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How Technology Shapes the Future of Science Research

A colorful obscure graphic.

From interconnected devices like cars and thermostats, to better detection and treatment for everything from Alzheimer’s to Hepatitis, new-age science technologies hold massive potential in improving our daily lives.

Published September 1, 2017

By Charles Cooper

Image courtesy of KanawatTH via stock.adobe.com.

When The New York Academy of Sciences (the Academy) marked its centennial in 1917, just eight percent of homes had landline telephones, and it took a full five days to travel from New York to London.

Albert Einstein would introduce the idea of stimulated radiation emission that year with the publication of On the Quantum Theory of Radiation. However, it wasn’t until mid-century that researchers were able to apply his insights to build the maser, and then the laser.

In a speech he gave in 1917, inventor and Academy Honorary Member, Alexander Graham Bell offered several prescient predictions about things like industrialization and the prospects for commercial aviation 100 years later. Yet even the most clairvoyant observers at the time would not have foreseen the transformations wrought by science and technology in the world of 2017. But what about 2117? What can we expect in the coming century given our understanding of the trajectory of scientific and technological advances? We put that question to Academy Members in a number of different disciplines, and here’s what they said.

No Knowledge Ever Gets Left Behind Again

Ryan Rose, Customer Experience and Product Design Cisco Systems.

A century into the future, predictive analytics and machine learning systems will be in a position to anticipate what human beings need to know, according to Ryan Rose, who leads Customer Experience and Product Design for a new social learning platform at Cisco.

“Right now, we’re just trying to leverage data to give us better ideas,” said Rose. “But if we project 100 years ahead, computer systems won’t just be making recommendations to people, they will make the decisions. Machine learning won’t be just about finding a way to get that information to a human. It will make the leap in logic to actually say, ‘This customer needs this system to be this way’ and then make that happen.”

With machines poring through disparate bits of information, systems will be able to connect the dots to register what Rose describes as “instant adaptation.”

“That’s going to be huge. You will see innovation occurring as quickly as the machine thinks it and asks, ‘Why don’t we try this?’ You can still have all of the human touch points, but the speed at which this happens will be much faster simply because we will not be waiting on someone to say, ‘I think that these things are related.’”

More Digitalization

Rose also expects a future in which no knowledge gets left behind as information is captured and retained digitally.

“Now, when we want to review knowledge from yesteryear, it’s archived in a movie or maybe some type of audio recording that we cannot interact with. But think about a society with access to the great experts or just the everyday experiences of people from any time. We’ll have all this information about individuals, their knowledge and expertise, and it will be stored so that someone in the future can ‘speak’ with any individual. Your descendants will be able to get a better understanding, even if it is just a digital understanding, of what you felt or thought.”

“The interaction could be something as simple as a 3D projector or augmented reality, but you’ll be able to talk back and forth through natural language processing. I think there is a great future where the wealth of information about humanity is preserved and being able to interact with those moments in perpetuity.”

Imagining a Pain-Free World

Left: William K. Schmidt, PhD, President, NorthStar Consulting, LLC. Right: Department of Environmental Science, Policy & Management at the University of California, Berkley. From left: Jan Buellesbach, Maria Tonione, Kelsey Scheckel, John Lau, Elizabeth I. Cash, Rebecca Sandidge, Brian Whyte, Jenna Florio, Neil Tsutsui (Principal Investigator) and Joshua D. Gibson. Photo credit: Elizabeth I. Cash.

William Schmidt, a pharmacologist and the President of North-Star Consulting, LLC, is optimistic that pain treatments in the next century will no longer carry high risks of addictive side effects.

“Within the next 100 years, we will have additional analgesics to prescribe along with opioids so that we can use lower dosages, replace opioids altogether, or (perhaps) have safer opioid analgesics that are less likely to show an addictive profile,” he said.

That would be a welcome development. An epidemic of opioid abuse has led to one of the worst drug crises in American history. Indeed, the Centers for Disease Control estimates that 91 Americans die every day from an opioid overdose.

Genetic Mechanisms for Controlling Pain

Schmidt, one of the world’s leading researchers into the discovery and development of novel analgesic and narcotic antagonist drugs, also expects developmental breakthroughs in the products that doctors can prescribe to deal with pain.

“I expect we will have analgesic products that are unlikely to cause respiratory depression, either acutely or chronically, were someone to take a higher dose. I also expect we will also have—not only medicines to treat inflammation and pain directly—but genetic mechanisms for controlling some types of pain or pain signaling pathways that we can exploit to reduce the impact of pain within the body,” he said. “We are already finding that we are able to treat things like rheumatoid arthritis in ways that are far more effective than what I learned when I was taking pharmacology in medical training.”

