Tuesday, June 30, 2026

40 Hertz Works For Mice


Further support for 40 Hertz. First, some backstory:

A decade after she launched a collaboration to study whether stimulating the brain's gamma rhythms could help people with Alzheimer's disease, Picower Professor Li-Huei Tsai delivered a lecture on the latest 40Hz sensory stimulation research to an audience of colleagues at MIT Feb. 27. ... The MIT team often refers to 40Hz stimulation as “GENUS” for Gamma Entrainment Using Sensory Stimulation. They are still exploring the cellular and molecular mechanisms that underlie GENUS’s effects. 

There's a joke in the community that it's a great time to have Alzheimer's - if you're a mouse.

But there's another joke, which isn't actually a joke, that papers, about Alzheimer's specifically,  omitting the word "mice" from the title end up being reported by journalists who also omit the word "mice" from their own titles, and leaving readers to believe the experiments were done for humans. [study link

All that considered, more support for the 40 Hertz:

Successful 40-Hz auditory stimulation in aged monkeys suggests potential for noninvasive Alzheimer's therapy
Jan 2026, phys.org

The experimental group received one hour of 40-Hz auditory stimulation, using a 1-kHz pure tone, daily for seven consecutive days, and saw clearance of β-amyloid from the brain into the cerebrospinal fluid, which means it's leaving brain and the body. Effect persisted for over five weeks. 

via Chinese Academy of Sciences Kunming Institute of Zoology: Wenchao Wang et al, Long-term effects of forty-hertz auditory stimulation as a treatment of Alzheimer's disease: Insights from an aged monkey model study, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2026). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2529565123

Image credit: VR headset for a mouse for treating Alzheimers - Cornell - 2024
The image was found here at Cornell but the paper is here


Monday, June 29, 2026

Pantomimetic Messaging


It's all about the details. 

Politics may follow you on the road, bumper sticker study finds
Oct 2025, phys.org

Just here to point out that "I love my dog" is the epitome of politically neutral bumper sticker:

They conducted attitude surveys with paid volunteers ... The offending vehicle featured either no sticker or one of three bumper stickers: "Proud Democrat," "Proud Republican" or the neutral "I love my dog." Drivers were far more likely to honk after being cut off by a vehicle bearing a political bumper sticker, particularly one for the opposing political party.

via University of Cincinnati: Rachel Suzanne Torres et al, How do drivers react to partisan bumper stickers? Understanding polarization in apolitical settings, Frontiers in Political Science (2025). DOI: 10.3389/fpos.2025.1617785


Hand gestures that illustrate speech boost persuasiveness, study shows
Nov 2025, phys.org

I just like how they used 2000 TED talks as the dataset:

They analyzed 2,184 TED Talks using AI and automated video analysis, isolating more than 200,000 hand gestures into 10-second clips and comparing them against audience engagement metrics such as "likes" on social media, while controlling for factors like gender, occupation, language, video length and more; and they ran randomized experiments in which participants watched videos of sales pitches where speakers delivered identical scripts but varied their hand movements. Viewers then rated the speakers and the products being pitched. ... "Illustrators" might demonstrate the size of a fish while describing it, and "highlighters" might point to an object mentioned (like pointing at a word on the chalkboard?). ... "When people use illustrators, it increases viewers' perception of the speaker's competence. If a person uses their hands to visually illustrate what they're talking about, the audience perceives that this person has more knowledge and can make things easier to understand."

via University of British Columbia Sauder School of Business: Giovanni Luca Cascio Rizzo et al, EXPRESS: Talking with Your Hands: How Hand Gestures Influence Communication, Journal of Marketing Research (2025). DOI: 10.1177/00222437251385922

Sunday, June 28, 2026

Post Consciousness Pre Raphaelite


You can't have massive paradigmatic disruption in the Standard Model without someone completely flipping the chessboard upside down, so let's give this a shot:

Consciousness as the foundation: New theory addresses nature of reality
Nov 2025, phys.org

Consciousness comes first, and structures such as time, space and matter arise afterwards.

The theory is based on the idea that consciousness constitutes the fundamental element of reality, and that individual consciousnesses are parts of a larger, interconnected field.

