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Medicine: Charming bowels (Science Slam Berlin)

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    Welcome to our next participant.
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    Her name is Giulia Enders.
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    She studies at the Goethe University
    in Frankfurt.
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    Applause to Giulia Enders.
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    The next 10 minutes are yours!
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    (Applause)
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    Okay, I study medicine --
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    (Cheers)
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    -- yes, exactly.
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    And studying medicine
    really comes in handy
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    when i'm having coffee
    and tea with my aunties.
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    Because usually they ask you
    what you study.
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    And whereas my sister needs
    half an hour to explain
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    what Communication Design is,
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    I can just say:
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    medicine.
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    (Laughter)
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    And my aunties just look at me
    all happy and satisfied.
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    It is nice, but it lasts only 30 seconds,
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    and then the usual question:
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    What field of medicine
    are you going to specialize in?
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    And then I must confess:
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    I have been crazy about the digestive tract
    since my first semester.
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    It began with the anus,
    and now I'm hooked to it!
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    Suddenly all the enthusiasm trickles away,
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    usually there ensues an awkward silence.
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    And the next question comes
    from the far corner of the room:
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    And what is Communication Design good for?
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    (Laughter)
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    It is a pity, because the bowels
    are very charming.
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    (Laughter)
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    I'm not sure what my aunties think.
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    But I suspect they think
    it's about tons of poop
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    (Laughter)
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    in all shapes and sizes
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    or about other people's excrements
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    (Laughter)
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    or about obscure cleansing methods
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    that make us walk like this
    out of doctor's room
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    or internet videos that are so graphic
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    that it's quite enough to watch
    other people's reaction to them.
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    Even science can find reasons
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    to hate the bowel.
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    But these are also the very reasons
    why the bowel is so fascinating:
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    It's 100 times larger
    then the area of the skin.
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    Just think of hundred Giulias
    standing here on this stage.
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    Such a thin tube,
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    with so much immune system inside,
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    so many hormones produced,
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    100 trillion gut bacteria,
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    that's the number of humans
    times the number of humans
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    times two.
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    The gut has such a completely
    independent nervous system
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    that if I cut out a piece and tap on it
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    it would just mumble a friendly reply.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's very complex
    and science is afraid of it,
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    which is understandable,
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    but my grandmother says
    that if you really like something,
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    even if it is overwhelming
    in the beginning,
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    you should approach it step by step,
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    and then even if you step in a puddle,
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    only one foot gets wet.
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    Let's begin. Here's the esophagus.
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    It makes powerful movements
    and pushes the food downward.
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    It falls into the stomach,
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    which cradles and rocks it a bit,
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    and feeds it into the small intestine,
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    where it's sort of magically kneaded,
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    diminishing in bulk during the process,
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    then it passes through the colon
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    and comes out from the anus,
    it all sounds so simple.
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    But if we focus on a single process --
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    -- I go for the anus --
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    then we realize it's a bit more complex
    than expected.
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    I actually didn't pick
    this subject on my own
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    rather my roommate asked me:
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    Giulia, you study medicine:
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    How does pooping work?
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    (Laughter)
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    I have noticed that the anus
    is actually very communicative.
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    It's an intermediate between
    two worlds of consciousness.
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    Here's an internal sphincter
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    and here's an external anal sphincter.
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    We know the external one very well.
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    Let's say: A - O - A - O
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    Audience: A - O - A - O
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    I meant with your anus.
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    (Laughter)
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    Probably many are doing it right now,
    we just don't see it.
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    So, you see we can do it.
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    If I say, now do the same --
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    (Laughter)
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    If I say, now do the same
    with your internal sphincter --
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    -- it's more difficult.
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    (Laughter)
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    Perhaps somebody managed...
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    But we can see there's a difference.
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    It's not under our command.
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    Let's take a look at the process:
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    when digested food arrives
    at the internal sphincter,
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    it opens up and lets a little morsel
    pass through for testing.
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    (Laughter)
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    And there are sensor cells
    in between the two sphincters.
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    These cells analyze
    whether it is solid or gaseous
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    and notify the brain.
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    (Laughter)
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    And then the brain realizes:
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    ah, I must poop.
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    (Laughter)
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    And the brain does what it's good at:
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    It informs us of our surroundings.
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    It might say, for example:
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    well, I have looked,
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    (Laughter)
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    we are at the Science Slam right now,
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    perhaps some gas is all right,
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    if you let it pass very silently,
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    but something solid
    would not be so good.
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    (Laughter)
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    So they unite their efforts
    and push it back in
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    (Laughter)
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    it goes back in the queue,
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    but it has to come out, eventually.
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    But when we are at home,
    with nothing better to do,
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    then -- free to go!
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    The anus is just the tip of the iceberg.
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    Auntie 1: What did she say?
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    Auntie 2: I think she said that the anus
    is just the tip of the iceberg.
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    The anus is really
    just the tip of the iceberg.
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    There are 2 cm that we perceive
    and that we can control
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    and the whole rest --
