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Synapse - UCSF Student Voices

Synapse - UCSF Student Voices

By UCSF Synapse

Synapse is the UCSF student news outlet. We seek to serve as a forum for the campus community.
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How Real Is ‘The Last of Us’? UCSF Fungus Expert Weighs In

Synapse - UCSF Student VoicesMay 01, 2023

00:00
36:40
How Real Is ‘The Last of Us’? UCSF Fungus Expert Weighs In

How Real Is ‘The Last of Us’? UCSF Fungus Expert Weighs In

The blockbuster HBO show, The Last of Us, uses an intriguing premise to explain the world’s post-apocalyptic setting: Ophiocordyceps unilateralis — aka the “zombie-ant fungus” — has jumped from insects to humans. The fungus takes over a host’s body with spores that compel the host to seek opportunities to expel the spores and infect others, which compels those hosts to spread the spores to others, and so on, and so on.

So how realistic is this scenario? According to Anita Sil, professor at the Department of Microbiology and Immunology at UCSF, not very.

“It’s extremely, extremely unlikely for the premise of the show to be true in the sense that, you know, I very strongly doubt that Ophiocordyceps make a jump from insect species to mammals,” Sil told us.

But fungal disease epidemics are not completely out of the realm of possibility. 

“There’s actually an outbreak right now of a fungus called Blastomyces in some sort of processing plant in Michigan,” Sil said. “All of a sudden, everybody in a facility is inhaling large quantities of those fungal spores and then getting infected. So that’s a really serious situation.”

So how concerned should we be? And could you defend against possible infection?

Find out on this episode of The Synapse podcast. 

May 01, 202336:40
Ankur Paliwal: Why inclusivity is better in science and journalism

Ankur Paliwal: Why inclusivity is better in science and journalism

Ankur Paliwal joined a few dozen UCSF student during Synapse’s the fifth annual science speaker series on April 13. He’s an independent journalist who writes about science, inequity and LGBTQIA+ persons, and has reported from India, Kenya, Tanzania, Ghana, Germany and the United States for various international media outlets such as Nature, Scientific American, Undark and the Guardian. He is also the senior editor with the Asian Scientist Magazine which focuses on science and scientists in Asia. 

Apr 25, 202336:48
Talking DEI with Sonoma State University nursing professor, Dr. Anna Valdez

Talking DEI with Sonoma State University nursing professor, Dr. Anna Valdez

Juli Riggs, a second year graduate student in the Biomedical Sciences program, talked to Dr. Anna Maria Valdez, professor and chair of nursing at Sonoma State University, about her DEI work and her responses to the comments below that she routinely hears. 

·  “I have been a nurse for XX years, and I have never seen racism in healthcare.”

·  “I am color blind.”

·  “I/we treat everyone the same.”

·  “What about the reverse racism I experience as a white person?”

·  “Increasing diversity in nursing means lowering standards.”

Nov 22, 202249:58
Coffee chat with New York Times science writer Nicholas St. Fleur

Coffee chat with New York Times science writer Nicholas St. Fleur

Synapse: UCSF Student Voices is proud to present the fourth annual science speaker series with an award-winning science journalist and children’s STEM author based in Long Island, New York. To watch the video recording of this event, go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EgCM4S5ToEE&t=2s.

Recorded on April 13, 2022.

Jul 20, 202201:02:27
To Mask or Not To Mask? Dr. Bob Wachter Weighs In

To Mask or Not To Mask? Dr. Bob Wachter Weighs In

Dr. Bob Wachter, UCSF’s Chair of the Department of Medicine, gained a vast twitter following during the COVID pandemic with his informative, direct, and sometimes personal tweets. He’s kept his followers up to speed throughout changes in the science, vaccination rates, and spread of infection. And as issues around the pandemic evolved, so did his position. In our latest podcast episode, Synapse contributor Janice Goh, a fourth year student in the UCSF Pharmaceutical Sciences and Pharmacogenomics program, asked Dr. Wachter about masking, transmission rates, and possible new variants.

Originally published in March 8, 2022.

Jul 20, 202220:23
UCSF's Dr. Jeanne Noble Explains Anti-Mask Mandate Petition

UCSF's Dr. Jeanne Noble Explains Anti-Mask Mandate Petition

In January 2022, four UCSF health providers wrote an open letter urging California Gov. Gavin Newsom to drop mask mandates. Among them was Dr. Jeanne Noble, an associate professor of emergency medicine at UCSF. In this episode, Janice Goh, a fourth year PhD student at UCSF and a Synapse contributor, asked Dr. Noble why she believes mask mandates should be lifted, especially among children.

Feb 16, 202226:36
Q&A Wirth UCSF Alumna & Poet Jenny Qi

Q&A Wirth UCSF Alumna & Poet Jenny Qi

In this episode, Synapse editor-in-chief Victoria Turner has the pleasure of chatting with Jenny Qi, a 2017 PhD graduate from the Biomedical Sciences Program at UCSF and a former Synapse editor-in-chief. She now works at a competitive intelligence firm while continuing her work as a writer. Her work has been features in such publications as The New York Times, The Atlantic, Tin House, and ZYZZYVA. We talked to her about her recently published collection of poetry, Focal Point, which received the 2020 Steel Toe Books Poetry Award.

Dec 14, 202115:41
Meet the Co-Presidents of UCSF Med Students for Choice

Meet the Co-Presidents of UCSF Med Students for Choice

Pre-med student and Synapse contributor Sarah Siddiqui talks to UCSF second year medical students and co-presidents of Med Students For Choice, Neha Pondicherry and Meredith Klashman, about the fight for reproductive justice at a time when women’s bodily autonomy and Roe v. Wade are under attack.

Dec 14, 202115:56
Coffee Chat with Esther Landhuis

Coffee Chat with Esther Landhuis

Science journalist Esther Landhuis joins Synapse's editors-in-chief Victoria Turner and Jihee Yoon along with UCSF students for a discussion about her transition from scientist to science writing.

May 20, 202154:44