Danielle N. Lee: How hip-hop helps us understand science
Danielle N. Lee examines the ecology and natural history of nuisance rodents, using hip-hop to share science with broader audiences. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
has been a challenge for scientists.
or to download an online lecture.
is revisit the song "OPP"
I'm going to put lyrics up on the screen,
to do the response, OK?
in this audience know this song,
with the tempo and the rhythm,
scratch your temple.
that it's a five-letter word,
on your significant other.
was in heavy rotation,
about whether bird species,
were actually monogamous or not.
generations of science students
of the bird species were monogamous.
mating faithfully for life.
came on the scene,
from a small tissue or fluid sample
of baby birds were.
which adults lived in a nest
study after study kept coming in
evidence of infidelity --
were the pinnacle of monogamy.
jealous for the ratings.
the entire definition of monogamy.
that this was the headline
It's not for the Birds or the Bees."
would change partners,
they didn't like their partner anymore?
going to be this funny.
the male and female pair together
belong to both partners?
that it only holds true
of the songbird species,
were truly monogamous.
of those field observations
sharing a nest,
even provisioning offspring together,
that did not belong to the male partner.
what you get it
there's just room to ..."
know just what I'm getting at?
splitting and cohitting that.
for extra-pair copulation.
as the mating outside of a pair bond.
discovering via science,
that don't belong to the male partner.
about EPCs years later,
while I was in graduate school.
and mating systems,
going through the definition
the dramatic turns of events
starts bopping in my head.
what that song was about:
to revisit this song.
and make sure that it counts.
playing songs in my head
of pop culture and hip-hop songs.
with my science professors,
stares as responses.
with people from communities like mine,
so, diverse communities --
to people who looked and sounded like me,
listened to some of the same songs.
to bring new science terms to them,
comprehension of science for the culture.
content to students from hip-hop culture
to connect to those students,
that they already know
is it ratifies them, us, our culture
and communicate science
science to broader audiences
has traditionally overlooked.
from every hood everywhere.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Danielle N. Lee - Behavioral biologistDanielle N. Lee examines the ecology and natural history of nuisance rodents, using hip-hop to share science with broader audiences.
Why you should listen
Danielle N. Lee examines the ecology and natural history of nuisance rodents across urban gradients, from the small field mice of North America to the giant pouched rats of Tanzania. A strong advocate for diversity and inclusion in the sciences, she uses hip-hop to share science with broader audiences. She's currently studying the behavioral differences between city mouse and country mouse, with the aim of understanding how and why rodents successfully vex us by living in and near our homes, pantries, farms and silos.
Danielle N. Lee | Speaker | TED.com