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    -- if we want to know what happens there
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    we need to look at the border area.
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    So we chose something which is
    both unconscious and conscious.
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    There are 7 basic emotions
    that show on the face,
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    they are same for all the people worldwide,
    in all cultures,
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    here are 3 of them,
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    fear,
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    joy,
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    sadness.
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    These basic emotions show in our faces
    when we feel them
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    and in the first split second
    we cannot suppress them.
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    That reminds us a bit
    of our internal sphincter,
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    which we cannot control
    consciously either,
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    and that's not a far fetched comparison.
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    For when we were little embryological
    heaps of cells in the womb
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    there wasn't much of a face --
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    - there was just the front opening
    of the intestinal tube.
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    And finally it was decided:
    O.K., let's create a face around it,
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    seems like people like it,
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    so it was a part of this
    unconscious tube of muscle
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    which is why we don't have perfect control
    over our facial expression.
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    We can control our arm any time,
    but not our mimics.
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    That brings up the question
    what the bowel does with all these emotions,
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    if it feels fear,
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    if it can laugh
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    or be sad.
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    And there we are touching
    on the deeper layers of the iceberg
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    on the subconsciousness,
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    and people start arguing,
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    because many people believe that the bowels
    have no influence on our emotions,
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    that they're just a bunch of cells,
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    and the brain, the DNA and the genes
    are the cause of our feelings.
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    So, there are two basic viewpoints:
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    One being that the brain
    decides on an emotion
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    and tells all other organs what to do,
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    and the other being that the gut
    is also involved in our emotions,
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    thoughts, and perhaps even our behavior.
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    So let's just take something
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    which has no connection
    with our genes and our DNA:
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    this huge gut flora.
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    So we have this whole population of bacteria
    inside of us,
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    which can weigh up to 2 kg,
    which would be quite normal,
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    and it's a collection of things,
    decisions, what we have eaten
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    and the environment that surrounds us,
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    our very own Pokemon collection
    of intestinal bacteria.
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    I'd like to introduce you to all of them,
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    but 60% of them we don't even know at all
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    since we cannot cultivate them,
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    they just like it so much in our gut,
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    that we can't simply
    observe them in a Petri dish.
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    But since they do have an influence,
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    scientists began to research them
    intensively in the last years.
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    Some basic things
    were already known before:
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    they train our immune system,
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    our blood type is determined
    by this training and influence,
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    if we have really bad ones
    then we get bad diarrhea.
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    But what about the discreet ones
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    quietly doing their job all day long?
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    So many different types operating
    in a huge variety of ways.
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    What is their influence?
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    And so we have another Babel,
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    which is my passion,
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    and about which we start
    asking ourselves many questions:
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    If I have certain gut bacteria,
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    will I get fatter than others even though
    I eat the same food as them?
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    Can I become depressed
    because of some kinds of gut bacteria?
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    Do some gut bugs protect me from cancer
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    while others promote it?
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    And most of these questions
    are getting answered positively.
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    And this field is so interesting,
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    it's constantly on my mind.
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    I have been in neuroscience in Frankfurt
    for the last half a year,
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    and we are doing experiments
    with endogenous proteins
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    trying to find out whether they protect
    or harm nerve cells
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    but I keep thinking, I want to do this
    with proteins from gut bacteria!
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    They did a study with a truly
    amazing outcome:
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    The bowels [of mice] were colonized
    with certain bacteria
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    and then under conditions of stress,
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    when the gut gets leaky,
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    they developed memory lapses
    of 10 to 30 days.
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    With simultaneous doses of probiotics --
    [no memory loss].
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    And so I wanted to know:
    O.K., how's that?
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    And other questions
    which I keep carrying around.
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    There is almost no research being done
    on this subject in Germany,
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    and I really want to promote this.
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    That's why I hope you got something out of this,
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    for example that the anus is communicative,
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    if you see a beautiful lady smiling
    it's all right to think of her digestive tract,
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    (Laughter)
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    the gut is very close to the people,
    with a lot of private property,
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    you all have your own gut population,
    take good care of it,
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    I hope you are more fond of it now,
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    some politicians might even
    start fearing its competition,
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    I hope the ladies are happier now,
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    Thank you all for listening
    and thanks to my sister,
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    because she made this possible
    with communication design!
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    (Applause)
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    Giulia Enders!
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    (Applause)
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    -- easy, isn't it?
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    So let's give today's winner
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    some more of our time and attention:
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    a short scientific encore!
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    So you have the last word!
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    How nice, how unusual...
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    I have something to share
    which I always forget,
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    and actually it's quite cool,
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    I have told you about those sensor cells,
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    that distinguish between
    gaseous and solid,
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    but there is a state of matter
    which is missing -- liquid,
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    it is always a bit of an awkward topic
    for the audience,
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    but perhaps some of
    you are familiar with this:
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    you have diarrhea, you feel you have to fart,
    do you end up with your pants full?
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    Your gut can't distinguish liquid from gas,
    so it just takes its chances!
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    That was it!
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    (Laughter) (Applause)
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    I have forgotten it in Freiburg already,
    I always forget it...
Title:
Medicine: Charming bowels (Science Slam Berlin)
Description:

Giulia Enders, Science Slam Berlin, 5. March 2012

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Video Language:
German
Duration:
12:54

English subtitles

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