It also would mark a veritable revolution in pain treatment, a field whose limitations Schmidt learned about through personal experience as a five-year-old when he broke his arm. Back then, doctors were afraid to use opioids to relieve his excruciating pain. “I now recognize the medication they used hadn’t a chance of working because they were afraid to use more effective medications in children,” Schmidt recalled. “But that was the best that doctors knew how to do back then.” A century from now, Schmidt says, no one may ever have to suffer that sort of trauma.

The Countdown to a Big Bio-Ethics Debate

When evolutionary biologists like UC Berkeley’s Jan Buellesbachlook at the trajectory of recent advances in genetics and molecular biology, they see a future laden with untold scientific potential. “The field is developing so quickl —especially in genomics,” said Buellesbach. “It’s unbelievable when you think how expensive and cumbersome it used to be to sequence a genome. Now, they almost come at a rate of a dime a dozen…and we’re just scratching the surface.”

One example of that new technical prowess is CRISPR, a gene editing technology that scientists are now using to develop treatment therapies for a range of diseases, including cancer. Researchers have already successfully used gene editing to repair a disease-causing mutation in a human embryo.

But access to that kind of capability has also fueled debate about the ethics of using technology to alter human genes. In the world of 2117, Buellesbach expects genomics breakthroughs will give society the theoretical ability to selectively eradicate the genetic conditions that lead to diseases, or any traits that might be considered detrimental. It also means society will need to navigate an ethical minefield where so-called designer babies are no longer a theoretical possibility.

No Longer a Sci-Fi Scenario

“With computational power getting exponentially faster and cheaper all the time, it’s not such a sci-fi scenario anymore,” he said. “I think we are likely heading towards a future where there will be research on how to perfect Homo sapiens in certain ways, especially if we start to manipulate our own genomes.”

Before then, he noted that more cautious naturalists who don’t believe we should interfere with human nature are likely to argue that just because science can do something doesn’t mean it’s wise to put theory into practice.

“What would be considered genetic perfection?” pondered Buellesbach. “I would find that very troubling. Who is to say what trait can be considered universally negative? Even 100 years from now, I don’t think we’ll have a unified view about that. There’s no question that this would entail too much power. We know from history that this…can be very dangerous, and decisions about that shouldn’t be left in the hands of the few people in positions of authority.

Genomics Will Revolutionize Medicine

Above: Subhro Das, PhD, Research Scientist, Computational Health Behavior and Decision Sciences IBM T. J. Watson Research Center. Below: RIGHT: Laboratory technician culturing cell specimens from precision-designed mouse models for experimental analysis at the UC Davis Mouse Biology Program.

Doctors nowadays choose among myriad treatments to help patients suffering from heart disease and other ailments. By the time 2117 rolls around, however, trial-and-error will have been relegated to the history books. Genomics advances will pave the way for the right treatments for the right diseases for the right patients and at the right times, according to Kent Lloyd, a professor in the Department of Surgery at UC Davis.

In the future, Lloyd says doctors will have the kinds of drugs that don’t just target the protein product—the end result of genes gone bad—but actually fixes them without needing to worry about having the drug go after the protein product.

“Also, if we have enough knowledge and can predict with great certainty that someone will develop a disease—why not try to prevent the disease from progressing or even starting?” he said. “That’s where the future is—not only more precise treatments for diseases when they happen, but further down the road, more precise preventive measures for individuals you can predict are highly likely to contract the disease,” he added.

These breakthroughs are predicated on research now underway to uncover deeper understanding of basic gene functions and how they impact human health.

A Huge Impact Around the World

“When we scan a person’s genome, we might find a variant in gene X, another variant in gene Y, and another variant in gene Z. If we didn’t know what those genes do, we wouldn’t know which of those are more related to the cardiovascular disease that a patient might have,” he said.

“We can test therapies in mice with that mutated gene to assess whether that therapy might be good or bad, what the effect might be and whether it might cause other things that we wouldn’t want it to cause,” Lloyd said. “This new knowledge will greatly catalyze and accelerate the implementation and practice of precision medicine. I think this will have a huge impact on health…around the world.”

Lloyd also sees potential in harnessing new genome editing technologies. In the future, he expects doctors to be able to change gene variants that create mutant proteins. The patient’s system would then produce the normal protein, potentially reducing symptoms or relieving prospective diseases.

“We definitely need to improve on extant technologies and develop newer and more precise (or targeted) ones than today, no question about that,” Lloyd said. “And we have the scientific power to be able to do it. If we put a little bit of effort in now…the return on investment will be enormous.”

Engineering a Stress-Free Life

Ongoing advances in engineering and computer science are transforming the global healthcare system, raising the prospect of breakthroughs in various areas of personal health, according to Subhro Das, a computer engineering researcher at the IBM T. J. Watson Research Center.

“Life expectancy will go beyond what we might imagine,” said Das, part of an interdisciplinary team at IBM working on developing new computational approaches for improving health behaviors. “We might be able to find cures for diseases like cancer, and to find more effective ways of preventing things like type 2 diabetes.”

