Why Am I?

Why Am I?: The Science of Us (also known as Predict My Future: The Science of Us) is a 2016 New Zealand documentary series about the Dunedin Multidisciplinary Health and Development Study, a long-running cohort study following 1037 people born in Dunedin, New Zealand during 1972 and 1973. The study revealed the result of the combined effects of hereditary (genes) and environment (upbringing) on how people turn out.

Why Am I?
GenreDocumentary
Directed by
  • Paul Casserly
  • Mark McNeill
  • Irena Dol
Narrated bySusie Ferguson
Country of originNew Zealand
No. of episodes4
Production
Producer(s)Mark McNeill
Editor(s)Irena Dol
Production company(s)Razor Films
Release
Original networkTelevision New Zealand
Original release31 May (2016-05-31) 
21 June 2016 (2016-06-21)
External links
Production website

The series of four sixty minute episodes was made by Razor Films of Auckland, New Zealand, and screened on TV One from 31 May to 21 June 2016, with all four episodes available online on TVNZ On Demand.

The series follows the study and information it has provided in almost every field of medical and social development including respiratory and cardiovascular health, addictions, obesity, sexual health, cognitive neuroscience, psychiatry, genetics and criminology and the effects of nature and nurture on health and behaviour.

Episodes

No.TitleOriginal air date
1"The Early Years"31 May 2016 (2016-05-31)
2"When Teens Go Off the Rails"7 June 2016 (2016-06-07)
3"When Genes Mix with the Wrong Environment"14 June 2016 (2016-06-14)
4"Dirt is Good, Dirt Poor is Bad"21 June 2016 (2016-06-21)
gollark: Daylight saving time: because if someone is unhappy with how their work hours line up with sunlight or something, the obvious solution is to meddle with the fabric of time itself and cause untold hundreds of issues in computer programs everywhere.
gollark: That sounds about as sensible as daylight saving time.
gollark: There are quite a lot of laws *in general*, enough that you can't practically know what they all are.
gollark: It's an "autonomous commune" in... Seattle or something.
gollark: It's apparently big enough that you would need something like 20 high-end compute GPUs, so... quite a lot of raspberry pis.


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