Daily Human Digest
Gene editing babies: For a few hundred dollars in chemicals, you could install these changes in an embryo in ten minutes
If anyone did create an edited baby, it would raise moral and ethical issues, among the profoundest of which, [Jennifer ...
Robots enabled to detect human touch in a new way — mimicking pressure on your knuckles
Even the most capable robots aren’t great at sensing human touch; you typically need a computer science degree or at ...
‘We live at a time where cultural evolution can be very, very, very rapid, but our biological evolution seems relatively stunted.’
In modern times, our lives have changed tremendously by gaining control over nature. The advent of vaccines, antibiotics, antivirals, and ...
‘Million dollar question’: Can advancements in ‘AI science’ create ‘AI scientists’
As amazing as today’s AI programs can be, they are limited by their need to consume human-generated training data. If ...
Anatomically modern humans may not have originated in Africa’s Rift Valley
The story of our species begins in Africa, although our ability to tell that story is based on patchy evidence ...
Sexual sensation: How the brain manages sensuality
Sexual sensation is absolutely central to both our shared human experience and our individual quirks and kinks. It’s exactly the ...
How genetically-engineered black flies could help tackle global environmental challenges
In the battle against pollution, a team from Macquarie University is turning to an unexpected ally: genetically engineered black soldier ...
Europe’s bioindustry 4.0: ‘The upside of biotechnology is that it can offer a cleaner alternative to traditional chemical manufacturing’
Biotechnology, which uses living organisms to create different products or processes, remains important in today’s production of food and drink ...
50,000 brain scans: AI has discovered five patterns of brain atrophy, providing insights into the mystery of aging
An analysis of almost 50,000 brain scans has revealed five distinct patterns of brain atrophy associated with ageing and neurodegenerative ...
High intelligence, athletic, calm disposition? Designer babies are enticingly near but red flags abound
Genetic screening has rapidly evolved, offering insights into an embryo’s genetic makeup that were once unimaginable. Prospective parents can now ...
Viewpoint: AI is paving the path for dehumanizing medicine
AI promises to make healthcare quicker, more precise, and error-free. To the degree that it replaces doctors and nurses, it ...
Cloudy with a chance of AI? How weather forecasters are more accurately predicting tropical storms
In May, Microsoft released a forecast tool called Aurora that produces five-day global air- pollution predictions and 10-day weather forecasts ...
From Sitting Bull to Beethoven: Scientists are using DNA to create geneaological maps for people with murky histories
In the decade or so since scientists reported the first ancient human genome sequence, they have generated genome data for ...
Viewpoint: Polygenic screening allows parents to ‘choose the very best children’ — Ethical questions abound
Emerging technology is about to present parents with a set of ethical questions that make the usual kinds of debates ...
80 per cent of the world’s population uses some folk medicine. Here’s why magical thinking will never go away
At one point or another, we all knew something about how to heal ourselves using the plants and animals that ...
‘Addictively dependent’ on an AI girlfriend? Scientists and ethicists fear artificial intelligence may undermine human romantic connections
AI companionship is no longer theoretical—our analysis of a million ChatGPT interaction logs reveals that the second most popular use of ...
Unearthing the Shire? 3-foot tall Hobbit-sized human ancestor bone found in Indonesia
The remains of a member of the smallest ancient human species on record, who stood at just 1m tall, have ...
‘My life was full of people telling me you can’t do this’: First sickle cell CRISPR gene therapy already rescuing lives
“My life was constantly full of ‘noes’, and people telling me ‘you can’t do this’ – it was limitation after ...
We know moms shouldn’t drink while pregnant. Now there’s evidence that drinking dads can damage children’s brain development too
For more than 50 years, scientists have warned about the risks of drinking alcohol in pregnancy. Recent research has found that ...
‘Digital psychological twins’: AI copy of a dying family member’s consciousness could help make end-of-life decisions. Is this ethical?
End-of-life decisions can be extremely upsetting for surrogates, the people who have to make those calls on behalf of another ...
The Atlantic ocean might collapse from climate change. How long do we have to find a solution?
A gigantic, weather-defining current system could be headed to collapse. How much time might we have left to save it? ...
Viewpoint: HIV doesn’t cause AIDS? Joe Rogan’s COVID conspiracies spark surge in AIDS denialism
Several million people were listening in February when Joe Rogan falsely declared that “party drugs” were an “important factor in AIDS.” His ...
A futurist says our species evolves in 3 phases: With 1 down, here’s what may come next
Jeffrey Charles Hardy introduces a three-tiered model of human evolution—the “First, Suspended, and Second Human Evolution.” Standing back and viewing ...
A Fatal Inheritance: Book review — Cancer-stricken family survivor recounts legacy of tragic genetic lineage
When it’s working, p53 acts as a tumor suppressor, stamping out malignancies before they can grow and spread. This gene ...
Do fetuses talk in the womb? How accents form before birth
Some restless infants don’t wait for birth to let out their first cry. They cry in the womb, a rare ...
Progeria solution: Gene editing takes us one step closer to curing the disease that makes children rapidly age
A cure for an ultrarare disease, progeria, a disease that speeds up aging in children, could be on the horizon ...
Can we repurpose parasites to deliver drugs to the brain?
Some question if a parasite can ever be rendered harmless enough to be used as a treatment to get drugs ...