That’s the long-term view. More short-term, Das also expects intelligent systems will be able to analyze real-time data collected from body sensors and other mobile technologies that trigger commands to other connected devices to address signs of stress, including elevated blood pressure or cortisol levels.

“For instance, I might be having a hard day at work. But my laptop, my phone, my house thermostat and my car—they are all going to be connected and sharing data among themselves,” he said. “My car would get a signal from my laptop and put it in a mode so that when I’m driving home, soothing music would come on. Also, my house thermostat now knows that I was having a bad day at the office, so it will be able to adjust the temperature of my house to make me feel more comfortable.”

More broadly, Das said that the continuing improvement in machine learning and data mining will enable more “smart buildings” to be equipped with sensors that can alert medical teams when somebody needs assistance. If there are people living inside who have medical conditions like Alzheimer’s disease, or suffer a fall, those sensors are going to be communicating among themselves and will be able to get help quickly.

Winning the Battle to Beat Brain Pathologies

Above: Dr. Björn LDM Brücher, Professor of Surgery and a Distinguished Fellow New Westminster College, British Columbia. Below: Ijaz S. Jamall, PhD, DABT, President & Principal Scientist Risk-Based Decisions, Inc.

While the study of the brain presents dauntingly complex challenges, Dr. Marcie Zinn, a cognitive neuroscientist at DePaul University believes medical practitioners will one day be able to reverse the process of brain degeneration.

One hundred years from now, Zinn expects new technologies will transform our understanding of the functioning of the central nervous system. Armed with new tools, future researchers will be equipped to gain new insights into brain pathologies and uncover more effective ways to diagnose, treat, prevent, and even cure disorders.

“There has been a lot of excellent research telling us why brain degeneration occurs. Take, for example, ALS (a progressive neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system.) Currently, there is no cure for ALS. The degeneration takes place rather quickly without impediment. I think the first thing that anyone wants is to figure out how to slow down the process.”

The brain poses obvious challenges for cognitive neuroscientists because it is continually changing itself on a millisecond basis. But the study of neurologically impaired people has been aided by recent imaging advances, such as visualization tools, which allow researchers to more accurately understand neural networks.

Looking over the horizon, though, Zinn expects more breakthroughs thanks to the increasing intersection of biochemistry and technology that might lead to new treatments for many neurological impairments, including the regrowth of brain cells.

“Formerly, science thought that new brain cells did not grow or regrow throughout the lifespan,” she said, “but we now know that brain cells do regenerate under the right conditions.”

Slow But Steady: Closing in on a World Without Cancer

Roughly $300 billion has been spent since 1971, when President Nixon declared the nation’s “war on cancer” but as new technologies give researchers deeper understandings of genes and molecular pathways, it’s also possible to imagine a future world free of cancer. Just don’t bet on bolt-from-the-blue breakthrough announcements.

To be sure, the history of medicine is replete with serendipitous, sometimes world-changing observations, such as the 1928 discovery of penicillin by bacteriologist Alexander Fleming. That discovery resulted in the development of antibiotics that have saved millions of lives. In contrast, the field of cancer treatment has been marked by steady improvements in technology and better patient care.

Indeed, Academy Members Ijaz S. Jamall, a toxicologist and Principal Scientist with the biomedical consultancy, Risk-Based Decisions Inc., working in conjunction with Dr. Björn LDM Brücher, a surgical oncologist in Germany, noted that while cancer biology “has increased by leaps and bounds during the last 50 years,” it’s wise not to get too carried away.

“We should try to avoid using terms such as landmark, hallmark, breakthroughs or war against cancer, etc.,” he said. “Such terms imply a lot more than can be delivered.”

Still, slow but steady advances offer encouragement about the future. Jamall pointed to the deployment of new immunotherapy and nanotechnology techniques that help doctors diagnose and treat cancers earlier than ever before. Also, researchers now benefit from increased computer and data processing power as well as more precise 3D imaging tools. In addition, Jamall said, some vaccines are proving effective in preventing cancers caused by pathogens like HPV (human papillomavirus), HCV (the Hepatitis C virus), and HBV (the Hepatitis B virus), a development that he predicted will influence future therapies worldwide.

Diseases of Inconvenience

Even more progress is possible in the future with the development of nanobots and nano-drug delivery tools that improve the diagnosis and treatment of cancers by targeting features specific to cancer cells or malignant tissue without damaging nearby healthy cells and tissues.

Jamall said that nanotechnology can further improve the earlier detection of cancers by homing in on particular features of early cancers such as inflammation that currently slip below the radar of existing imaging and blood tests (biomarkers) of cancer. In the meantime, he said, science is on the right path with the development of more effective vaccines and immunotherapies that will become better over time. But just as critical to the future, said Jamall, is a re-thinking of diseases and their treatments with an eye toward developing new and relevant approaches.