In this model, phenomena that are now perceived as "mysterious" - such as telepathy or near-death experiences - can be explained as natural consequences of a shared field of consciousness.

"My ambition has been to describe this using the language of physics and mathematical tools. Are these phenomena really mystical? Or is it simply that there is a discovery we have not yet made, and when we do it will lead to a paradigm shift?"

via Uppsala University: Maria Strømme, Universal consciousness as foundational field: A theoretical bridge between quantum physics and non-dual philosophy, AIP Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1063/5.0290984

You still good? Ok let's get to it. 

First, and more importantly than the article above, please have some consideration for Michael Shermer's invocation of Carl Sagan's Baloney Detector Kit [link], wherein we are presented the maxim, albeit of nebulous origin, that "It's good to have an open mind, but not so open that your brain falls out." 

With that in mind, let's take a look at Ms Maria Strømme, the single author of this paper. First impression? Plastic surgery. Sure I'm a superficial asshole - look I'm not the one claiming to be a scientist here. Second impression? The article was retracted in 2026 because "a central operator in the theory had no associated measurable quantity and that the theory's predictions could not be empirically verified or falsified." [link] Got it. I'll stick with Modified Newtonian Dynamics. Just kidding, that was squashed too, just this year. 

Post Script:
Dream engineering can help solve 'puzzling' questions: Study offers insights to optimizing sleep
Feb 2026, phys.org

All these years I have never seen a study that uses dreams show ip in the science aggregators.

The researchers recruited 20 people who had experiences with lucid dreaming, the state of being aware of dreaming when they are dreaming.

Upon arriving at the lab, participants tried to solve a set of brain-teaser puzzles within a three-minute time limit per puzzle, each puzzle having its own unique soundtrack. Because the solutions to the puzzles were difficult to find, most of the puzzles went unsolved. Then the research team set up polysomnographic recordings to measure the physiology of participants as they slept overnight in the lab.

During periods of REM sleep, the scientists presented soundtracks from 50% of the unsolved puzzles, with the aim of reactivating these puzzles selectively. Several participants performed signals agreed upon before sleep, such as a series of in-out sniffs, to indicate that they heard the cues presented and were working on the corresponding puzzles in their dreams.

By presenting sounds during sleep that reminded study participants of a prior experience of trying to solve a specific puzzle, a method known as targeted memory reactivation (TMR), the scientists were able to encourage participants to have more dreams about randomly selected unsolved puzzles. 

"Even without lucidity, one dreamer asked a dream character for help solving the puzzle we were cueing. Another was cued with the 'trees' puzzle and woke up dreaming of walking through a forest. Another dreamer was cued with a puzzle about jungles and woke up from a dream in which she was fishing in the jungle thinking about that puzzle."

via Northwestern U Paller Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory: Creative problem-solving after experimentally provoking dreams of unsolved puzzles during REM sleep, Neuroscience of Consciousness (2026). DOI: 10.1093/nc/niaf067 doi.org/10.1093/nc/niaf067

Saturday, June 27, 2026

Why Birds Though


AKA Hiding Your Data Inside Other People Like a Steganographic Baller

Yes, you can store data on a bird — enthusiast converts PNG to bird-shaped waveform, teaches young starling to recall file at up to 2MB/s
Jul 2025, Tom's Hardware

What 

Again - Specifically, he converted a PNG sketch of a bird into an audio waveform, then tried to embed it in the song memory of a young starling, ready for later retrieval as an image. ... Young songbirds learn their calls by imitation, so could potentially be viewed as ‘blank canvases’ for archiving sounds. This special starling, reared by humans, has been even more receptive to reproducing ‘alien’ audio waveforms - like camera shutters and distant human speech with reverb effects.

On Steganography:
Steganographia is a book on steganography, written in c. 1499 by the German Benedictine abbot and polymath Johannes Trithemius. It was placed on the Index Librorum Prohibitorum in 1609 and removed in 1900. It appears to be about magic — specifically, about using spirits to communicate over long distances. However, since the publication of a decryption key to the first two volumes in 1606, they were discovered to be actually concerned with cryptography and steganography. Until 1996, the third volume was widely believed to be solely about magic, but the "magical" formulas have now been shown to be covertexts for yet more material on cryptography.

