Thursday, December 21, 2023

Climate Things Now


Microorganisms are key to storing carbon in soils, shows new study
May 2023, phys.org

What's the impact ratio of fossil fuel carbon vs soil carbon?

Microbial carbon use efficiency is at least four times more influential than other biological or environmental factors when it comes to global soil carbon storage and distribution. The study's result has implications for improving soil health and mitigating climate change.

Soils serve as crucial carbon sinks, storing more carbon than any other terrestrial ecosystem and three times more than the atmosphere. However, the processes involved in soil carbon storage have not been well understood. 

And the paranoid person should readily come to the suspicion that this is not a coincidence, Big Agra etc.

via Max Plank Society for Biogeochemistry in Jena: Feng Tao et al, Microbial carbon use efficiency promotes global soil carbon storage, Nature (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06042-3

Image credit: AI Art - A Collection of Teaching Resources - 2023

Also: Improving soil could keep world within 1.5C heating target, research suggests
Apr 2023, The Guardian
It has long been known to be one of Earth’s biggest stores of carbon, but until now it has not been possible to examine in detail how much carbon soils in particular areas are locking up and how much they are emitting.

  

AI Art - Magnetar in Space - 2023

This is where things get interesting.

Recent, rapid ocean warming ahead of El Niño alarms scientists
Apr 25 2023, BBC News

Note that this article comes out only months after the IPCC 6.

"In March, sea surface temperatures off the east coast of North America were as much as 13.8C (24.8F) higher than the 1981-2011 average."

Because that sounds really high. And it makes you think, how can we be that wrong? We've been studying this for a long time, devote so many resources to this, use the world's most powerful computers to run these models, and we're still ----this---- wrong about what's happening. I imagine that anyone paying close enough attention to this sees nothing but the all-out apocalypse blinding their vision of the future. 

"Scientists don't fully understand why this has happened."

The IPCC 6 is almost 4,000 pages long and based on 14,000 scientific papers, and we can't figure out why the ocean is 25F hotter than it's supposed to be, based on the same models that went into that report? You think that would be big news. Yet:

"An important new study, published last week with little fanfare, highlights a worrying development."

I saw this mentioned first on BBC. Then I saw it in Wired magazine within the same week. That was it. Until one month later, it resurfaces, this time in the Wall Street Journal. Maybe that's because it can be used to support the idea that we have no idea what we're doing, and maybe we can stop all this panic and keep the motor running another 100 years. You might expect to hear that from a newspaper owned by the same guy who also owns a global logistics company which relies on exploiting the intimate relationships developed in cooperation with Big Fossil.

Then again, maybe it's really no big deal, right? (Right?)

AI Art - Quarks - 2023

Reduced emissions during the pandemic led to increased climate warming, reveals study
May 2023, phys.org

The global material experiment -- "It is well known that emissions of sulfur and nitrogen oxides and other air pollutants lead to the formation of aerosols (particles) in the air that can offset, or mask, the full climate warming caused by greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide and methane. But there has been a lack of knowledge about this "masking effect." In order to determine the size, large-scale experiments involving huge regions would be required—this is infeasible.

The COVID pandemic became such a "natural" experiment."

"Through this large-scale geophysical experiment, we were able to demonstrate that while the sky became bluer and the air cleaner, climate warming increased when these cooling air particles were removed," says Professor Örjan Gustafsson at Stockholm University, who is responsible for the measurements in the Maldives and who led the study.

The results show that a complete phasing out of fossil fuel combustion in favor of renewable energy sources with zero emissions could result in rapid "unmasking" of aerosols, while greenhouse gases linger.

via Stockholm University: H. R. C. R. Nair et al, Aerosol demasking enhances climate warming over South Asia, npj Climate and Atmospheric Science (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41612-023-00367-6


Ocean temperatures are off the charts, and El Niño is only partly to blame
Jun 2023, phys.org

Had to "increase the upper bound on the y-axis," he said.

When someone is measuring a global emergent disaster, that is absolutely not what you want to hear them say.

But this is where it gets good:

"major change in regulations around the sulfur content of shipping fuels could also be behind the warming spike, according to both Swain and Jacobson.

The regulations, ordered by the International Maritime Organization in 2020, reduced the upper limit of sulfur in fuels from 3.5% to 0.5% in an effort to achieve cleaner air in ports and coastal areas.

However, the change may have had an unexpected consequence because sulfate aerosols can reflect sunlight away from the earth, "effectively dimming the planet's surface," Jacobson wrote in a post on his website.

"By cleaning up shipping fuels, massive regions of the world's oceans that were protected from heating by shipping sulfate aerosols are now experiencing rapid warming," he said, including many of the main shipping routes where the warming is happening. -Eliot Jacobson, retired mathematics professor who created the graph using data from NOAA's Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory ... "

Aside from the Tonga eruption, the global pandemic, the arriving El Niño, this comes up as one possibility for the sudden rise in sea temperatures -- how crazy would it be if the very sulfur that we are trying to keep out of the air because it gets in the blood and causes heart disease, has been masking a huge temperature rise that might now cause heart attacks across the planet but this time from heat-related events. 

Then again, Terminal Shock and Ministry for the Future already wrote that book, if you're interested in hearing what it might be like to intentionally put sulfur back into the air... 


Climate change -- Sudden heat increase in seas around UK and Ireland
Jun 2023, BBC News

Same alarms as the above, but this time from the European Space Agency (ESA). They mention that the North Atlantic is seeing the most rise in temperatures, and also talk about the sulfur emissions:

Regulations reducing the sulphur content of fuel burned by ships were brought in by the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) in 2020.