“One goal is interdicting the multi-sequence steps leading up to carcinogenesis,” he said. “This would be a giant leap forward in cancer prevention.” In conjunction with early screening and more effective treatments, he said science would advance closer toward the goal of making the majority of cancers (approximately 80 percent) “diseases of inconvenience” such as diabetes or arthritis.

Also read: Imagining the Next 100 Years of Science and Technology


About the Author

Charles Cooper is a Silicon Valley based technology writer and former Executive Editor of CNET.

How a Small Redesign Can Lead to Big Savings

A photo with solar panels in the foreground, wind turbines in the middle ground, and the sun in the background.

With the help of PowerBridgeNY, the HIGHEST Transformers company aims for cleaner, safer electrical technology that could save billions of dollars a year.

Published March 29, 2017

By Marie Gentile and Robert Birchard

What if one component of the electrical grid could be redesigned to be safer and more environmentally-friendly, plus save the United States billions of dollars each year?

Engineers-turned-entrepreneurs Saeed Jazebi, PhD, and Francisco de Leon, PhD, from the New York University Tandon School of Engineering, are bringing their clean-tech to the marketplace to accomplish exactly this task. The product, HIGH Efficiency Shielded Toroidal (HIGHEST) Transformers, is designed to be a reliable and cost-efficient clean-energy alternative to traditional transformers for use by electric utilities. With new energy efficiency standards from the U.S. Department of Energy that went into effect in January 2016, the timing is deal for HIGHEST Transformers to enter the field of electrical engineering with a unique green technology.

Jazebi and de Leon honed their product and started their company as part of a proof-of-concept center program called PowerBridgeNY, which provides early-stage investments and services to help inventors and scientists turn their high-tech, clean-energy ideas into successful businesses. The POCC, for which the Academy serves in an advisory capacity, is funded through a grant from the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA).

Typically, transformers transfer electrical energy between two or more circuits via electromagnetic induction; because it’s not efficient to transmit electricity at a low voltage across long distances, transformers increase or decrease the alternating voltages in electric power applications. Ideally these transformers would operate at 100% efficiency, but energy losses linked to transformer inefficiencies are estimated at 60-80 billion kilowatt hours (kWh), carrying a cost of approximately $4 billion per year.

Developing Environmentally Friendly, Safe Transformers

In addition, the coils of toroidal transformers are often insulated and cooled with mineral oil that can have a risk of leaking, or even exploding. As part of their work with PowerBridgeNY, Jazebi and de Leon set out to develop a more reliable dry (non-oil) toroidal transformer that is environmentally friendly and has a lower risk of explosions.

With the technology developed during their participation in the POCC program, HIGHEST Transformers are capable of significantly reducing energy losses and thus cutting energy costs.

“HIGHEST Transformers are comprised of a continuous steel strip that is wound into a doughnut shape (toroidal iron core) and then wrapped entirely in coils. The core has a gapless construction with extremely low no-load losses,” Jazebi explains.

A specialty designed electrostatic shield, new winding strategy, and amorphous iron cores allow the smaller transformers to be comparable in price and efficiency to larger transformers that use oil.

Built with Business Expertise

PowerBridgeNY also helped to provide HIGHEST Transformers with the business expertise and knowledge that is extremely beneficial-but not always accessible-to startups.

“The resources that they provide such as workshops and hourly meetings with lawyers and accountants are invaluable for startup companies,” Jazebi emphasized. “The conferences and networking events assisted us in connecting with national labs, large manufacturing companies, and electric utilities to test the product as well as understand the market.”

With this aid, HIGHEST Transformers achieved two extremely valuable milestones:  the company became an incorporated business, and received a National Science Foundation Small Business Technology Transfer Research grant to further develop their ideas and research.

Innovation for the Next Generation

Next steps for HIGHEST Transformers include manufacturing up to five prototypes to be tested according to the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Standards Association standard test codes and then implement pilot programs with utility companies and work with large transformer manufacturers or venture capitalists. Because of the new energy efficiency standards are poised to save 3.63 quadrillion BTUs of energy for equipment sold over the next 30 years, it is an ideal time for HIGHEST Transformers to enter the marketplace since there will be a greater demand than ever for this cleantech.

More than anything, the potential impact of this technology drives the research and development of HIGHEST Transformers.

“We owe the environment to future generations; we have to maintain it. This is the prime factor of our progress,” stated Jazebi. “Providing U.S. residents a better place to live with innovative engineering and design motivates us to innovate on this path.”


Learn more about NYSERDA‘s energy-focused Proof of Concept Centers in this podcast from the Academy.

Better Batteries for Electric Cars

A graphic illustration of a battery.

Thomas Edison struggled with creating an electric car battery that would provide energy over time. With assistance from PowerBridgeNY, a startup may have solved this dilemma.

