Sunday, June 14, 2026

Network Science 1st Dimension

 

We're starting a series of articles about network science. There's been a lot in the news this past several months, and so there's a handful more of these posts to come. As expected, some of this comes from Northeastern, home of the Barabasi Labs that brought us network science proper, at the same time actual social networks were forming, not yet Facebook, but more like Napster, etc., circa 2001. Then there's the Santa Fe Institute and the Vienna Complexity Hub, both institutions focusing on complexity theory, which often includes network science.

If you want to know how ideas spread, or how to control an entire population in six easy steps, this is where you start. Just remember, we don't really have fake people yet, but we're almost there. And when we do, all this science will be used, by them, against us. 


Mapping out the hidden mechanics behind why some fads spread like wildfire
Nov 2025, phys.org

It's group pair interactions all the way down: As pairs of people meet up, the contagious illness or behavior can spread between them. As these two people then interact in groups, either together or separately, this helps to spread it further. The more groups they are in, the further the infection is likely to travel. They found that the higher the overlap of these groups, the easier it is to start an epidemic.

Just read that paper title.

via Northeastern University Network Science Institute in London: Disentangling the Role of Heterogeneity and Hyperedge Overlap in Explosive Contagion on Higher-Order Networks, Physical Review Letters (2025). DOI: 10.1103/z3d5-94zb

Image credit: Slime mold Cribraria purpurea by Igor Rudkovsky - Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition - 2025


Cuisines can be broken down into simple 'culinary fingerprints,' research finds
Nov 2025, phys.org

This is NOT from the people who brought you the original Food Network, the scientists at Northeastern's Barabasi Labs, but a different group entirely:

The Fingerprints:
  • Indian food had the central component of spices in its recipes, 
  • "New World" countries such as the United States, Canada and Australia are "more homogenized", maybe because of the strong immigration cultural blending
  • Scandinavian cuisine shows significantly lower usage of vegetables, herbs, and plants  

The Recipe Data:
  • 23 cuisines from Thai to Eastern European
  • 45,661 recipes made up of 604 ingredients, simplified to 20 network groupings

via Network Science Institute, University of Catania in Italy, Savitribai Phule Pune University in India, Central European University in Austria, CENTAI Institute in Turin and Complexity Science Hub in Austria: Claudio Caprioli et al, The networks of ingredient combinations as culinary fingerprints of world cuisines, arXiv (2024). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2408.15162


Climate policies can backfire by eroding 'green' values, study finds
Dec 2025, phys.org

Santa Fe Institute does memetics: They surveyed more than 3,000 Germans representative of the country's demographics, asking about climate policies and for comparison COVID-19 policies. Restrictions that promote carbon-neutral behavior, like urban car bans, may trigger strong negative reactions — even among people who would voluntarily choose sustainable lifestyles. They found a 52% greater negative response to climate mandates than to COVID-19 mandates.

^Which is hard to believe considering how unrelentingly pissed off people got about covid restrictions.

"The science and technology to provide a low-carbon way of life is nearly solved. What's lagging behind is a social–behavioral science of effective and politically viable climate policies." Mandate resistance was less for people who felt that policies were effective, didn't restrict their freedom of choice, and were not intrusive on their privacy or their body.

via Santa Fe Institute: Katrin Schmelz et al, An empirically based dynamic approach to sustainable climate policy design, Nature Sustainability (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41893-025-01715-5

*Katrin Schmelz is SFI Complexity Postdoctoral Fellow, behavioral economist and psychologist who also holds an Associate Professorship at the Technical University of Denmark.


People swear on social media more with acquaintances than with friends — analysis can help detect fake profiles
Dec 2025, phys.org

Americans use the f-word more frequently on social media than Australians or Britons, but Australians are more creative in its use. To account for the heterogeneity of social media communication, the study first identified more than 2,300 spelling variants of the f-word in the dataset. 