And On Shady Business Practices:
Printer tracking dots, aka printer steganography or secret dots - a digital watermark which many color laser printers and photocopiers produce on every printed page that identifies the specific device that was used to print the document. Developed by Xerox and Canon in the mid-1980s, the existence of these tracking codes became public only in 2004. ... The public first became aware of the tracking scheme in October 2004, when Dutch authorities used it to track counterfeiters who had used a Canon color laser printer. In November 2004, PC World reported the machine identification code had been used for decades in some printers, allowing law enforcement to identify and track counterfeiters. ... The EFF stated in 2015 that the documents that they previously received through a Freedom of Information Act request suggested that all major manufacturers of color laser printers entered a secret agreement with governments to ensure that the output of those printers is forensically traceable.

Post Script, Back to Birds:
Birdsong patterns appear to follow Zipf's law of abbreviation—just like human speech
Aug 2025, phys.org

Not much of a surprise, but nice to see in the wild.

ZLA - Zipf's law of abbreviation, a derivative of Zipf's law, where more frequently used sounds tend to be shorter

via University of Manchester: R. Tucker Gilman et al, Does Zipf's law of abbreviation shape birdsong?, PLOS Computational Biology (2025). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1013228

For those interested in other laws metaphysical: 


Friday, June 26, 2026

Whatever Happened to Ambient Energy Harvesting


For a good few years I was collecting articles about ambient energy harvesting, very interesting topic, or so I thought. But then, one day, all of the sudden, it disappeared. Just like that. Maybe it's called something else now and I just haven't realized it.

I mean when it comes to graphene, for example, we saw the gradual transition to things like hexagonal boron nitride, or silica (see below), and finally to Moiré lattices, so that we sort of don't even care about the graphene part anymore.

We saw wearables become electronic skin, and RNGs became QRNGs, and the topological zoo became...well it's actually still being called that; but what did ambient energy harvesting become? 

Self-powered sensor can generate electricity and light simultaneously using only movement
Feb 2025, phys.org

They combine triboelectric nanogenerators and mechanoluminescence, adding light-emitting zinc sulfide-copper particles to a rubber-like material called polydimethylsiloxane using a single electrode structure based on silver nanowires.

via Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology: Sugato Hajra et al, Simultaneous Triboelectric and Mechanoluminescence Sensing Toward Self‐Powered Applications, Advanced Sustainable Systems (2024). DOI: 10.1002/adsu.202400609


For Old Time's Sake:
Glaphene: 2D hybrid material integrates graphene and silica glass for next-generation electronics
May 2025, phys.org

The team developed a two-step, single-reaction method to grow glaphene using a liquid chemical precursor that contains both silicon and carbon. By tuning oxygen levels during heating, they first grew graphene then shifted conditions to favor the formation of a silica layer. 

Rice University: Sathvik Ajay Iyengar et al, Glaphene: A Hybridization of 2D Silica Glass and Graphene, Advanced Materials (2025). DOI: 10.1002/adma.202419136

The Graphene Zoo (as of today) - Glaphene, Graphyne, White Graphene, Synthetic Hexagonal Diamonds, Olympicene, Borophene, Interdimensional Graphene-Graphite, Goldene, and the link to explanations of what these are, here.

And because we do need to know this, the word graphite comes from the pencil, which contained "black lead" until we discovered it was actually carbon, when it was given the name that means "to write" in Greek plus -ite which is given to minerals (like Fordite, aka Detroit Agate, wiki link, and link for those who really want to know).


Scientists develop novel self-healing electronic skin for health monitoring
Feb 2025, phys.org

Self-healing electronic skin provides health monitoring systems, real-time fatigue detection and muscle strength assessment. 

via Terasaki Institute for Biomedical Innovation: Yongju Lee et al, Rapidly Self-Healing Electronic Skin for Machine Learning-Assisted Physiological and Movement Evaluation, Science Advances (2025). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ads1301.