Published July 14, 2016

By Diana Friedman

We may think of the technology behind electric cars as a relatively new innovation, but at the turn of the 20th century battery-powered vehicles accounted for approximately one in every three automobiles on the road.

Luminaries like Henry Ford and Thomas Edison were keen on improving electric cars and car batteries, but encountered setbacks still seen today-namely, how to design a battery that can provide more energy over longer periods of time, and at a lower cost. Ford and Edison weren’t able to solve this problem, but with assistance from PowerBridgeNY, a proof-of-concept center funded by The New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA), the startup company Lionano is working to improve lithium-ion batteries and pave the way for greener electric cars.

The Challenge of Energy Density

According to Lionano co-founder Alex Yu, PhD, a significant problem with implementing lithium-ion battery technology in electric cars is due to the energy density necessary to power a vehicle over longer distances.

“The current Chevy Volt can only run about 53 miles on a battery alone, while the Nissan Leaf is up to 107 miles on a battery alone,” Yu explained. “This may not be enough energy to power a vehicle for commuters who travel longer distances to work.”

Newer automotive manufacturers like Tesla Motors have greater efficiency when it comes to mileage range on a single battery charge, but cost significantly more than other makes and models. There is also the issue of the life cycle of lithium-ion batteries for use in cars, which degrade over time.

“Think about your cell phone-if you charge it every single day, it will last through about 1,000 charging cycles or three years. At that point, you’re likely to buy a new phone. That’s fine for cell phones, but most people don’t buy a new car every three years,” Yu noted.

A Boot Camp for Clean Energy Technology

While completing his doctoral studies in chemistry at Cornell University, Yu learned about the PowerBridgeNY program that functions as a boot camp of sorts to help scientists and researchers transition their clean technology innovations from the laboratory to the marketplace.

In 2014 Yu and his team, including members Siyu Huang and Héctor D. Abruña, were awarded a Cycle One grant from the proof-of-concept center to validate and market lithium-ion batteries that were more efficient and longer-lasting than other models available in consumer and commercial products. The end result is a proprietary nano-engineered material for lithium-ion batteries with twice the energy density and 2-3 times the cycle life of comparable batteries, at half the cost.

According to Yu, the support that PowerBridgeNY provided to the Lionano team by connecting them to customers for feedback on the industry overall and the specific product was particularly illuminating and invaluable to the process. Thanks to this funding and guidance, Lionano has passed both the technology validation and prototype stages, and is actively seeking investment capital and licensing agreements to increase production.

Going forward, Yu believes that transportation will becoming truly “electrified” as the technology becomes more viable for a wider audience.

“Because of environmental issues like congestion and pollution, electric transportation (as cleantech) is likely to be hugely popular,” he stated. “I believe that this car is the future.”


Learn more:

Bioelectronic Medicine Stimulates New Research

A line graph that shows heartbeat metrics.

It’s more than just “hacking health”—bioelectronic medicine has the potential to transform how we treat a range of conditions and disorders.

Published June 21, 2016

By Attila Szász

Image courtesy of teerapon via stock.adobe.com.

The term “bioelectronic medicine” may seem to be more science fiction than medical reality, but this field of science has recently made significant strides in translating research from the lab to the clinic with promising results. From implantable devices to treat autoimmune diseases without medication to microchips to help quadriplegics regain movement, bioelectronic medicine is quickly moving into the forefront of scientific applications.

The premise of bioelectronic medicine is that nearly all cells in the human body are in some way regulated via information communicated from electrical signals from the nervous system. Similar to how implantable artificial pacemakers emit electrical impulses to regulate a heartbeat, various technologies have been developed to block, stimulate, or regulate the body’s neural signals to control the underlying molecular targets of many diseases.

Bioelectronic Medicine: A Viable Therapeutic Field

Bioelectronic medicine would not have emerged as a viable therapeutic field without the work of Kevin J. Tracey, MD, President and CEO of The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research-specifically, a key discovery in May of 1998. At the time it was believed that there was no communication between the nervous system and the immune system, but Tracey devised an experiment to test his own hypothesis on a link between the two systems.

Kevin J. Tracey, MD

Tracey predicted that stimulation of the vagus nerve with electrical impulses would reduce production of tumor necrosis factor (TNF), a cell signaling protein linked to inflammation. Electrical impulses were delivered to an exposed vagus nerve in a rat and after the cut was closed, Tracey administered endotoxin to trigger inflammation.

Seventy-five percent of TNF production was blocked, through activation of what Tracey coined as “the inflammatory reflex.” Since these research findings were published in Nature in 2000, Tracey has co-founded SetPoint Medical to develop an implantable device to stimulate the vagus nerve as a treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) that is intended to last for 10 years. Results from a pilot study reported that patients with this implant experienced symptom improvements comparable to those taking medications for RA and a long-term study is currently underway.