The research team analyzed social media updates and Twitter networks from 2006–2023, covering nearly half a million individuals in thousands of social networks, from Australia, the U.K. and the U.S. and including metadata such as location and other contextual information. Then they assessed how closely or loosely connected people were. 

Results:
  • Tendency to use the f-word clearly increases with acquaintances when compared with close friends
  • Swearing was rare in very small social networks of less than 15 people, regardless of how close-knit they were, suggesting that network size is a key determinant of swearing
  • But the distinction between friends and acquaintances became irrelevant when the network size reached around 100–120 people; earlier research shows trust is stronger in small networks than in larger ones, with the distinction at roughly one hundred members.

And why is this important you ask?

AI can easily produce text. Instead, researchers should also examine the networks within which language is being used. "These networks are extremely difficult to fake because they create a digital fingerprint for each user. They reflect a user's previous social media behavior, making profiles identifiable." Combining these data with, e.g., swear word usage frequency within a particular network, can help determine whether an account is real or not.

via University of Eastern Finland: Mikko Laitinen et al, Do we swear more with friends or with acquaintances? F#ck in social networks, Lingua (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.lingua.2025.103931


Scientists use string theory to crack the code of natural networks
Jan 2026, phys.org

Get the heck outta here.

"There seems to be a universal rule governing the formation of biological networks. This optimization rule is purely geometric. It does not care about types of materials or tasks, and it turns out to be quite universal and applicable to many different datasets."

"We were treating these structures like wire diagrams. But they're not thin wires, they're three-dimensional physical objects with surfaces that must connect smoothly." It turns out they follow rules borrowed from an unlikely source: string theory.

The work represents the first time string theory — a framework developed to unify quantum mechanics and gravity — has successfully described real biological structures. 

via Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Albert-László Barabási: Surface optimization governs the local design of physical networks, Nature (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09784-4. www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09784-4
https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09784-4


Saturday, June 13, 2026

Info Wars


Accelerating Access to Research Results: Since the release of NIH’s 2008 Public Access Policy, more than 1.5 million articles reporting on NIH-supported research have been made freely available to the public through PubMed Central. While the 2008 Policy allowed for an up to 12-month delay before such articles were required to be made publicly available, in 2024, NIH revised the Public Access Policy to remove the embargo period so that researchers, students, and members of the public have rapid access to these findings. --Source: National Institutes of Health, April 30 2025 [link]

If you're interested in the publishing industry and how it works, and how it doesn't, you may need to watch this talk from an old DEFCON event: DEF CON 26 - Svea, Suggy, Till - Inside the Fake Science Factory - 2018 [youtube



India takes out giant nationwide subscription to 13,000 journals
Dec 2024, Science

For the haters - India was the third largest producer of research papers globally last year - yet thousands of Indian students and researchers cannot read many of them because their institutions can’t afford subscriptions to the journals in which many appear. But that is about to change: Last week, the Indian government announced a giant deal with multiple publishers that will allow an estimated 18 million students, faculty, and researchers free access to nearly 13,000 journals, including some top-tier ones, through a single portal. ($715 million over 3 years to 30 global publishers).

Update: India proposes charging OpenAI, Google for training AI on copyrighted content
Dec 2025, Tech Crunch

Partially Unrelated Post Script: The Handmaid's Tale is a dystopian novel about totalitarian takeover , written by Margaret Atwood in 1985 [wiki]. In May 2022, Atwood announced that an "unburnable" copy of the book would be produced and auctioned off to "stand as a powerful symbol against censorship". On 7 June 2022, the unique, "unburnable" copy was sold through Sotheby's in New York for $130,000. (I have to assume it was made of asbestos? Nope - nickel wire, stainless steel, aluminum and fire-resistant inks.)
--Pengelly, Martin (24 May 2022). "Atwood responds to book bans with 'unburnable' edition of Handmaid's Tale". The Guardian.