This significantly reduces the amount of aerosol particles released into the atmosphere, the IMO says.

But aerosols that pollute the air can also help reflect heat back into space, so removing them may have caused more heat to enter the waters.
AI Art - Un Pequeno Dispositivo Cuantico - 2023

Effect of volcanic eruptions significantly underestimated in climate projections, study shows
Jun 2023, phys.org

Researchers have found that the cooling effect that volcanic eruptions have on Earth's surface temperature is likely underestimated by a factor of two, and potentially as much as a factor of four, in standard climate projections.

Compared with the greenhouse gases emitted by human activity, the effect that volcanoes have on the global climate is relatively minor, but it's important that we include them in climate models, in order to accurately assess temperature changes in future.

via University of Cambridge: Man Mei Chim et al, Climate Projections Very Likely Underestimate Future Volcanic Forcing and Its Climatic Effects, Geophysical Research Letters (2023). DOI: 10.1029/2023GL103743


Climate change: Shipping agrees net-zero goal but critics chide deal
Jun 2023, BBC News

The global shipping industry has agreed to reduce planet warming gases to net-zero "by or around 2050", but critics say the deal is fatally flawed. Ships produce around 3% of global CO2 but countries will now have to reduce this as close as possible to zero by the middle of the century.

Small island states have welcomed the plan but green groups are furious. They believe the strategy is toothless and will do little to limit rising temperatures. China, Brazil, Saudi Arabia and others the new strategy that will see "indicative checkpoints" rather than hard targets

 

AI Art - A Virus Drawn by DaVinci - 2023


Let's switch to something different for a moment:

Potential financial losses from a renewable energy transition are concentrated among the wealthy, study finds
Jun 2023, phys.org

Pretty much explains everything --

Their results found that, in the United States, two-thirds of the financial losses from lost fossil fuel assets would affect the top 10% of wealth holders, with half of that affecting the top 1%. Because the top 1% tend to have a diverse portfolio of investments, any losses from fossil fuel assets would make up less than 1% of this group's net wealth. When the researchers repeated this analysis for the United Kingdom and continental European countries, they found similar results.

"Investing in a stranded asset is like buying a rotten apple," says Chancel. "In this case, the apple is rotten because of climate change. Who owns these rotten apples? We find that the richest 10% of the population owns the vast majority of these assets."

via Political Economy Research Institute and Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst and Center for Research on Social Inequalities, Sciences Po, Paris : Gregor Semieniuk, Potential pension fund losses should not deter high-income countries from bold climate action, Joule (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.joule.2023.05.023.


Roadside hedges can reduce harmful ultrafine particle pollution around schools
Sep 2023, phys.org

(Why did we need science to tell us this)

"Western red cedar does a great job in 'capturing ' particulate pollution because it has abundant, fine, evergreen leaves into which airborne particles bump and then settle from the roadside air," said study co-author Professor Barbara Maher from the University of Lancaster who led the previous research. *I believe we call these trees Arborvitae here in the Northeast?

The researchers applied a new type of pollution analysis, using magnetism to study particles which originate from vehicle exhaust and the wearing of brake pads and tires, and are then trapped by a hedge separating a major 6-lane road from a primary school in Manchester, UK. They found that the hedge was especially successful in removing ultrafine particle pollution, which can be more damaging to health.

Testing with magnetism allowed them to distinguish local traffic pollution from other sources of air pollution.

In the school playground, 30 meters from the road, they measured a 78% decrease in PM10 relative to roadside air.

They noticed that this removal was even more efficient for ultrafine PM2.5 particles. "What was remarkable was just how efficiently the tredge hoovered up the very finest particles," said senior author Professor Richard Harrison, also from Cambridge's Department of Earth Sciences. They measured an 80% reduction in the ultrafine particles just behind the tredge.

via University of Cambridge and Lancaster University: H.A. Sheikh et al, Efficacy of green infrastructure in reducing exposure to local, traffic-related sources of airborne particulate matter (PM), Science of The Total Environment (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.166598


Green growth loses favor with climate policy scientists
Sep 2023, phys.org

A total of 86.1% of the researchers from the European Union for instance expressed very high levels of skepticism about green growth, while North American researchers were less likely to hold degrowth positions compared to those from other OECD countries. In contrast, more than half of the researchers from non-OECD countries, most importantly BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa), expressed views aligned with a green growth position.

"We also found that climate policy researchers with a degrowth position tend to support direct regulation (standards, quotas, bans) while green growth proponents support innovation subsidies."

Truly eye opening, every piece of this makes sense, like how the US (more infiltrated by industry and money) is for green growth more than EU, how economists and environmentalists (latter a direct target of academia money influence on climate) and even how the innovators are for green growth, and they are the people who stand to make money off it, as usual....

Post-Growth (either degrowth or agrowth) -- prioritize sustainability, social justice, and human well-being, even if this means a reduction in material consumption and economic activity.

via ESCP Business School (France), the Graduate School of Economics and Management of the Ural Federal University (Russia), the University of Málaga (Spain), and the Institute of Environmental Science and Technology of the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona: Lewis C. King et al, Shades of green growth scepticism among climate policy researchers, Nature Sustainability (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41893-023-01198-2.

AI Art - Bosons - 2023

New study finds that the Gulf Stream is warming and shifting closer to shore
Oct 2023, phys.org

The Gulf Stream has warmed faster than the global ocean as a whole and has shifted towards the coast.

"The warming we see near the Gulf Stream is due to two combined effects. One is that the ocean is absorbing excess heat from the atmosphere as the climate warms," said Todd. "The second is that the Gulf Stream itself is gradually shifting towards the coast."