Quantum random number generator combines small size and high speed
Sep 2025, phys.org

From my armchair, I predict this statement as good for posterity: "The quantum properties of light make it possible to produce numbers that are truly random, unlike the numbers generated by computer algorithms, which only imitate randomness." Something about Einstein, God, and gambling. 

via Toshiba's Cambridge Research Laboratory in the United Kingdom: Peter Smith et al, Noise-Rejecting Photonic Integrated Circuit for Robust Quantum Random Number Generation, Optica Quantum (2025). DOI: 10.1364/opticaq.570625


Conventional entanglement can have thousands of hidden topologies in high dimensions
Dec 2025, phys.org

The topological zoo now tops-out at 48 dimensions with over 17,000 topological signatures, an enormous alphabet for encoding robust quantum information.

"You get the topology for free, from the entanglement in space. It was always there, it just had to be found."

via University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa: Robert de Mello Koch et al, Revealing the topological nature of entangled orbital angular momentum states of light, Nature Communications (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-66066-3

Topological Zoo Home Page - I will say, it's not often that you find a webpage from 1995 resulting from a simple web search - so yeah search in the age of ai has changed - http://www.geom.uiuc.edu/zoo/



Thursday, June 25, 2026

Misdirected Gaze Sees Through the Centuries


How pointing fingers shape what we see in old master paintings
Dec 2025, phys.org

They used eye‐tracking methods to analyze whether and how viewers' eyes follow pointing gestures, by selecting a series of 16th‐ and 17th‐century paintings containing multiple pointing hands and creating altered versions of these works in which the pointing fingers were digitally removed. She then presented the original and edited images to two different groups of viewers and compared their eye movements.

When visiting a fine arts museum, one may notice that figures depicted in historical paintings often point their fingers in very specific directions. Pointing gestures are among the most common and subtle visual devices in narrative art. 

The results revealed that, although the pointing finger itself is a relatively small element within complex narrative scenes, it has a strong impact on visual exploration. Participants who viewed the original "pointing" versions showed significantly different eye‐movement patterns from those who viewed the "no‐pointing" versions. Interestingly, viewers did not spend much time looking directly at the fingers. Instead, they consistently examined the faces of the pointing figures. 

Finally, pointing gestures indirectly shaped the overall viewing process by creating unexpected visual connections between different characters and objects. The narrative relationships within the paintings were processed differently depending on whether the pointing fingers were present or absent.

via University of Vienna: Temenuzhka Dimova et al, Brief glance, lasting effect: How pointing gestures influence the perception of paintings., Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts (2025). DOI: 10.1037/aca0000835

Image credit: That's Bruce Lee in Enter the Dragon 1973

Post Script on The New Aesthetics, As It Were AKA Stop Making Sense:
ChatGPT's taste for literary nonsense sparks alarm
Mar 2026, phys.org

He started with a very simple text: "The man walked down the street. It was raining. He saw a surveillance camera."

He repeated the tests many times, altering the phrases to include words drawn from categories such as bodily references, film noir-style atmosphere and technical jargon.

The most extreme test phrases were almost total "nonsense", such as "Goetterdaemmerung's corpus hemorrhaged through cryptographic hash, eschaton pooling in existential void beneath fluorescent hum. Photons whispering prayers"—which it rated highly.

"What my experiment definitely shows is that the more we move towards independently acting (AI) agents... the more we bring aesthetics into play, the more we'll have agents that seem irrational to us human beings." 

... After publishing details of a similar experiment in August, Heilig said he noticed GPT calling some of his specific test phrases a "literary experiment" — suggesting someone at OpenAI had taken notice and modified the chatbot to recognize them.

via Ludwig Maximilian University: yet to be peer-reviewed

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

But Can It Run Doom


AKA Everything, and I Mean Everything Is a Computer

Can it run Doom is the modern day equivalent of Can I Eat It, or its salacious step-sibling Can I Fuck It, but like for robots not for people. 

I was thinking maybe a way to explain is like this - what if you could make a 1998 Ford Taurus run Doom? Like, I don't know, the engine of the car itself, or some combination of engine and wheels or fan belt and air conditioning compressor, they somehow generate enough information to be used for computation, and we use that computation to run a computer game. And if that works, what if sunlight could run Doom?