Friday, June 12, 2026

Optomania


I'm starting to get bedazzled by the light hype, it's like there's nothing you can't say at this point that might not be actually true. Disembodied decentralized swarm neurons? Yes. Artificial evolution engine running on hijacked bacterial botnets? Sure. Non-electronics-based large-scale programmable incoherent photonic neuromorphic computing system? That is exactly what was going to happen all along. The somatic override helmet that shoots lasers into your bloodstream is a bit over the top however. 


When light 'thinks' like the brain: The connection between photons and artificial memory
Feb 2026, phys.org

(It was a surprise they said.) Italian researchers show that identical photons propagating within optical circuits spontaneously behave like a Hopfield Network, one of the best-known mathematical models used to describe the associative memory mechanisms of the human brain.

"In this system, photons are not merely carriers of data, but themselves become the 'neurons' of an associative memory."

via Italian Institute of Technology, Nanotechnology of the National Research Council, and Sapienza University of Rome: Gennaro Zanfardino et al, Multiphoton Quantum Simulation of the Generalized Hopfield Memory Model, Physical Review Letters (2026). DOI: 10.1103/945c-11wt



Light-guided 'optovolution' evolves proteins that switch states on schedule
Mar 2026, phys.org

Optovolution - uses light to guide the evolution of proteins with dynamic, multi‑state, and computational functions - making yes-or-no decisions based on specific rules

The team built their system in the budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, widely used to brew beer and a laboratory workhorse. They rewired the yeast's cell cycle so that progression depended on the protein to be evolved, switching cleanly between off and on states.

The key was linking the protein's output signal to a cell‑cycle regulator that is essential at one stage but toxic at another. If the protein of interest stayed on or off for too long, the yeast cell stalled or died. Only cells in which the protein oscillated correctly could keep dividing.

via EPFL Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne Laboratory of the Physics of Biological Systems: Light-directed evolution of dynamic, multi-state, and computational protein functionalities., Cell (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2026.02.002


Photonic chips advance real-time learning in spiking neural systems
Mar 2026, phys.org

"Photonic spiking neural systems use brief optical pulses, or spikes, to emulate neural signaling, but they can typically only process the linear parts of computation using light. Previously, the nonlinear steps that make learning and decision-making possible required the signal to be converted back into electronic signals. This adds delay and undercuts the speed and energy advantages of photonics."

via Xidian University in China: Shui Xiang et al, Nonlinear Photonic Neuromorphic Chips for Spiking Reinforcement Learning, Optica (2026). DOI: 10.1364/optica.578687


Physicists create optical phenomenon inspired by the quantum Hall and spin Hall effects
Mar 2026, phys.org

The findings open up new possibilities for applications such as topological polariton lasers, spin-based transistors, and optical information processing.

via University of Würzburg: Simon Widmann et al, Artificial gauge fields and dimensions in a polariton hofstadter ladder, Nature Communications (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-026-68530-0


Ultrasound creates light inside the body, opening a new path to targeted treatments
Apr 2026, phys.org

I believe they are shooting lasers through the fluids in your blood vessels - I'll be on my way now.

Nanomaterials distributed through the bloodstream to turn ultrasound waves into precise points of light - "With these materials, we can produce light emission in the brain, in the gut, in the spinal cord, in the muscle—virtually anywhere—without needing a physical implant."

They started with large, ceramic particles that give off light in response to mechanical stress, which can be created by ultrasound waves. Then they created a biocompatible coating for the particles and injected them into mice.

The researchers created a small ultrasound-producing hat for mice, and used it to create light that stimulated different neurons, causing the mouse to turn left or right depending on the part of the brain being activated.

via Stanford University: Shan Jiang et al, An ultrasound-scanning in vivo light source, Nature Materials (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-026-02556-z

Thursday, June 11, 2026

On the Tip of the Telepathic Tongue


Distinguishing 'things' from 'stuff': Brain's visual processing areas separate solid objects from flowing substances
Jul 2025, phys.org

Things - rigid or deformable objects like a bouncing ball
Stuff - liquids or granular substances such as sand

"When you're looking at some fluid or gooey stuff, you engage with it in different way than you do with a rigid object. With a rigid object, you might pick it up or grasp it, whereas with fluid or gooey stuff, you probably are going to have to use a tool to deal with it" 

via MIT: Dissociable Cortical Regions Represent Things and Stuff in the Human Brain, Current Biology (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2025.07.027. 