They identified these trends using observational data from Spray autonomous underwater gliders and from the Argo Program, which is an array of about 4,000 autonomous profiling floats that drift with ocean currents and move up and down between the surface and about 2,000 meters (6,560 feet) in depth, collecting data as they rise. Argo is an international program that has been operating since 1999. WHOI is one of the original Argo institutions and maintains about 10% of the array.

via Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution: Robert E. Todd et al, Warming and lateral shift of the Gulf Stream from in situ observations since 2001, Nature Climate Change (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41558-023-01835-w


Carbon emissions threaten 1.5C climate threshold sooner than thought
Oct 2023, BBC News

They're not saying it but they are saying it --

Earlier this year, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the UN's key advisory body, projected that the world could only emit another 500bn tonnes of carbon and have a 50% chance of keeping warming under the 1.5C figure.

As the current annual level of emissions is around 40bn tonnes, the IPCC projected that the threshold would be crossed permanently by the middle of the next decade. But this new analysis suggests it will be much sooner than that.

The researchers ... also re-examined the role of other, non-carbon factors that impact warming. One of the most critical are sooty particles called aerosols, which mainly arise from the burning of fossil fuels. They contribute heavily to air pollution but have an unexpected benefit for the climate because they help cool the atmosphere by reflecting sunlight back into space.

The new research paper finds that these aerosols have in fact a far higher cooling impact than previously thought. 

Neil Stephenson and Kim Stanley Robinson, literally wrote this future like yesterday (2020).


Shoot I can't keep up; this is unfolding in real time:
Pioneering scientist says global warming is accelerating. Some experts call his claims overheated
Nov 2023, phys.org

The Godfather of Global Warming -- former NASA top scientist James Hansen, prominent protester against the use of fossil fuels, alerted much of the United States to the harms of climate change in dramatic congressional testimony in 1988

Hansen argues there is more sun energy in the atmosphere, and less of the particles that can reflect it back into space thanks to efforts to cut pollution. The loss of those particles means there's less of the cooling effect that they can have. 

Particles.

via James Hanson, Godfather of Global Warming: James Hansen et al, Global warming in the pipeline, Oxford Open Climate Change (2023). DOI: 10.1093/oxfclm/kgad008

Hold On I Have To Go Plug In My Skin


Sensors built into wearable patches could signal the future
Feb 2023, phys.org

Acoustic transmitter and receiver without any additional antenna.

via Northumbria University: Qian Zhang et al, Multifunctional and Wearable Patches Based on Flexible Piezoelectric Acoustics for Integrated Sensing, Localization, and Underwater Communication, Advanced Functional Materials (2022). DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202209667

Image credit: AI Art - A Cup of Coffee Connected to a Man's Head - 2023

Breakthrough for sweat analysis: 3D-printed wearable sensor
May 2023, phys.org

It's called the "sweatainer", named after the "vacutainer" used in blood sampling. 

via University of Hawaii at Manoa: Chung-Han Wu et al, Skin-interfaced microfluidic systems with spatially engineered 3D fluidics for sweat capture and analysis, Science Advances (2023). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adg4272.


Soft 'e-skin' generates nerve-like impulses that talk to the brain
May 2023, phys.org
"Monolithic e-skin" - soft integrated circuits that convert sensed pressure or temperature to electrical signals similar to the nerve impulses to communicate with the brain, but with low enough operating voltage to be used safely on the human body, and to be one day directed to implanted wireless communication chips in the peripheral nerve to allow amputees to control prosthetic limbs

25-50 microns thick, like a sheet of paper, or the outer layer of human skin, and runs on 5 volts.
via Stanford: Weichen Wang et al, Neuromorphic sensorimotor loop embodied by monolithically integrated, low-voltage, soft e-skin, Science (2023). DOI: 10.1126/science.ade0086

AI Art - Head Made of Recursive Speakers 3 - 2022

AI powers second-skin-like wearable tech
May 2023, phys.org

Ultra-thin wearable patch worn on the neck has three layers to measure speech, neck movement, touch, breathing and heart rates

via Monash University: Shu Gong et al, Hierarchically resistive skins as specific and multimetric on-throat wearable biosensors, Nature Nanotechnology (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41565-023-01383-6


Wearable textile captures energy from body movement to power devices
Jun 2023, phys.org

"Triboelectric wearable textile that can convert body movement into useable electricity and even store that energy, using graphene oxide fiber for use in a coaxial fiber-shaped supercapacitor."

This used to sound cool, but it's funny how things change, and under the shadow of surveillance capitalism this now sounds like an absolute nightmare:

"In the future, if advanced fabrics can be developed, then perhaps wearable electronic devices integrated into shirts, pants, underwear and hats will be able to track indicators of frailty to assess risk of age-related disease, monitor cortisol levels to track stress levels, or even detect pathogens as part of a global pandemic monitoring network."

via Tsinghua University: Feifan Sheng et al, Wearable energy harvesting-storage hybrid textiles as on-body self-charging power systems, Nano Research Energy (2023). DOI: 10.26599/NRE.2023.9120079


Making headway in precision therapeutics with novel fully organic bioelectronic device
Jul 2023, phys.org 

The first stand-alone, conformable, fully organic bioelectronic device that can not only acquire and transmit neurophysiologic brain signals, but can also provide power for device operation. Uses sub-micron IGT (internal-ion-gated organic electrochemical transistor) architecture.

via Columbia University School of Engineering and Applied Science: Claudia Cea et al, Integrated internal ion-gated organic electrochemical transistors for stand-alone conformable bioelectronics, Nature Materials (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-023-01599-w