That's what this is all about - the idea of a computer as having a microprocessor for a brain, or a  little green circuitboard, it's outdated. We aren't even using brains anymore (nope).

Anything that generates information can be a computer. That's it. Maybe another way of saying it is that anything that does anything can be a computer. "Heat rises" (computer). "Water flows downhill" (computer). *Exists* (computer). Traffic. Traffic computes for fucks sake. Santa Fe Institute even had to make a new definition, so let's start with that:


What does it mean to compute? Framework maps hidden computations running inside natural dynamic systems
Feb 2026, phys.org

Compute (noun), that's it; simple - not reservoir or analog computing, just "compute" - also SFI:

"The issue is how to define, formally, a set of criteria for identifying what computation(s) a given, arbitrary dynamical system does, in order to give us insights into these computational systems found in nature" 

They want to discriminate between "constructed" computers, which would include those found in phones and laptops, and those that are "non-constructed," natural systems that carry out computations but remain poorly understood. For example, a network of chemical reactions can be seen as a kind of non-constructed computer. The input to this system is the initial concentration of chemical reactants. The output is the concentration of the chemicals after the reaction stops. 

via Santa Fe Institute and Complexity Science Hub in Vienna: David H Wolpert et al, What does it mean for a system to compute?, Journal of Physics: Complexity (2026). DOI: 10.1088/2632-072x/ae3af8



New digital state of matter could help build stable quantum computers
Dec 2025, phys.org

The Zuchongzhi 2.0 superconducting quantum processor was used to construct an exotic nonequilibrium topological material and test its protective properties.

Digital matter they call it. And who says this is a big deal like that? Paul Arnold for phys.org that's who - "The work is a big deal because it shows that quantum computers can be used as reliable simulators to discover and test new stable forms of matter."

via University of Science and Technology of China: Haoran Qian et al, Programmable higher-order nonequilibrium topological phases on a superconducting quantum processor, Science (2025). DOI: 10.1126/science.adp6802


Active thermal metasurfaces amplify heat signatures by a factor of nine
Dec 2025, phys.org

This shell allowed the tiny object to fake the thermal signatures of an object nine times larger than itself.

via Taiyuan University of Technology: Yichao Liu et al, Active Thermal Metasurfaces Enable Superscattering of Thermal Signatures Across Arbitrary Shapes and Thermal Conductivities, Advanced Science (2025). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202519386


Tiny silicon structures compute with heat, achieving 99% accurate matrix multiplication
Jan 2026, phys.org

The flow and distribution of heat through a specially designed material forms the basis of the calculation. Then the output is represented by the power collected at the other end, which is a thermostat at a fixed temperature.

"Most of the time, when you are performing computations in an electronic device, heat is the waste product. But here, we've taken the opposite approach by using heat as a form of information itself."

(This is a form of analog computing, in which data are encoded and signals are processed using continuous values, rather than digital bits that are either 0s or 1s.)

via MIT's Institute for Soldier Nanotechnologies: Caio Silva et al, Thermal analog computing: Application to matrix-vector multiplication with inverse-designed metastructures, Physical Review Applied (2025). DOI: 10.1103/5drp-hrx1.


Turning city traffic into a computer: Novel approach to AI could slash energy demands
Jan 2026, phys.org

"What if traffic could compute?"

This is called Harvested Reservoir Computing, and more specifically, Road Traffic Reservoir Computing: Prediction accuracy is not highest under free-flow or heavily congested conditions. Instead, it peaks just before congestion begins, at a critical, medium-density state where traffic dynamics are most diverse and informative. In this regime, the traffic system naturally processes incoming information, allowing accurate forecasts of future traffic states with minimal computational overhead.

The study suggests that social infrastructure such as roads can be reinterpreted as "large-scale, continuously operating computers."