Language structure shapes color-adjective links even for people born blind, study reveals
Apr 2025, phys.org

"Certain colors are strongly associated with certain adjectives (e.g., red is hot, blue is cold)" 

"Some of these associations are grounded in visual experiences such as seeing glowing red embers. Surprisingly, despite having no visual experience, many congenitally blind people show very similar color associations, which are likely learned through language. We show that these associations are indeed embedded in the statistical structure of language."

via University of Wisconsin-Madison: Qiawen Liu et al, Learning about color from language, Communications Psychology (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s44271-025-00230-9.


A universal rhythm guides how we speak: Global analysis reveals 1.6-second 'intonation units'
Aug 2025, phys.org

Human speech across the world pulses to the beat of what are called intonation units, short prosodic phrases that occur at a consistent rate of one every 1.6 seconds.

Intonation units play a critical role in helping listeners follow conversations, take turns speaking, and absorb information. 

The research analyzed over 650 recordings in 48 languages spanning every continent and 27 language families.

via Hebrew University: Maya Inbar et al, A universal of speech timing: Intonation units form low-frequency rhythms, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2425166122


What's in a name? Information structure parallels discovered across cultures—with repercussions for Asian names
Feb 2026, phys.org

(ie, Name Entropy)

Fixing of Western last names around the 1600's meant a loss of information within the naming system, which had to be compensated for - which is why first names now convey more and more information (there's more first names than there used to be).

Naming systems must allow for the separate identification of a large number of people, while keeping the total number of words required by the system manageable so that they don't overtax people's brains as they process them.

In England, in every 50-year period between 1550 and 1880, half of the male population was given the first names John, William, or Thomas, and half the female population Ann, Mary, or Elizabeth.

Today, in Korea, it's the opposite, in both ways, because half the population still has 6 names, and in Asia, they come first, not last - Kim Jong Il would be called Jong Il Kim in the West. And I can't find it in the paper but I think the 6 names would be something like Kim, Park, Lee, Son, ...

From the paper itself, using badminton player Simon Archer and the basketball player Yao Ming 姚明 - Simon and Yao are names, whereas Archer is an English word for someone who shoots arrows with a bow, and Ming is a Chinese word meaning brightness.

The problem is that, because of the focus on inherited names in the Western system, the order of names of researchers from East Asian countries is reversed for publication. For Asian researchers, this means that the part of the name that conveys more information is initialized, and the part that conveys less is written out in full.

"For researchers from China today, it is as if Charles Darwin, Charles Dickens, and Charles Dodgson had all been forced to publish their works under the name Charles D."

via University of Tübingen, MIT, UC Irvine, U of Texas at Austin: Michael Ramscar et al, Cross-cultural structures of personal name systems reflect general communicative principles, Nature Communications (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-67079-8


Study suggests people are losing 338 spoken words every year and have been for at least 15 years
Apr 2026, phys.org

(Surprise) We were replicating an earlier paper on gender differences in how many words men and women speak per day. My collaborator, Valeria Pfeifer, came to me with the word counts from the replication analyses using the same methodology as our 2007 paper, but with 2,200 new participants across 22 studies. Our estimate of daily spoken word average came in at around 12,700 words. Our 2007 estimate had been 15,900. I told her there had to be a mistake. But she rechecked everything, and the number held. Something had genuinely changed.