AI Art - Head Made of Recursive Speakers 4 - 2022

New wearable sensor sets record for solar power efficiency
Jul 2023, phys.org

Biosensors capable of reading out levels of salts, sugars, uric acid, amino acids, vitamins, and C-reactive proteins, and is powered with a flexible perovskite solar cell (FPSC) which is particularly well suited to indoor lighting emission spectrum. (Also mentions that it's assembled in an origami-like fashion).

via Heritage Medical Research Institute, Johannes Kepler University Linz in Austria, and California Institute of Technology: Min, J. et al. An autonomous wearable biosensor powered by a perovskite solar cell. Nature Electronics (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41928-023-00996-y


Screen-printed, flexible sensors allow earbuds to record brain activity and exercise levels
Sep 2023, phys.org

Flexible sensors screen printed onto earbuds to record the electrical activity of the brain as well as levels of lactate in the body.

via University of California - San Diego: In-ear integrated sensor array for the continuous monitoring of brain activity and of lactate in sweat, Nature Biomedical Engineering (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41551-023-01095-1


New wearable sensor makes continuous analysis of sweat possible, researchers say
Sep 2023, phys.org

Whereas low biomarker concentration levels in sweat and variability of other factors such as pH, salinity and temperature have pushed previous sweat biosensors past the limits of their detection and accuracy, this laser-modified graphene nanocomposite material can detect specific glucose levels in sweat for three weeks while simultaneously monitoring body temperature and pH levels

via Penn State: Farnaz Lorestani et al, A Highly Sensitive and Long‐Term Stable Wearable Patch for Continuous Analysis of Biomarkers in Sweat, Advanced Functional Materials (2023). DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202306117


When Algorithms Attack - Thought Hygiene and Social Behavior in the Digital Age


Here's some things about how algorithms and social behavior interact, starting with a good background on how we as individuals treat bad information:

No simple answer for why people believe in conspiracy theories
Jun 2023, phys.org
"Conspiracy theorists are not all likely to be simple-minded, mentally unwell folks—a portrait which is routinely painted in popular culture," said Bowes. "Instead, many turn to conspiracy theories to fulfill deprived motivational needs and make sense of distress and impairment."
  • 170 studies, 158,000 participants from the United States, UK and Poland, measuring motivations or personality traits associated with conspiratorial thinking.
  • overall, people were motivated to believe in conspiracy theories by a need to understand and feel safe in their environment and a need to feel like the community they identify with is superior to others
  • people were more likely to believe specific conspiracy theories when they were motivated by social relationships
  • participants who perceived social threats were more likely to believe in events-based conspiracy theories (Sept. 11), rather than an abstract theory in general (governments plan to harm their citizens to retain power)
  • people who are motivated by a desire to feel unique are more likely to believe in general conspiracy theories about how the world works
  • The Big Five personality traits (extraversion, agreeableness, openness, conscientiousness and neuroticism) had a much weaker relationship with conspiratorial thinking
  • may be related to recent theory about social identity motives and conspiracy theories 
via Emory University: The Conspiratorial Mind: A Meta-Analytic Review of Motivational and Personological Correlates, Psychological Bulletin (2023). DOI: 10.1037/bul0000392

Image credit: AI Art - Is Your Data Under the Weather - 2023


Perception of Russia-Ukraine conflict linked to endorsement of false news about adversary
Mar 2023, phys.org
Analysis of the survey responses showed that participants who perceived a higher level of conflict between Ukraine and Russia were less likely to believe in and want to share the false stories about the European Union, but were more likely to endorse the false stories about Russia. Stories about Tanzania (a neutral control) were least likely to be endorsed.

These findings suggest that people's tendency to endorse false news does not depend simply on their group identity; it also depends on perceptions of the level of conflict between their group and another group. This implies that conflict de-escalation could help prevent the spread of misinformation.
via Leiden University in the Netherlands and Public Library of Science: Information battleground: Conflict perceptions motivate the belief in and sharing of misinformation about the adversary, PLoS ONE (2023). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0282308


Social media 'trust' or 'distrust' buttons could reduce spread of misinformation
Jun 2023, phys.org

(You mean like a "dislike" button?)
The addition of "trust" and "distrust" buttons on social media, alongside standard "like" buttons, could help to reduce the spread of misinformation, finds a new experimental study led by University College London (UCL) researchers.
via UUCL Psychology & Language Sciences, Max Planck UCL Center for Computational Psychiatry and Aging Research, and Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Laura K Globig et al, Changing the incentive structure of social media platforms to halt the spread of misinformation, eLife (2023). DOI: 10.7554/eLife.85767

Also: Valentina Vellani et al, The illusory truth effect leads to the spread of misinformation, Cognition (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2023.105421


Controversy in Facebook posts linked to speed of spread among users
Jun 2023, phys.org

  • 57 million posts published across about 2 million Facebook pages and groups from 2018 to 2022. 
  • Posts that went viral were more likely to be associated with negative or controversial reactions among users, regardless of topic.
  • Posts that did not go viral were associated with more positive reactions.
via Sapienza Università di Roma: Etta G, Sangiorgio E, Di Marco N, Avalle M, Scala A, Cinelli M, et al. Characterizing engagement dynamics across topics on Facebook, PLoS ONE (2023). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0286150

Image credit: AI Art - Isometric Maze by Jesper Ejsing, Rhads, Makoto Shinkai Lois van Baarle, and Ilya Kuvshinov - 2022

Researchers build an AI system to identify social norm violations
Jul 2023, phys.org
Built the system using GPT-3, zero-shot text classification, and automatic rule discovery. The system used a binary of ten social emotions: competence, politeness, trust, discipline, caring, agreeableness, success, conformity, decency, and loyalty.