A Chip Implanted in the Brain

Chad Bouton, also from The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, was recently the lead author in a landmark study appearing in Nature on a neuroprosthetic device that, for the first time in a 24-year-old man with quadriplegia, allowed a paralyzed man to move his hand using only his brain. First, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scans of Ian Burkhart’s brain were taken while he attempted to complete a range of hand movements; once Bouton and his team identified from the fMRI the areas of the motor cortex associated with the movement attempts, a chip was implanted in Burkhart’s brain.

This chip is designed to note the electrical activity from the motor cortex that is linked to movement and to transmit this information to a computer, which eventually translates these signals and sends them to a flexible sleeve on Burkhart’s arm. The result? Burkhart’s muscles were stimulated, and over time with training he has been able to make isolated finger movements and complete six different wrist and hand motions. There are limitations to the technology, as it can currently only be used in a laboratory for a limited amount of time and requires recalibration before each use.

Regardless, Burkhart sees great value in bioelectronic medicine. “Even if it’s something that I can never take home in my lifetime, I’m glad I’ve had the opportunity to take part in this study. I’ve had lots of fun with it. I know that I’ve done a lot of work to help other people as well,” Burkhart told Nature.

Also read: Merging Modern and Ancient Medicines

Bioethics Meets R&D: The Ethics of Pre-approval Access

Patients with life-threatening illnesses face challenges in accessing potential therapies at the cutting-edge of research and development, which have not yet been proven in a clinical trial. Some pharmaceutical companies produce and provide medicines on a case-by-case basis through expanded access or “compassionate use” programs. The tension among principles of fairness, equity, and compassion are explored in this podcast through a case study about a social media campaign led to an expedited clinical trial for an investigative antiviral medicine. Guests will explore the provocative and emotional stories of patients, family members, advocates, researchers, physicians, and the regulators charged with keeping medicines in the marketplace safe and effective. 

This podcast was a collaboration between The Division of Medical Ethics at NYU School of Medicine and The New York Academy of Sciences. 

Filling in the Gaps Left by Artificial Intelligence

A graphic rendering from a science experiment.

Learn how human gamers are helping scientists and computers draw more accurate maps of the human retina. How do human stack up against artificial intelligence?

Published February 2, 2016

By Diana Friedman

The average human brain is estimated to contain between 86-100 billion neurons and 10,000 times as many synapses. In the retina, the layer of tissue at the back of the eye that receives and sends visual signals to the brain, scientists don’t yet know the number and type of neurons that are connected. Even with advances in software technology for neuron reconstruction, it would take a team of 100 people working non-stop for 500,000 years to map the neurons in one human brain. However, researchers devised a novel solution to this obstacle-using a browser-based computer game, anyone can help in neural mapping and contribute to neuroscience research.

Created by Sebastian Seung’s research lab, the computer game EyeWire uses crowdsourcing to study the trillions of connections between neurons (which Seung calls “the connectome”) that are hypothesized to store memories, personality, and perhaps even intellect. The game is similar to a puzzle, in which players are assigned a high-resolution picture of a partially reconstructed neuron branch from a retina; on the right side of the screen, players “color” the parts of the image that are neurons.

The goal of the game is to select the areas that artificial intelligence (AI) has missed, improving the outline of the neuron and helping neuroscientists more accurately map neurons in the retina. The researchers hope that by gaining a greater understanding of the neurons in the retina, they can then apply these techniques to assessing neurons and synapses in the human brain.

Humans vs AI

Why recruit humans to complete this task, rather than rely on AI alone? Humans are actually more proficient at spotting neuronal connections than most AI, so the data from the game is being used to help the machines learn how to better perform the task. Player data is also submitted to Seung’s lab, where a computer reassembles the colored sections and produces a 3-D image of the connected neurons. Anywhere from 5 to 25 game participants trace the same set of connected neurons before it’s determined to be valid.

The game offers performance-based badges, chat, and weekly challenges, but some players received an unexpected bonus for playing the game – co-authorship credit in a published study. The research, published in Nature, sought to evaluate how mammalian retina detect motion by reconstructing Off-type starburst amacrine cells and bipolar cells (BC).

To map these neurons, the research team designed a special “Starburst Challenge” and recruited over 2,000 of the top-performing users to complete the activity. In the analysis of the mapping, the researchers found evidence that one bipolar cell type prefers to wire with an Off-type SAC dendrite near the SAC soma, while another BC type prefers to wire far from the soma and with faster visual response time. All players were included as co-authors on the paper.

Soon EyeWire will be expanding beyond the computer browser, as the company plans to develop a mobile version of the game. EyeWire will also be debuting EyeWire VR, a virtual-reality version of the game with hand motion-tracking sensors at this year’s Tribeca Film Festival in New York City. Regardless of the platform, the essence of EyeWire is simple: anyone can help neuroscience research in a fun and interactive way.