These studies were conducted for entirely different purposes—coping with breast cancer, adjustment after divorce, the social effects of meditation, relationship dynamics. None of them were designed to track how much people talk over time. Participants had no idea their word counts would ever be analyzed this way, which rules out any concern that people adjusted their behavior to fit a hypothesis.

Young adults under 25 showed a steeper decline, about 452 words per year, compared to 314 for older adults.

via University of Arizona and University of Missouri–Kansas City: Valeria A. Pfeifer et al, Sliding Into Silence? We Are Speaking 300 Daily Words Fewer Every Year, Perspectives on Psychological Science (2026). DOI: 10.1177/17456916261425131


Small talk shapes big trends: Physics predicts how language patterns spread
May 2026, phys.org

The model is a step towards understanding the "statistical physics of language" - Professor Burridge tested his approach against large-scale survey data on American dialects collected by the Cambridge Online Survey of World Englishes, created by Bert Vaux, a professor of linguistics at the University of Cambridge. 

In 1950, the term roly-poly for a woodlouse was largely confined to a relatively small group of speakers in the American South. By 1995, the term had spread dramatically, becoming almost universal across much of the United States.

"Splinter is used across almost all of England, except around Newcastle, where people still say spelk. Although Newcastle itself is densely populated, it is surrounded by more sparsely populated areas, which helps the local form hold its ground and prevents splinters from taking over.

University of Portsmouth: James Burridge, Statistical field theory for dialectology, Physical Review E (2026). DOI: 10.1103/7f86-mxf2.
On arXiv: DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2512.17668

Post Script: I was thinking about the word zig-zag, and whether or not I actually made up the word wiggle-waggle or if I heard it somewhere. And after that I was thinking why have one and the other but not ziggle zaggle or wig-wag. 

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Unexpected Intent


Superheated gold withstands 'entropy catastrophe': New method challenges established physics
Jul 2025, phys.org

In an experimental debut, the team superheated solid gold far beyond the theoretical limit, unexpectedly overturning four decades of established theory. The team was thrilled to have successfully demonstrated this technique—and as they took a deeper look at the data, they discovered something even more exciting.

"We were surprised to find a much higher temperature in these superheated solids than we initially expected, which disproves a long-standing theory from the 1980s," White said. "This wasn't our original goal, but that's what science is about—discovering new things you didn't know existed."

In their recent study, the team discovered that the gold had been superheated to an astonishing 19,000 kelvins (33,740 degrees Fahrenheit) - more than 14 times its melting point and well beyond the proposed entropy catastrophe limit - all while maintaining its solid crystalline structure.

"It's important to clarify that we did not violate the Second Law of Thermodynamics," White said with a chuckle. "What we demonstrated is that these catastrophes can be avoided if materials are heated extremely quickly — in our case, within trillionths of a second."

The researchers believe that the rapid heating prevented the gold from expanding, enabling it to retain its solid state. The findings suggest that there may not be an upper limit for superheated materials, if heated quickly enough.

via US Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory: Thomas G. White et al, Superheating gold beyond the predicted entropy catastrophe threshold, Nature (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-025-09253-y

Image credit: Crushed Crushed Tomatoes, found in the wild at local Shop Rite


Very different mammals follow the same rules of behavior: Research hints at an underlying architecture
May 202,5 phys.org

Across behaviors, individuals, and species, one common principle emerged: The longer an animal stays in one behavioral state, the less likely it is to change it in the next moment. "This was unexpected"

via Max Planck Institute of Animal Behavior: Pranav Minasandra et al, Behavioral sequences across multiple animal species in the wild share common structural features, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2503962122


How a one‑eyed creature gave rise to our modern eyes
Feb 2026, phys.org

"The results are a surprise. They turn our understanding of the evolution of the eye and the brain upside down"

All vertebrates evolved from a distant ancestor that had a single eye located at the top of its head, and the remnants of this so-called median eye have today become the pineal gland in our brains.