DARPA commissioned The Computational Cultural Understanding (CCU) program to create cross-cultural language understanding technologies to improve a Department of Defense operator's situational awareness and interactional effectiveness. Cross-cultural miscommunication not only derails negotiations, but also can be a contributing factor leading to war, according to DARPA's explanation of the rationale for the program.
via Department of Cognitive and Brain Sciences Ben-Gurion University of the Negev: Yair Neuman et al, AI for identifying social norm violation, Scientific Reports (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-35350-x


Sharing on Facebook reveals two very different news environments
Aug 2023, phys.org

Low-Cred
Here it is: "There's a little more nuance to what it takes to be a well-informed person. You can't just be reading multiple news stories. You have to be reading sources that are well known to be credible."
(I think we're having a problem with the "well-known" part; well-known by who? It gets even harder  when more and more of our online infodiets come from robots.)
  • 2 million online news stories that were shared at least 100 times by Facebook users from February 2017 to April 2019
  • both high- and low-credibility publishers tended to put out bursts of coverage at the same time -- but they often were about different topics
  • low-credibility publishers more often converged on stories about politics and the government
  • high-credibility publishers' topics ranged more widely
via Ohio State: Ceren Budak et al, Bursts of contemporaneous publication among high- and low-credibility online information providers, New Media & Society (2023). DOI: 10.1177/14614448231183617


Social media algorithms exploit how humans learn from their peers
Aug 2023, phys.org

They can't change to create a sense of community because that's not their purpose and doesn't yield profit.
Humans are biased to learn from others in a way that typically promotes cooperation and collective problem-solving, which is why they tend to learn more from individuals they perceive as a part of their ingroup and those they perceive to be prestigious. In addition, when learning biases were first evolving, morally and emotionally charged information was important to prioritize, as this information would be more likely to be relevant to enforcing group norms and ensuring collective survival.

In contrast, algorithms are usually selecting information that boosts user engagement in order to increase advertising revenue. This means algorithms amplify the very information humans are biased to learn from, and they can oversaturate social media feeds with what the researchers call Prestigious, Ingroup, Moral, and Emotional (PRIME) information, regardless of the content's accuracy or representativeness of a group's opinions.
This last part is great part because it sounds like how you have to talk about an alien race taking over the planet or a new parasite to wipe out the population -- 
"It's not that the algorithm is designed to disrupt cooperation. It's just that its goals are different."
via Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern: Algorithm-mediated social learning in online social networks, Trends in Cognitive Sciences (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.tics.2023.06.008


No evidence linking Facebook adoption and negative well-being
Aug 2023, phys.org

According to the article below this, it doesn't matter because it's already broken, but also because nobody is going to believe this.
"largest independent scientific study ever conducted" (nearly a million people across 72 countries over 2008 to 2019)
Reasons -- "Much of the past research into social media use and well-being has been hampered by an exclusive focus on well-being data in the Global North and a reliance on inaccurate self-reports of social media engagement."
There was another study that says the positive effects are mediated by affluence, so that the wealthier the country the more negative the effects and vice versa? I don't see it here, but I think it just came out in the last few months. Also, and this isn't so much a swipe at the authors, but the state of affairs in general, that their first reference, where they introduce their "2.94 billion monthly active users" number, is sourced from quarterly earnings data from the company itself. We know private companies blackbox lots of their data, and that we can't use with confidence the numbers they give us (the public, or university researchers), and yet one of the base numbers of their whole calculation comes from the company, lowering the confidence of all that follows. 

via University of Oxford's Internet Institute: Matti Vuorre et al, Estimating the association between Facebook adoption and well-being in 72 countries, Royal Society Open Science (2023). DOI: 10.1098/rsos.221451


Facebook's design makes it unable to control misinformation, research suggests
Sep 2023, phys.org
Facebook's efforts were undermined by the core design features of the platform itself. "Our results show that removing content or changing algorithms can be ineffective if it doesn't change what the platform is designed to do."
via George Washington and Johns Hopkins Universities: David Broniatowski, The Efficacy of Facebook's Vaccine Misinformation Policies and Architecture During The COVID-19 Pandemic, Science Advances (2023). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adh2132



And finally, feed this to your model-bot:

High rate of mental health problems and political extremism found in those who bought firearms during COVID pandemic
Sep 2023, phys.org

Not about the article itself, but this is the statement that defines you as a conspiracy theorist in scientific studies:

"The government, media, and financial worlds in the U.S. are controlled by a group of Satan-worshiping pedophiles who run a global child sex trafficking operation." (I agree, I do not agree)

via University of Michigan: Brian M. Hicks et al, Who bought a gun during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States?: Associations with QAnon beliefs, right-wing political attitudes, intimate partner violence, antisocial behavior, suicidality, and mental health and substance use problems, PLOS ONE (2023). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0290770

To Believe


Study finds placebo effect also applies to exercise training
Apr 2023, phys.org

Personal trainer, is that you?
"If you believe that the training program you are following has been optimized for you, that in itself will have an effect, regardless of the content of the program. It is exactly the same as the placebo effect we know from medicine. ... The placebo effect has been studied for over 70 years, but looking at it in the context of exercise research is new."

Interesting to think about this in terms of recommendation algorithms -- a term which encompasses pretty much all the consumer-facing artificial intelligence that's been available to the masses up until the explosion of generative-AI like GPT or Stable Diffusion. Recommendation algorithms, like so much consumer technologies, don't actually work as well as they're marketed to work. But they do convincingly present to us the illusion of personal customization -- this thing knows who you are, what you do and what you like, and it can give you things that even your most intimate of social partners don't know you want.