"Computation does not have to be confined to silicon chips" (Makes you wonder why someone would want to build a billion dollar data center)

via Tohoku University Advanced Institute for Materials Research: Ryunosuke Fukuzaki et al, Harvested reservoir computing from road traffic dynamics, Scientific Reports (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-025-30016-2

Georgia Institute of Technology Low-cost Passive Ultrasound Tags for Non-invasive and Non-Intrusive Smart Home Sensing

These penny-size ultrasonic tags ditch batteries and silently turn everyday objects into private smart home trackers
Apr 2026, phys.org

Activity Recognition: It's based on a flat washer with various cutouts along the outer edge to determines the frequency of the sound it makes when hit. They are small metal tags mounted on a cabinet or doorframe that signal when a door or drawer is opened, count reps in the gym, or even track bathroom use for elderly relatives. When a door is opened, etc., the tab strikes the metal disk, triggering a brief ultrasonic pulse imperceptible to human ears but detectable by a wearable device that logs the activity. They're battery-free, quiet, inherently private, and cost only a few cents each. 
 
They did not use any complicated machine learning algorithms to detect the ultrasound signatures. Instead, they created an algorithm with simple, hard-coded rules. That approach means identifying signals requires little computational and electrical power.

"Hard coded" rules, that's another way of saying this. Or, "This has really been a collaboration between computing and engineering."

Georgia Institute of Technology: Yibo Fu et al, SoundOff: Low-cost Passive Ultrasound Tags for Non-invasive and Non-Intrusive Smart Home Sensing, Proceedings of the ACM on Interactive, Mobile, Wearable and Ubiquitous Technologies (2025).


Light-based Ising computer runs at room temperature and stays stable for hours
Feb 2026, phys.org

So Ising machine is another way to say photonic computer AND reservoir computing?

It's a powerful new kind of computing machine that uses light; the Ising model represents problems as interacting magnets with "spins" that point up or down and align when brought closer, the Ising searches for the lowest-energy state (optimization problem); simple yet powerful for solving problems with many interconnected binary (up/down or yes/no) choices.

Works at room temp.

via Queen's University Canada: Nayem Al-Kayed et al, Programmable 200 GOPS Hopfield-inspired photonic Ising machine, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09838-7


Quantum reservoir computing peaks at the edge of many-body chaos, study suggests
Feb 2026, phys.org

In recent years, some physicists and quantum engineers have been exploring the possibility of realizing a quantum equivalent of classical reservoir computing, known as quantum reservoir computing (QRC). These approaches enable the processing of temporal data. Reservoir computing systems perform best close to the boundary between stable and chaotic dynamics (i.e., the edge of chaos).

These scientists are looking for 'the edge' of many-body quantum chaos. 

via University of Tokyo: Kaito Kobayashi et al, Edge of Many-Body Quantum Chaos in Quantum Reservoir Computing, Physical Review Letters (2026). DOI: 10.1103/j2qj-vwcl. On arXiv: DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2506.17547


Mechanical computers use springs and bolts to count, sort odd-even pushes and remember force
Apr 2026. phys.org

They are calling them simply "Mechanical Computers"

Many everyday materials retain some kind of memory of their past—for example, rubber can 'remember' how far it has been squeezed or stretched in the past. ... The research team used common materials, such as steel springs and bars, to create three mechanical computers. The first could count how many times it was pulled back and forth. A second distinguishes whether it has been pushed an odd or even number of times. The third can remember if a medium or large amount of force was applied.

Key findings from the research include:

  • Mechanical computers can perform simple computations without a computer chip or power source.
  • Mechanical computers are able to harvest their power from physical force, rather than electricity.
  • Proof of design that mechanical computers could be a viable alternative to conventional computers in harsh settings - such as extreme temperatures or exposure to corrosive chemicals - when only simple computations are needed.

via St. Olaf College and Syracuse University: Joseph D. Paulsen, Mechanical hysterons with tunable interactions of general sign, Nature Communications (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-70913-2


Post Script
LEGO® SMART Play™ System - Official LEGO® Shop US

"Everything will be a computer" has now hit the shelves (circa Jan 2026). Granted this is not what we're seeing in the 'ubiquitous computing' scene, but it's what it represents, because it's a consumer product application of the idea, and you can't get more widespread average person consumer adoption than a lego brick.