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Fulbright PULSE

Fulbright PULSE

Fulbright

Fulbrighters - from the first to the current generation – are driven by the desire to create an impact in this world. In PULSE, Fulbrighters of all disciplines, from scientists to artists, from journalists to entrepreneurs, tell their story. A podcast initiated by the German-American Fulbright Commission and Fulbright Alumni e. V. Germany.

15 - PULSE x Diversity: Zeynep Alraqeb (MBA Candidate at Columbia Business School; former Diversity Chair of German Fulbright Alumni association)
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  • 15 - PULSE x Diversity: Zeynep Alraqeb (MBA Candidate at Columbia Business School; former Diversity Chair of German Fulbright Alumni association)

    With this episode, we launch our PULSE x Diversity series, spotlighting personal stories and perspectives on belonging within the Fulbright community. Our aim is to celebrate the diversity of experiences and amplify underrepresented voices. Our first guest is Zeynep Alraqeb, a multilingual economist with a rich background in economics, social entrepreneurship, and politics. Currently based in New York and pursuing an MBA at Columbia University, Zeynep has previously worked on macroeconomic issues at Banque de France and the Deutsche Bundesbank. She holds an MSc in Economics from the University of Warwick and the University of Cologne, where she was a Friedrich Ebert Scholar: She also studied abroad in Turkey and in the USA, where she went to the University of Kentucky with Fulbright Germanys Diversity Initiative. Besides her professional achievements, Zeynep is committed to social impact and has, among many other things, served as Diversity Chair of the German Fulbright Alumni Association. In this conversation, we explore Zeynep’s identity journey and her reflections on belonging—from her initial draw to the United States to how her perspectives on Germany shifted through her experiences abroad. She shares the story behind her name, her ‘identity superpower,’ and the cultural misconceptions she wishes would disappear. Interviewed by Enes Karacaoglan.

    Wed, 13 Nov 2024 - 1h 01min
  • 14 - Prof. Gloria Mark (Chancellor's Professor of Human-Computer Interaction at UC Irvine)

    Gloria's blog on Substack: https://gloriamark.substack.com/ Gloria's most recent book "Attention Span": https://www.amazon.de/dp/1335449418 -- Professor Gloria Mark is a Chancellor's Professor in the Department of Informatics at the University of California, Irvine, and one of the most renowned psychologists in the field of human-computer interaction. Gloria is a book author, science communicator, sought-after speaker in the tech industry, and a blogger. Her best-selling book "Attention Span" synthesizes scientific insights from her decades-long research on focus, distraction, technostress, and productivity, and in this episode we talk about some of these insights. After obtaining a master's degree in Biostatistics from the University of Michigan, and a PhD from Columbia University in Psychology, she became a lab director in the field of team communication software, in 1990. In 1995 she joined the GMD, a German research institute that is now part of Fraunhofer. Since 2000, Gloria has been a professor at the University of California in Irvine. On a Fulbright grant, she conducted research at the Humbolt Univerity of Berlin department in 2005/06. She worked with IBM in Haifa, the University of Haifa, the National University of Singapore, with the MIT Media Lab in Massachusetts, and with Microsoft Research in Redmond, Washington. She has received a US National Science Foundation Career Award, multiple Google Research Awards, and has been inducted into the CHI Academy, a group of the most impactful researchers in the field of human-computer interaction. In our interview, we find out about the average attention span has developed from the early 2000s, how this attention span dropped, how Gloria and her team investigated the physiological effect of short attention spans, the effects on productivity, and how to find focus again. We also learn about some of Glorias other research and about her scientific approach more generally. And we talk about Gloria's personal approach to including digital devices in her life, and the advantage of living in Southern California when it comes to stress reduction. Gloria is also a reviewer for the US Fulbright Commission, and in this episode, she shares some perspectives on an ideal grant application. Interviewed by Mohamed Kari.