Also read: High Temps Call for High-Tech Edutainment

Improving Clinical Trials through Mobile Technology

Mobile technology is emerging as a powerful tool for transforming the way clinical research is conducted now and in the future. Acquisition of real-time biometric data though the use of wireless medical sensors will allow for around-the-clock patient monitoring, reduce costly clinic visits, and streamline inefficient administrative processes. With the promise of this technology also comes challenges including digital data privacy concerns, patient compliance issues, and practical considerations such as continuous powering of these devices.  

This podcast provides an illuminating examination of both the promises and challenges that underpin the implementation of mobile technology into the clinical realm. 

New Findings in our Knowledge of the Universe

A shot of bright lights in the galaxy.

The newly-discovered supernova provides astronomers an opportunity to hone our knowledge of the universe, and you can help!

Published January 23, 2014

By Diana Friedman

Image courtesy of muratart via stock.adobe.com.

Astrophysicist and science blogger @CatherineQ summed it up beautifully:

@CatherineQ Great thing about Type 1a #supernova is that they all have similar characteristics and that enables us to use them to determine distances.

@CatherineQ But here we are – 12 million years later – perfectly poised in time to view this amazing exploding death of a star. How cool!

Indeed! About 12 million years ago in the M82 galaxy, also known as the Cigar Galaxy, a white dwarf star in a binary system (in which two stars orbit one center of mass) exploded into a supernova. Light from the event recently arrived on earth and was first observed by a University College of London astronomy observation workshop led by Dr. Steve Fossey.

“We were expecting a standard quick look through the telescope and a chance to use the camera for the first time before the clouds moved in, that’s all. When we started looking and Steve began getting more excited none of us could really believe what was going on. I can’t wait to get back on a telescope next week now,” says UCL student Matt Wilde.

M82 is a “mere” 12 million light years away from earth—pretty close by astronomy standards. Originally dubbed PSN J09554214+6940260 and now assigned the catchier name 2014J, the supernova will likely be visible through binoculars in the coming weeks. You can watch a video on locating M82 and 2014J here.

For professional astronomers this is an opportunity to calibrate our maps of space and better understand dark energy, the mysterious accelerator of universal expansion. This is because 2014J is a Type 1a supernova, and all Type 1a supernovae are the same (well, mostly, but more on that soon…).

More Detailed Knowledge about the Expansion of the Universe

They occur when the mass of white dwarf stars, super-dense remnants of “dead” stars, exceeds a mass limit of about 1.4 solar masses. In a binary system, the dense white dwarf’s extreme gravity pulls matter from the sister star, eventually crossing the mass threshold—called the Chandrasekhar limit after discoverer Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar—igniting the nuclear chain reaction of supernovae.

The mass threshold is the same for any white dwarf star due to the processes of stellar evolution and principles of nuclear physics. This means that the progenitor conditions and resultant luminosity are homogenous throughout this class of supernova. National Geographic breaks it down nicely here. For a more detailed explanation, the University of Michigan offers helpful notes online.

Objects of uniform brightness appear brighter or dimmer depending on distance from the observer, following the inverse square law. A Type 1a supernova that appears a quarter as bright as another Type 1a supernova is twice as far away from us, allowing the supernovae to be used as yardsticks—standard candles in astro-jargon. They can thus be used to refine measurements of galactic distances, helping to understand how the universe is laid out and how the layout is changing over time. More detailed knowledge about the expansion of the universe may offer clues about the dark energy hurrying that expansion.

But here’s the thing: standard candles lack standardization, and the variation leads to some yet-unanswered questions. Younger stars form under more metallic conditions than older stars, because older generations of stars create and expel heavy elements.

A Call to Amateur Astronomers

“This means the stars that are forming today are forming out of materials that were just a twinkle in a young giant star’s eye some day in the past. The first stars were almost pure hydrogen and helium. Those stars have very different physics from today’s stars. Metals moderate the formation of stars, making stars form smaller and burn in a more controlled way. When white dwarf stars first started forming, they had fewer metals than modern white dwarfs and that could have effected how supernovae explode, causing supernovae to vary as a function of time in ways that we don’t know about,” explains astronomer Dr. Pamela L. Gay.

Importantly, the (to us) newness of 2014J means that astronomers can compare the star’s before and after supernova data, which will help suss out information about the components of its spectrum. And you can help! Phil Plait writes how and why:

“If you are an amateur astronomer, get images! And if you observed M82 recently, you may have ‘pre-discovery’ images of it, taken before it was officially discovered. Those are critical for understanding the behavior of the supernova. If you do, report it to the CBAT (but make sure you read the instructions first; they don’t want images, just reports of magnitudes and so on). Given the fact that it’s nearby, up high for so many observers, and caught so early, this may become one of the best-observed supernovae in modern times.”

Also read: What Caused the Big Bang?

What Happened to the Comet of the Century?

A comet flies through the night sky.

