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Herman Pontzer, PhD

Science Of Ultra

Release Date: 10/06/2020

SOUP Out show art SOUP Out

Science Of Ultra

Thank you, thank you, thank you...on we

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Break show art Break

Science Of Ultra

SOUP is taking a break for the summer, and will be back in September 2021.

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Hillary Allen show art Hillary Allen

Science Of Ultra

Hillary Allen, aka Hillygoat, is one of the top ultra- and sky-runners in the world. We talk about her views of life and running, what's important, and how to stay competitive while embracing whatever life brings.

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Training Intensity Distribution show art Training Intensity Distribution

Science Of Ultra

Let's answer the question: How much time should I spend training at different intensities? And, let's bust the polarized training myth in the process.

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Kenefick & Cheuvront show art Kenefick & Cheuvront

Science Of Ultra

Rebroadcast part 2 of 2 - Two of the living legends of performance hydration bring everything you could want to know about hydration for endurance athletes. This episode is all about application of knowledge in the context of ultras.

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Sam Cheuvront, PhD & Robert Kenefick, PhD show art Sam Cheuvront, PhD & Robert Kenefick, PhD

Science Of Ultra

Rebroadcast part 1 of 2 - Sam Cheuvront, PhD & Robert Kenefick, PhD, two of the living legends of performance hydration, bring everything you could want to know about hydration for endurance athletes starting with the basics in this episode.

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Herman Pontzer PhD - Burn show art Herman Pontzer PhD - Burn

Science Of Ultra

Major advances in our understanding of human metabolism have been made in recent years; they’ve been pioneered by Herman Pontzer, PhD. He, and his colleagues, are making discoveries in human metabolism and energy balance that will reshape our approach to human health for many years to come. These are fundamental breakthroughs issues relating energy intake, exercise, and body weight that have confused us for so long.

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Run With Ease (rebroadcast) show art Run With Ease (rebroadcast)

Science Of Ultra

[Rebroadcast] Our goal is never to get good at suffering. Our goal is to suffer less under the same conditions, not to make running easier but to run with greater ease.

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Keith Baar, PhD show art Keith Baar, PhD

Science Of Ultra

Dr. Baar rejoins us on the show. He was previously on for episode 58. Today we illuminate the central role of connective tissue and associated proteins in transmitting force from muscle, extend that understanding to explain how muscle functions in running (hint: it’s not at all like most people think), and dive into ways that you can optimize your connective tissue health.

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Kathryn Ackerman, MD, MPH show art Kathryn Ackerman, MD, MPH

Science Of Ultra

Kathryn Ackerman, MD, MPH is a sports medicine physician, Associate Professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, medical director of the Female Athlete Program at Boston Children's Hospital, Associate Director of the sports endocrine research lab at Massachusetts General Hospital, and a team physician for USA Rowing.

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More Episodes

Herman Pontzer, PhD is an evolutionary anthropologist at Duke University interested in how the human body evolved and how our species’ past has shaped our health and physiology today. He studies the ecology, lifestyle, diet and evolutionary history of humans and apes to better understand metabolism and health. As you’ll hear in the interview, we emphasize what hunter-gatherer societies can tell us about the human body because it’s the lifestyle of hunter-gatherers that created the bodies we have. Several years ago, Dr. Pontzer and his colleagues were curious about the total energy expended per day by people living as hunter-gatherers. They discovered that nobody had made the actual, direct measurements. It took them a while to convince funding agencies that this was a good use of research dollars because the reviewers thought ’these are very active people, they’re going to be expending a lot more energy than sedentary people, we have good estimates of that based on activity level, we’re not going to learn anything here’. But Dr. Pontzer and is colleagues persisted, got the funding, and did the direct measurements. They discovered that the Hadza people of Tanzania expend the same number of calories per day as sedentary people in the United States and other modern societies despite being much more active. Show page: https://www.scienceofultra.com/podcasts/134