Recommendation algorithms inherently benefit from this phenomenon, and so we should be even more critical when assessing their utility, and especially when comparing that utility to the harms it inflicts, like personal data harvesting and surveillance.   

via University of Agder in Norway: Kolbjørn Lindberg et al, The effects of being told you are in the intervention group on training results: a pilot study, Scientific Reports (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-29141-7


Study finds people who use alternative medicine favor risk and novelty, and distrust science
Sep 2023, phys.org
"Susceptible to persuasion, and skeptical of science" (the ultimate recipe for disaster)

Researchers found that 1,492 Canadians ages 16 and over who access alternative health-care therapies where the proven benefits do not justify the risks involved tend to be wealthier, like novelty and taking risks, and are also more likely to distrust conventional medicine.
via University of British Columbia School of Nursing and the University of Alberta Health Law Institute: Bernie Garrett et al, Demographic and psychometric predictors associated with engagement in risk-associated alternative healthcare behaviours, PLOS ONE (2023). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0291016


Belief in manifesting financial success leads to risky investments and bankruptcy, says study
Sep 2023, phys.org

Not only did they creating a "manifestation scale", but it focuses on "aspirational" thinking, which has been my word of the year for 2023 by the way.

First let's get this in writing, archived here: "The business world is filled with self-described experts, gurus, and influencers who promise success through manifestation, but many of these beliefs and practices lack solid evidence," Dr. Dixon said.
Next, some results: "Although manifesters felt more confident and optimistic about achieving success, we didn't find objective proof to support the effectiveness of manifestation."

And finally I ask, why did we need a study to prove that "thinking really hard" about money can make you rich? Anyway, now you know. 

via University of Queensland Business School: Lucas J. Dixon et al, "The Secret" to Success? The Psychology of Belief in Manifestation, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (2023). DOI: 10.1177/01461672231181162

Image credit: AI Art - Aliens Entering a Pissoir by Marcel Duchamp - 2022


Are You Listening



Android phones sold to customers in China found to be loaded with apps that send user data to third parties
Feb 2023, phys.org

No way though:
Riddled with software that continuously sends user data to third parties without the permission or even knowledge of the phone's users.

The research team found that the phones were rife with applications sending user data to a variety of third parties, all without permission. During testing, they set phones to opt out of sending any sort of data to providers or any other third parties, and did not connect to cloud applications. Still, applications sent data to the makers of the phone, network operators and also to the makers of apps. Data included physical information such as the user's phone number, its MAC address and ongoing geolocation data. It also included more personal data, such as contact lists and text metadata.

Text metadata (to, from, time, length, location), sent straight to the phone-makers and app-makers.
via University of Edinburgh and Trinity College: Haoyu Liu et al, Android OS Privacy Under the Loupe—A Tale from the East, arXiv (2023). [a "loupe" is like a magnifying glass, typically seen used with jewelery] DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2302.01890



Smartphone study reveals that bodily rhythm affects behavior
Apr 2023, phys.org

He literally says it out loud: 
"If people think they just live their lives, deciding their behavior for themselves, and that there is no overarching structure, they've got it wrong," says researcher Arko Ghosh.
  • the body has rhythms ranging between seven and 52 days
  • these cycles influence how we behave
  • everyone has these rhythms (young, old, men, women)
  • impact on psychological and neurological research -- "Are the cycles we see here caused by the illness, or are they 'normal' cycles that become more apparent as a result of the illness?"
  • 400 subjects aged 16 to 80 had an app installed that allowed the researchers to track usage data
  • "We only looked at the times when people were actively using their phones and were swiping or typing"
  • We distinguished 2,500 different types of smartphone use.
  • Some mannerisms had a pattern that repeated every 25 days such as a long pause between touches.
  • Others had a pattern that repeated every 19 days such as a short pause between touches. 
"We might then be able to predict particular behavior on the basis of a person's cycle. This might in turn lead to a completely new definition of what is normal behavior and what is behavior that is related to a neurological or psychological condition."
via Leiden University: Enea Ceolini et al, Common multi-day rhythms in smartphone behavior, npj Digital Medicine (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41746-023-00799-7


Wearable devices may be able to capture well-being through effortless data collection using AI
May 2023, phys.org

"Passive data collection" sounds so benign. 
The findings support wearable devices as a way to monitor and assess psychological states remotely without requiring the completion of mental health questionnaires.
This would sound like the most dystopian thing ever if it weren't coming from a hospital:
"Wearables provide a means to continually collect information about an individual's physical state. Our results provide insight into the feasibility of assessing psychological characteristics from this passively collected data."

"A better understanding of who is at psychological risk and an improved means of tracking the impact of psychological interventions is needed. The growth of digital technology presents an opportunity to improve access to mental health services for all people."
The data: 
They the Warrior Watch Study, a digital observational study of 329 health care workers enrolled at seven hospitals in New York City, measuring heart rate variability and resting heart rate throughout the follow-up period using a smart watch. The metrics collected were found to be predictive in identifying resilience or well-being states. 

via the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai Hospital: A machine learning approach to determine resilience utilizing wearable device data: analysis of an observational cohort, JAMIA Open (2023). DOI: 10.1093/jamiaopen/ooad029

https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jamiaopen/ooad029



Majority of consumers care what kind of data they share with retailers and service providers, new study finds
May 2023, phys.org

Just preferences -- 
96% of individuals were willing to pay to avoid sharing their personal data in at least one of the data sharing environments. Banking transactions was the data type people considered the most important to protect, with over 

95% for banking data
79% for medical records
72% for GPS
43% for online browsing history
40% for social media data
via University of Bristol: Anya Skatova et al, Unpacking privacy: Valuation of personal data protection, PLOS ONE (2023). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0284581


AI Art - Body Cam - 2023

Swiss researchers use typing, mouse clicks to detect office stress
Apr 2023, phys.org

The way people type and use their computer mouse can be better stress indicators than their heart rate.

