The Conversational Flow - An Official Podcast of KCAS
KCAS
26 episodes
1 week ago
This episode dives into how scientific understanding evolves over time, using immunology as a case study to highlight how often researchers underestimate what they don’t yet know. Adam and Brian reflect on historical quotes from medicine and science that confidently declared fields “complete,” only to be proven wrong by later discoveries. From there, they discuss how the way scientists name and categorize cells shapes how experiments are designed, interpreted, and compared across labs. Incons...
All content for The Conversational Flow - An Official Podcast of KCAS is the property of KCAS and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
This episode dives into how scientific understanding evolves over time, using immunology as a case study to highlight how often researchers underestimate what they don’t yet know. Adam and Brian reflect on historical quotes from medicine and science that confidently declared fields “complete,” only to be proven wrong by later discoveries. From there, they discuss how the way scientists name and categorize cells shapes how experiments are designed, interpreted, and compared across labs. Incons...
Impactful Developments Across Oncology and Regulatory Science
The Conversational Flow - An Official Podcast of KCAS
53 minutes
8 months ago
Impactful Developments Across Oncology and Regulatory Science
In this milestone 20th episode of The Conversational Flow, hosts Adam and Brian dive into impactful developments across oncology, regulatory science, and bioanalytical innovation. The episode highlig4 hts a major Keytruda study showing the first significant improvement in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma outcomes in over two...
The Conversational Flow - An Official Podcast of KCAS
This episode dives into how scientific understanding evolves over time, using immunology as a case study to highlight how often researchers underestimate what they don’t yet know. Adam and Brian reflect on historical quotes from medicine and science that confidently declared fields “complete,” only to be proven wrong by later discoveries. From there, they discuss how the way scientists name and categorize cells shapes how experiments are designed, interpreted, and compared across labs. Incons...