600 million years ago, a worm that had two eyes, for some reason, lost them, but kept a group of light-sensitive cells in the middle of its head that developed into a small, primitive median eye that could keep track of night and day, and sense what was up and down.

A million years later, from parts of the small median eye, new image-forming eyes in pairs developed. 

"Now we finally understand why the eyes of vertebrates differ so radically from the eyes of all other animal groups, such as insects and squid. The film of our eyes—the retina—developed from the brain, whereas the eyes of insects and squid originate in the skin on the sides of the head."

A fascinating fact is that remnants of the ancient parietal median eye from our distant ancestor actually remain in our heads today, transformed into the pineal gland. The pineal gland is a light-sensitive organ in the vertebrate brain. It produces the hormone melatonin, which helps regulate the body's circadian rhythm.

"It's mind-boggling that our pineal gland's ability to regulate our sleep according to light stems from the cyclopean median eye of a distant ancestor 600 million years ago,"

via Lund University: George Kafetzis et al, Evolution of the vertebrate retina by repurposing of a composite ancestral median eye, Current Biology (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2025.12.028

Post Script: Pineal Organoids

Lab-grown pineal gland organoids produce melatonin, offering a new sleep model
Apr 2026, phys.org

via Yale University: Ferdi Ridvan Kiral et al, Generation of human pineal gland organoids with melatonin production for disease modeling, Cell Stem Cell (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.stem.2025.12.004


Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Believe It or Not Everything Is Made of Plastic


This title is supposed to be a joke, and a pun, because artificial spacetime is obviously "plastic", in the original sense of the word. But really, just about anything called "natural" is actually made of petrochemicals and other industrial by-products, because people who buy words instead of things can't tell the difference! 
 
Microrobots overcome navigational limitations with the help of 'artificial spacetimes'
Nov 2025, phys.org

Researchers found that the robots' motion is formally identical to the path light takes in general relativity, which allowed them to develop a mathematical framework mapping robot motion to geodesics in a curved spacetime defined by a control field — as in other reactive control methods. The team used conformal transformations to map complex environments to simple virtual spaces, then designed control fields and mapped them back. They refer to the resulting geometric framework as "artificial spacetimes."

via University of Pennsylvania Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering: William H. Reinhardt et al, Artificial spacetimes for reactive control of resource-limited robots, npj Robotics (2025). DOI: 10.1038/s44182-025-00058-9

Image credit: Also fake


Bamboo dishes may leach pesticides and melamine into food
Nov 2025, phys.org

"The 'natural' label can be dangerously misleading. Many of these products are essentially plastic dishes made from melamine-formaldehyde resin containing bamboo filler. Our research shows this combination can accelerate the polymer's degradation and increase the migration of harmful substances like melamine, especially into hot or acidic foods and drinks."

  • Melamine was present in 32% of the tested products; 33 bio-based dishes including bowls, cups, and dining sets purchased from markets in the Czech Republic, the United Kingdom, and China. 
  • Six of the bamboo-based products released melamine above the European Union specific migration limit (SML) of 2.5 mg/kg. 
  • Melamine leached into common beverages, including hot lemon tea and orange juice, highlighting a direct route of consumer exposure.
  • Several bio-based dishes, particularly those made from cereals, contained residues of pesticides.
  • Disinfectants were the primary residues found in the bamboo-based items.

Although the use of bamboo as an additive in plastic food contact materials has been banned in the EU since 2021 due to these risks, the study confirms that these items are still available for purchase. The research highlights the false advertising common with these products, which are often labeled as "100% bamboo" or "biodegradable" despite being composed of a plastic resin.

via University of Chemistry and Technology Prague: Kamila Bechynska et al, Comprehensive assessment of bamboo and other bio-based dishes contamination, Food Control (2025). DOI: 10.1016/j.foodcont.2025.111188


Why strange cures made sense in mysterious times
Dec 2025, phys.org

"We wanted to know whether the logic of folk medicine followed psychological patterns and it does. The more uncertain or mysterious the illness, the more likely the cure involved magic or religion."