"People who are stressed move the mouse pointer more often and less precisely and cover longer distances on the screen," Nagelin said.

People who feel stressed in the office make more mistakes when typing and tend to write in fits and starts, with many brief pauses.

Relaxed people by contrast take fewer but longer pauses when typing.
via Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich


Wearable monitor detects stress hormone levels across a full 24-hour day
Jun 2023, phys.org

We can already do it for entire groups by measuring isoprene in the air, and now it can be done on the individual level -- 
Until now scientists haven't been able to define what normal rhythmicity looks like in healthy daily life. ... The device is worn around the waist and painlessly and automatically samples from beneath the skin every 20 minutes, without the need to collect blood. Importantly, the method allows sampling during sleep, work, and other daily life activities for up to 72 hours in a single session. Mathematicians then used these data to develop a new class of dynamic markers to better understand how a healthy hormonal profile should look like depending on an individual's sex, age, body mass index, as well as other characteristics.
via University of Birmingham: Thomas Upton, High resolution daily profiles of tissue adrenal steroids by portable automated collection, Science Translational Medicine (2023). DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.adg8464.


Attackers can break voice authentication with up to 99% success within six tries
Jun 2023, phys.org

Please stop -- 
Computer scientists at the University of Waterloo have discovered a method of attack that can successfully bypass voice authentication security systems with up to a 99% success rate after only six tries.

No Wells Fargo, company that literally created fake bank accounts using existing customer data, nobody wants you to record their voice. Nobody wants this, only you want this.

via University of Waterloo: Breaking Security-Critical Voice Authentication, 2023 IEEE Symposium on Security and Privacy (SP). DOI: 10.1109/SP46215.2023.00139


Hackers can steal cryptographic keys by video-recording power LEDs 60 feet away
Jun 2023, Ars Technica

Side channels -- a class of attack that measures physical effects that leak from a device as it performs a cryptographic operation, like using cameras in iPhones or commercial surveillance systems to video record power LEDs that show when the card reader or smartphone is turned on.
By carefully monitoring characteristics such as power consumption, sound, electromagnetic emissions, or the amount of time it takes for an operation to occur, attackers can assemble enough information to recover secret keys that underpin the security and confidentiality of a cryptographic algorithm.

Computer security experts offer advice to freeze out risk of thermal attacks
Aug 2023, phys.org

Sometimes you just need to be reminded that this is a thing --
Thermal attacks use heat-sensitive cameras to read the traces of fingerprints left on surfaces like smartphone screens, computer keyboards and PIN pads.

Hackers can use the relative intensity of heat traces across recently-touched surfaces to reconstruct users' passwords. [follow the above link to see the heat map video]

The team identified 15 different approaches described in previous papers on computer security which could reduce the risk of thermal attacks:
  • wearing gloves or rubber thimbles
  • touching something cold before typing
  • pressing hands against surfaces or breathing on them
  • a heating element behind surfaces could erase traces of finger heat
  • surfaces could be made from materials which dissipate heat more rapidly
  • a physical shield which covers keys until heat has dissipated
  • eye-tracking inputs or biometric security could reduce risk of thermal attack
  • manufacturers of thermal cameras could integrate software to prevent thermal cameras from taking pictures of surfaces like PIN pads on bank machines.
via University of Glasgow: In the Quest to Protect Users from Side-Channel Attacks—A User-Centred Design Space to Mitigate Thermal Attacks on Public Payment Terminals.


Research hack reveals call security risk in smartphones
Aug 2023, phys.org

The researchers' malware, called EarSpy, used machine learning algorithms to filter a surprising amount of caller information from ear speaker vibration data recorded by an Android smartphone's own motion sensors

via Texas A&M University College of Engineering: Ahmed Tanvir Mahdad et al, EarSpy: Spying Caller Speech and Identity through Tiny Vibrations of Smartphone Ear Speakers, arXiv (2022). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2212.12151


AI Art - Cables and Wires - 2023


Extracting blood-induced color changes on the face for non-contact heart rate estimation
Aug 2023, phys.org

Blood volume pulse (BVP) that causes slight temporal changes in facial skin color can be captured in videos, but complex lighting conditions make any change in color difficult to measure. These scientists have devised a way to use dynamic mode decomposition (DMD), a technique that analyzes spatio-temporal structures in multi-dimensional time-series signals.

via Tokyo University: Kosuke Kurihara et al, Spatio-Temporal Structure Extraction of Blood Volume Pulse Using Dynamic Mode Decomposition for Heart Rate Estimation, IEEE Access (2023). DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2023.3284465


Reddit forces personalized ads, starts X-like user payment program
Sep 2023, Ars Technica

Other privacy policy changes announced Wednesday include allowing users to choose to see "fewer" ads regarding alcohol, dating, gambling, pregnancy and parenting, and weight loss. 

