
Nicole Keller
Consumer Investigative Producer at CBS News
Producer @cbsmornings, @NYUniversity alum, MN raised
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
hbs.edu | Rembrand Koning |Nicole Keller |Susan Golden |Maria P. Roche
In the fall of 2024, Abby Miller Levy (HBS ’01), co-founder and managing partner of Primetime Partners, was preparing to raise a second fund. Founded in 2020 with veteran investor Alan Patricof, Primetime was a horizontal fund focused on early-stage companies serving older adults, the fast-growing segment of the population. There were 62 million people aged 65+ in the US, controlling the majority of net worth.
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2 months ago |
hbs.edu | Ray Kluender |Natalia Rigol |Benjamin Roth |Nicole Keller
In 2017, Arjan Schütte, founder of Core Innovation Capital, faced a decision on whether to invest in Hugo Insurance, an auto insurance startup. Core, an early-stage social impact VC firm, focused on “fintech for good,” by investing in financial services for low- to middle-income consumers. Since 2010, Core had raised $120 million across two funds and backed nearly 50 companies, including Ripple Labs and NerdWallet.
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Sep 3, 2024 |
geneticliteracyproject.org | Andrea Love |Kevin M. Folta |Nicole Keller
Agricultural advances have made farming and our foods safer and more abundant than at any other time in history. Everyone wants safe food and sustainable farming. But modern technologies are victims of their own success, and media ecosystems exacerbate confusion. And while everything is a chemical—and chemicals enable food production—the word evokes fear and anxiety.
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Aug 20, 2024 |
skepticalinquirer.org | Kevin M. Folta |Nicole Keller
Agricultural advances have made farming and our foods safer and more abundant than at any other time in history. Everyone wants safe food and sustainable farming. But modern technologies are victims of their own success, and media ecosystems exacerbate confusion. And while everything is a chemical—and chemicals enable food production—the word evokes fear and anxiety.
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Mar 17, 2024 |
nature.com | Nicole Keller |Emily Leiker
AbstractCuriosity can be a powerful motivator to learn and retain new information. Evidence shows that high states of curiosity elicited by a specific source (i.e., a trivia question) can promote memory for incidental stimuli (non-target) presented close in time. The spreading effect of curiosity states on memory for other information has potential for educational applications.
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