ISON, also known as the “Comet of the Century,” has been in the headlines recently. But did ISON survive its trip around the sun?

Published December 1, 2013

By Diana Friedman

Comet ISON is only “mostly dead,” maybe.

ISON has been touted as the “Comet of the Century.”

“There’s great interest in comet ISON for a couple of reasons. First of all, it’s coming from the very edge of our solar system so it still retains the primordial ices from which it formed four-and-a-half billion years ago. It’s been traveling from the outer edge of the solar system for about five-and-a-half million years to reach us in the inner solar system, and it’s going to make an extremely close approach to the sun and hence could become very bright and possibly a very easy naked-eye object in early December,” explains Don Yeomans, manager of NASA’s Near-Earth Object Program Office at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.

So, what happened when ISON approached the Sun on November 28? The comet’s fate remains unclear, though astronomers were mostly pessimistic about its survival. Images from NASA/ESA spacecraft SOHO showed ISON approaching the sun, and then nothing came out on the other side. …until, finally, something did! According to NASA, “The question remains whether it is merely debris from the comet, or if some portion of the comet’s nucleus survived, but late-night analysis from scientists with NASA’s Comet ISON Observing Campaign suggest that there is at least a small nucleus intact.”

Ongoing Analysis Will Reveal More

We might be able to see the remnants of ISON without telescopes later this month. Whatever’s left, “its closest approach to Earth at the end of December, when it will be 60 million kilometers away. A few weeks later, it’s possible that we’ll pass through the debris trail from ISON, and see some meteors from it,” says astronomer and blogger Phil Plait.

Fascinatingly, ISON’s suspenseful and unexpected dimming and intensifying will teach scientists a lot. NASA explains, “Such brightness changes usually occur in response to material boiling off the comet, and different material will do so at different temperatures thus providing clues as to what the comet is made of. Analyzing this pattern will help scientists understand the composition of ISON, which contains material assembled during the very formation of the solar system some 4.5 billion years ago.”

Also read: A Scientific Explanation to the Demise of Dinosaurs

Launching the New Era of Space Exploration

A shot of a rocket preparing to launch, with a sunrise in the background.

The successful launch of Orbital Sciences’ Antares rocket and Cygnus cargo spacecraft heats up the commercial space race.

Published September 22, 2013

By Diana Friedman

The Orbital Sciences Corporation Antares rocket is seen during sunrise on the Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport (MARS) Pad-0A at the NASA Wallops Flight Facility in Virginia, Sunday, April 21, 2013. NASA’s commercial space partner, Orbital Sciences Corporation, is scheduled to test launch its first Antares later in the day. Photo Credit: (NASA/Bill Ingalls)

“If we needed more tangible proof that this is a new era of [space] exploration, it’s right here, right now,” said Robert Lightfoot, NASA Associate Administrator, at a briefing following the successful launch of Orbital Sciences’ Antares rocket and Cygnus cargo spacecraft.

“With this launch, the private space race is now heating up as we now have competition for cargo transports to the International Space Station,” writes Alex Knapp in Forbes. “In the coming months, expect the competition to heat up more as SpaceX sends its third cargo launch to the ISS and plans its first manned launch to the Space Station, Orbital Sciences prepares for its second trip to the ISS, and Sierra Nevada Corporation prepares to finish its milestones for its Dream Chaser spacecraft.”

NASA has been working with commercial space science partners since 2006 to nurture a US-based private space transportation industry. Through the Commercial Crew Program and Commercial Orbital Transportation Services program, NASA aims to decrease American reliance on Russian spacecraft since the retirement of the US space shuttle and to free up resources to tackle grand(er) challenges, such as the (politically controversial) asteroid initiative.’

Tracking and Understanding Asteroids

Cygnus was scheduled to rendezvous with the International Space Station today, carrying 1,300 pounds of supplies. However, the docking attempt has been delayed 48 hours due to a glitch. NASA reports, “This morning, at around 1:30 a.m. EDT, Cygnus established direct data contact with the ISS and found that some of the data received had values that it did not expect, causing Cygnus to reject the data,” noted Orbital. “This mandated an interruption of the approach sequence. Orbital has subsequently found the causes of this discrepancy and is developing a software fix.”

Relatedly, NASA Chief Technologist Mason Peck is at the World Maker Faire at the New York Hall of Science this weekend to discuss how Makers can contribute to the future of space science and the asteroid initiative. “NASA will offer makers a chance to program science hardware and learn how small, do-it-yourself projects might be used to help track and understand asteroids, using their own personal computers.” said Peck.

Astronaut Dr. Charlie Camarda discusses the future of spaces exploration, the asteroid initiative, and the value of involving as broad a spectrum of people and ideas as possible in space science. “With a more diverse group of minds inspired to think and dream about space, we’ll start to see really great stuff happen,” he says.

Also read: There’s A Star Man Waiting in the Sky