Now you know where the value lies -- these are the most problematic because these are the most effective:
  • alcohol
  • dating
  • gambling
  • pregnancy
  • parenting


AI and 10 seconds of voice can screen for diabetes, new study reveals
Oct 2023, phys.org
Scientists used six to 10 seconds of people's voice, along with basic health data, including age, sex, height, and weight, to create an AI model that can distinguish whether that individual has type 2 diabetes. The model has 89% accuracy for women and 86% for men. 267 people (diagnosed as either non- or type 2 diabetic) to record a phrase into their smartphone six times daily for two weeks. From more than 18,000 recordings, scientists analyzed 14 acoustic features for differences between non-diabetic and type 2 diabetic individuals.
via private company Klick Labs: Jaycee M. Kaufman et al, Acoustic Analysis and Prediction of Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Using Smartphone-Recorded Voice Segments, Mayo Clinic Proceedings: Digital Health (2023). DOI: 10.1016/j.mcpdig.2023.08.005


Your smart speaker data is used in ways you might not expect
Oct 2023, phys.org

It's so important to note that "we all knew this was a thing" like 10 years ago when they first came out, and yet, not until today do we have a legit university study, publicly funded, rigorously tested study, to prove what "we already knew", and even government agencies are only now paying attention. It takes years for this to happen:
The research team built an auditing framework to measure the collection, usage and sharing of Amazon Echo interaction data by creating several personas with interests in specific categories, and one control persona, and whereby each persona interacted with a different Echo device.

Then the researchers measured data collection by intercepting network traffic and inferred data usage by observing ads targeted to each persona on the web and on Echo devices.

The team reported that as many as 41 advertisers sync or share their cookies with Amazon, and then those advertisers further sync their cookies with 247 other third parties, including advertising services.
"Unfortunately, surveillance is the business model of the internet" 
-Umar Iqbal, assistant professor of computer science and engineering at the McKelvey School of Engineering at Washington University in St. Louis.
via Washington University in St. Louis: Umar Iqbal et al, Tracking, Profiling, and Ad Targeting in the Alexa Echo Smart Speaker Ecosystem, Proceedings of the 2023 ACM on Internet Measurement Conference (2023). DOI: 10.1145/3618257.3624803


AI Art - Cables and Wires 2 - 2023

A robot that can detect subtle noises in its surroundings and use them to localize nearby humans
Oct 2023, phys.org

Hidden information:
"Our group has recently been interested in exploring a high-level theme of research regarding what types of 'hidden' information are freely available that we can train models on. ... We wanted to see if the subtle and incidental sounds that humans inadvertently produce as they move can be that 'free' signal." 

The Robot Kidnapper Dataset: 14 hours of high-quality four-channel audio recordings paired with 360 RGB camera footage, collected during experimental trials where people were asked to move around a robot at various levels of 'sneakiness' (e.g., walking quietly, walking normally, etc.).

The researchers trained their model to ignore external and irrelevant noises, such as those originating from heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems, as well as sounds produced by the robot itself. 

"Robots commonly use cameras or lidar to navigate around people, but should those sensors fail or become unavailable (low-lit environments, occlusions, etc.), our method allows robots to fall back solely onto audio, which is usually already available in most hardware setups. Moreover, when interacting with robots, people should not be expected to intentionally create extra sounds, which is what previous works rely on." 
via Georgia Institute of Technology: Mengyu Yang et al, The Un-Kidnappable Robot: Acoustic Localization of Sneaking People, arXiv (2023). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2310.03743

Post Script: I am (only slightly) disturbed by the choice here in calling this the "un-kidnappable robot" which implies that, in the course of their study, they were trying to "kidnap" it. Isn't there another word for kidnap that doesn't have "kid" in it? (The Un-Abductable Robot?)


Five big carmakers beat lawsuits alleging infotainment systems invade privacy
Nov 2023, Ars Technica
The class-action "complaint alleges that the vehicle's system downloads all text messages and call logs from Plaintiffs' cellphones as soon as they are connected," the Ford ruling said. "The complaint also alleges that the infotainment system permanently stores the private communications without Plaintiffs' knowledge or consent." The complaint's allegations refer to Ford cars made in 2014 and after.

Plaintiffs alleged that there is no way to delete the text messages and call logs from the car system. "If text messages or call logs are deleted from a cellphone, the vehicle nevertheless retains the communications on the vehicle's on-board memory, even after the cellphone is disconnected. Vehicle owners cannot access or delete their personal information once it has been stored," the ruling's summary of the complaint said.

Why on Earth would you ever be able to access your own personal information that has been saved on this product which you purchased and thus ostensibly own? 

Because you don't own it. You don't own the product and you don't own your personal data. The Davos 2016 premonition -- it already happened -- You own nothing, and you like it. 


Study warns restrictions to application programming interfaces by social media platforms threaten research
Nov 2023, phys.org

Data is so valuable.
"Numerous social media platforms made substantial changes to their APIs -- drastically reducing access or increasing charges for access, which the researchers say will in many cases make research harder."

What research?
"The changes are adversely affecting academics who want to study the impact of social media on mental health, on misinformation, political views and so on."

In order for social media platforms to make money, in fact the only way they can possibly make any money at all, is by selling the intimate personal data about its own users. (Something that might be referred to as predatory in other contexts.)

It's like a cross between a digital Skinner Box and a roach motel where every person that touches it has their unspeakably minute, mostly invisible, and definitely private behavioral attributes catalogued, collated, and consigned to the greater data market where it will be used to fuel the consumer economy, where we stopped selling actual products to people a long time ago.

Now we just sell them ideas; actually, first we steal those ideas directly from the people themselves, via things like social media platforms, and then sell them right back, in a quasi-material form, where the actual physical part is mostly shitty made-in-China garbage, but the important part, which is the picture of you using said shitty product, quasi-physical since it's just a picture, has been acquired and used to manipulate another person into buying said product, and the circle of consumption complete. 

via University of Bath's School of Management: Platform-controlled social media APIs threaten open science, Nature Human Behaviour (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41562-023-01750-2