    Thu, 22 Aug 2024 - 1h 04min
  • 13 - Prof. Anett-Maud Joppien (Architect and Professor of Architecture at TU Darmstadt)

    In this episode of Fulbright PULSE, Prof. Anett-Maud Joppien, Professor of Architecture and Head of the Chair of Design and Building Technology at the Technical University of Darmstadt in Germany, is our guest. Anett's portfolio of architectural works includes many buildings in the skyline and cityscape of Frankurt, in all of Germany, and beyond, such as the Marienturm and the Taunusturm in Frankfurt's Banking Quarter, the One Forty West in Frankfurt Westend, the Max-Schmeling-Halle in Berlin, the Kaffeelager in the Hafencity of Hamburg, the Neue Lustgarten in Potsdam, or the Exhibition and Convention Center in Helsinki. Her works have received over 50 national and international awards. Anett received her pre-diploma from TU Berlin in 1980, and her diploma from TU Darmstadt in 1985. On a Fulbright scholarship, she first joined the University of Illinois at Chicago. Then she transitioned to the University of California Berkeley where she graduated with a Master of Architecture in 1987, before returning to Germany, working as a freelance architect and becoming a professor. In this episode, we talk about sustainable architecture in the 21st century, the architecture in Anett's very first projects, the architecture of the Max-Schmeling-Halle, of skyscrapers, Anett's approach to architecture more generally, and her inspirations. We also talked about her time as a Fulbright scholar in the US at UC Berkeley and how she got there. And, during this emotional UEFA Euro Championship, we find out about Anett's involvement in architecting the DFB campus.

    Wed, 10 Jul 2024 - 1h 05min
  • 12 - Manuel Bewarder (Investigative Journalist at WDR and NDR)

    In this episode, Manuel Bewarder, investigative journalist at Germany's public media WDR and NDR, is our guest. His journalistic research spans security, migration, and domestic policy, and one of his current long-running investigations includes the events around the Nord Stream pipeline sabotage. Manual studied at the University of Leipzig and graduated from the Humboldt-University of Berlin with a teaching state examination. On a Fulbright grant, he then graduated with a Master's degree in Journalism from the American University in Washington DC. In the subsequent 13 years, he worked at different Axel-Springer-Outlets, working his way to the head of the investigative journalism department at WELT, before then moving to investigative teams at WDR/NDR. In this episode, we talk about his investigation of the Nord Stream pipeline sabotage and some possible explanations of what had happened. We also talk about the journalistic process behind these investigations, both in the early phase, and when the first investigative breakthroughs took place, and how the investigation team rented out the same boat that the saboteurs might have used. We also talk about investigative journalism more broadly, its value, how Manual approaches a new topic, and how he deals with his sources. We also learn how Manuel's path to becoming an investigative journalist, and how he sees his role today.

    Thu, 30 May 2024 - 1h 12min
  • 11 - Prof. Dr. Rainer Storb (Pioneer of the Stem Cell Transplantation)

    In this episode, we are joined by Prof. Dr. Rainer Storb, one of the trailblazers who established bone marrow and stem cell transplantation as an effective treatment for diseases like leukemia, lymphoma and aplastic anemia. Rainer is a medical doctor, physician and professor for hematology and oncology at University of Washington's School of Medicine, pioneer of the blood stem cell transplantation, and one of the most impactful biomedical scientists and research translators of our time. He is also a founding member of the Fred Hutch Cancer Center, heading its transplantation biology program and its clinical research division. As a physician, he has been treating patients himself with therapies he has discovered, designed, studied, and standardized. We talk about the seemingly hopeless case he and his colleagues took on when he first entered the field in the 1960s, the adversarial circumstances under which they were conducting their research, the challenges they faced, how he dealt with these challenges, and how first transplantations in humans started to work consistently. We also find out how stem cell transplantation evolved into a procedure that has been performed more than 1'000'000 times around the globe since Rainer and his colleagues laid the ground-breaking foundations. And we talk about how Rainer envisions a cancer treatment, free of aggressive radiation and heavy chemotherapy, on the path to eliminating cancer.

    Wed, 13 Mar 2024 - 1h 11min
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