Episodes

  • The Sensory Blueprint: Navigating Metabolic Narratives with Dr. Paule Valery Joseph
    May 18 2026

    In this groundbreaking episode, Dr. Eli Joseph and Dr. Janice Gassam Asare welcome nurse-scientist Dr. Paule Valery Joseph, who shares her knowledge about the hidden vital sensory signs.

    Dr. Joseph discusses the uniqueness of the neurobiology of the olfactory system, which bypasses the thalamus and sends its information directly to the emotional and memory regions of the human brain. This unique wiring explains why scent has the potential to be an extremely powerful connector to positive memories or traumatic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) reactions.

    In addition to exploring the uniqueness of the olfactory system, Dr. Joseph also describes innovative studies that demonstrate loss of smell can occur up to 15 to 20 years prior to the onset of Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease symptoms, therefore providing an opportunity for effective intervention.

    In the course of this conversation, Dr. Joseph describes the importance of the "sensory soul" in medicine, with respect to using clinical data but also paying attention to cultural flavor profiles and prenatal learning, as Dr. Julie Mennella did in her groundbreaking research demonstrating that mothers' diets impact infants' flavor preferences.

    Lastly, Dr. Joseph provides a perspective on the "politics around scent" and the use of "Sniffin' Sticks" in bedside assessments and advocates for "biological literacy" as we work toward ensuring healthcare continues to be a safe, fair, and humane experience as we move toward the future and the building of the "bio-record."

    Show More Show Less
    58 mins
  • Sensory Blueprint
    2 mins
  • Boardroom Commencement (Interlude)
    2 mins
  • The Provost Directive: Institutional Agility & The New Academic ROI
    May 11 2026

    Higher education is facing a crisis in its value system, as it relies on a “safety net” of bachelor's degree awards, but cannot keep pace with the growing number of awards it will need to offer to future graduates due to widening automation in the labor market as we approach 2026. In this episode, we discuss this value crisis with Provost Anand Marri from Ball State University and his desire to move from focusing on “completion of a degree” to an emphasis on “integrating the degree with the market.”

    Dr. Marri and Dr. Joseph discuss the latency crisis, which represents a gap in time between curricula that are developing slowly and technology that is advancing quickly, and how he is attempting to bridge the gap through the development of a new readiness framework called “Facility-Based Readiness.” This process will provide market integration by creating a way to provide “frame-syncing” for graduates with regard to their perceived value by potential employers. The conversation continues with the provost’s shift from an academic setting at Columbia University’s Teachers College to a more applied setting at a regional flagship university, where he believes a graduate’s degree represents a “Growth Portfolio” rather than simply a static piece of paper.

    Finally, we discuss the “hard calls” that leaders must make to be successful in the future—decommissioning “sacred cow” legacy entities. For universities to continue to thrive after 2027, they must abandon their “sacred cows” to fund AI-enhanced education and human-centric skills development, such as contextual intelligence. This is not just an academic conversation; this is a high-stakes briefing on the new Academic ROI with specific directives for redefining universities from places of preservation to engines of evolution.

    Show More Show Less
    34 mins
  • The Provost's Manifesto
    2 mins
  • Filtering the Breakthroughs: Emma Barker Bonomo on How TIME Defines the Best Inventions
    May 7 2026

    As we enter the “Innovation Trap” era, where many institutions continue to spend billions of dollars on vaporware, the ability for individual institutions to differentiate between a high-production marketing video and a market-ready innovation is critical to their survival. Emma Barker, who has been the creative vision behind the TIME Best Inventions list, joins us for this episode of The Academic Boardroom to clarify the rigorous vetting process that will be employed to determine the most consequential innovations for 2026. As we move beyond a speculative time in innovation, many C-suite executives have developed a tremendous “trust deficit.” We will discuss how the TIME Best Inventions list serves as a necessary validation layer, acts as a third-party proxy for ROI, and provides the level of due diligence that most organizations do not have the internal capabilities to perform.


    We begin with the "Anti-Vaporware Filter" section. Here, TIME's editorial objectivity enables the differentiation between what is simply "cool" or "interesting" vs. what is truly significant regarding prioritization of functional evidence vs. concept prototype. Then we continue forward into "The Trust Architecture" section and how the selection method can change the way a technical curiosity becomes a benchmark for institutionally sanctioned and economically useful long-term uses of technology. After this, we turn our attention to the "Ambitiously Effective" axis to examine how the biggest innovations of 2026 will include technologies that have finally overcome either technical or cultural barriers, making them significant accomplishments rather than simply "new."


    The latency crisis—over time, there's a long delay or lag time between a major discovery and its use in a meaningful way. By adopting the "Invention to Impact" perspective, leaders can make quicker decisions internally and allocate their 2026-2027 budgets more wisely. In this discussion, we then look ahead into what's coming in the "Agentic Era," where humans, as inventors, are moving from being creators of things to curators of things as AI starts to create chemical compounds or designs for mechanical devices. This discussion will provide university provosts and CEOs with roadmaps for closing the gap between laboratories and markets by establishing a standard set of metrics that many scientists and inventors use to measure their innovations.

    Show More Show Less
    52 mins
  • Time is the Best Professor
    2 mins
  • Media Playbook
    May 4 2026
    2 mins