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She travelled extensively in the United States, lecturing on coal to "the carbon crowd" and on the crystallography of viruses to scientific audiences.
He began giving more than fifty lectures a year, not just to scientific audiences but to policy institutes, history departments, women's health clinics, food preparers, farmers, and high schools.
He presented his theory of clouds and his more general (though incorrect) theory of storms before scientific audiences in the United States and Europe and in his Philosophy of Storms (1841).
However, it is very probable that Shannon's article A Mathematical Theory of Communication would not have become famous without the help of Warren Weaver, whose popular text on "The Mathematics of Communication" re-interpreted Shannon's work for broader scientific audiences.
The Molecular Expressions group does a remarkable job of not only clearly presenting the principles behind these techniques in a manner approachable by lay and scientific audiences alike but also provides representative data from each as well.
Large and sustained growth at several research agencies must be deferred until sunnier economic times, Holdren said, reiterating a message he has given to numerous scientific audiences this year.
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Geoffroy's evolutionary concepts did much to create a receptive scientific audience for Charles Darwin's arguments.
Now, astronomers are the best scientific audience I've played for.
When Harold Varmus, the president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, gives a lecture, he usually talks to a scientific audience about health, or government policy, or the discovery that won him a Nobel Prize (with J. Michael Bishop), in 1989 — the proto-oncogene, which enhanced our understanding of cancer.
His work led to the construction of a general theory of brain development and function called neuronal group selection, which he explained in a trilogy of books (1987 89) for a scientific audience and in Bright Air, Brilliant Fire: On the Matter of the Mind (1992) for laypersons.
By Paul Goldberger When Harold Varmus, the president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, gives a lecture, he usually talks to a scientific audience about health, or government policy, or the discovery that won him a Nobel Prize (with J. Michael Bishop), in 1989 — the proto-oncogene, which enhanced our understanding of cancer.
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