Nobel Medal for Physiology or Medicine. ®© The Nobel Foundation.

Oct. 7 -- National Academy of Sciences member Yoichiro Nambu has been awarded the 2008 Nobel Prize in Physics for his introduction of spontaneous broken symmetry into elementary particle physics, along with Makoto Kobayashi and Toshihide Maskawa, who will share half of the prize for their discovery of the origin of the broken symmetry. The spontaneous loss of symmetry permeates the Standard Model of physics, which unifies the smallest building blocks of all matter and three of nature's four fundamental forces into a single theory. [more]


IOM Foreign Associate Shares Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine

Oct. 6 -- This year's Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine recognizes the discoveries of two viruses causing severe human diseases. The 2008 prize was awarded to Harald zur Hausen, a foreign associate of the Institute of Medicine, for his discovery that human papilloma viruses cause cervical cancer, and to Françoise Barré-Sinoussi and Luc Montagnier, the discoverers of HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. [more]


Emergency Room Wait Times Continue to Increase

Photo by Joe Shlabotnik under Creative Commons 2.0 license

Oct. 2 -- The number of emergency room visits in the United States increased by 20 percent between 1995 and 2005, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s National Center for Health Statistics. Wait times have also been on the rise. In 2006, the average ER wait time in an emergency department was 56 minutes -- almost 10 minutes longer than it was in 2004. Meanwhile, the number of emergency departments in the nation is shrinking. [more]



More Science in the Headlines

New & Notable
 Featured Books
Read this and more than 4,000 other books online FREE at The National Academies Press
 Site Highlights

NEW ISSUE: The summer/fall issue of The National Academies In Focus is now online, featuring Academies activities and recent reports.

On Oct. 14, attend a free book reading of A Place Called Canterbury by author Dudley Clendinen.

Applications are now being accepted through Nov. 1 for postdoctoral and senior research awards in U.S. government laboratories.

This Week in PNAS
September 30, 2008:
Proceedings of the National Academy of SciencesNeuronal differentiation
Browse the Online Early Edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
 Events

View upcoming public meetings and other events listed by date.

RSS News Feed | Subscribe to e-newsletters | Feedback | Back to Top