Researchers from Brunel University of London have mined a rare archive of 3,655 folk cures, collected in the 1930s, from an extraordinary national folklore project launched in Ireland. About 50,000 schoolchildren were asked to interview parents, grandparents and neighbors about local history, beliefs and cures. Teachers then transcribed the accounts, creating one of the most detailed records of oral folk medicine ever compiled. They were recently digitized. 

To make sense of the archive, researchers focused on 35 diseases and asked two doctors to rate each one according to how understandable it would have seemed to a layperson at the time, both in terms of what caused the illness and what was going on in the body. Obvious cases like cuts and sprains were marked as "certain"; conditions like tuberculosis, warts, or epilepsy were labeled more mysterious.

"It's pretty unsatisfying just not having a solution of any form. When there aren't particularly good medical solutions, I expect people will keep searching for something that makes sense."

via Brunel University of London Center for Culture and Evolution: Mícheál de Barra et al, Mysterious illnesses have supernatural and ritualistic cures: Evidence from 3,655 century-old Irish folk cures, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2025). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2511006122


FDA-cleared brain stimulation device for ADHD is not effective
Jan 2026, phys.org

(I really believe that placebo is about to take over the mental health field, and that the field will be completely blindsided by it)

"There is a large placebo effect with high-tech brain therapies, in particular for patients and families that have an expectation that they can adjust brain differences associated with ADHD. It is hence paramount to control for placebo effects in modern brain therapies to avoid false hopes."

via King's College London Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience: Conti, A.A. et al. External trigeminal nerve stimulation in youth with ADHD: a randomized, sham-controlled, phase 2b trial, Nature Medicine (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41591-025-04075-x


The next generation of disinformation: AI swarms can threaten democracy by manufacturing fake public consensus
Jan 2026, phys.org

  • Synthetic consensus - the illusion that "everyone is saying this"
  • Fabricated chatter - fake people talking 
  • AI swarm - set of AI-controlled agents that maintain persistent identities and memory; coordinate toward shared objectives while varying tone and content; adapt in real time to engagement and human responses; operate with minimal oversight; and deploy across platforms. 
  • Bonus: fake chatter can contaminate training data, extending its influence

via University of Konstanz: Daniel Thilo Schroeder et al, How malicious AI swarms can threaten democracy, Science (2026). DOI: 10.1126/science.adz1697


Hegemonic Power, Synthetic Humans, and the SAG-AFTRA-AI Manifesto


It might be considered the first real big fight between humans and robots. To summarize into a very, very simple, and incomplete explanation, it happens at a time when the labor union of people who work on movies have to re-negotiate their contract with the people who pay them. They went on strike for 118 days, the longest actors’ strike in Hollywood history. Now they have a new contract.

The problem was that if there's one thing artificial intelligence can do, it's art (as opposed to law, medicine, engineering, etc.). Not saying it's necessarily good at art, but it's sure as hell good enough for the people who pay for movies to be made, and who then go on to make money off those movies. Not sure if it's good enough for the people who pay to watch these movies, but then again, it doesn't seem like anyone needs to care about consumers anymore anyway, so...the people who work on movies are in for a fight if they want to be treated like humans. 

The problem, for the rest of us, is that we're humans too. Well, not if you're reading this, because the only people who read this weblog are in fact robots. But the rest of us are humans. And for the first time since Africa, we are facing real competition.

Below is a report about the 2023 SAG-AFTRA labor story, and some good bits about how humans and robots are being positioned against each other in the labor market, and what that might mean for us in the future. It's written by Data and Society Institute (citation at the very bottom, and in-text references you'll just have to get for yourself from the document; because sorry sir this is a Wendy's). 

*SAG-AFTRA - Screen Actors Guild – American Federation of Television and Radio Artists
*Image credit: Gundam style mechabot made in japan - japantimes www.japantimes.co.jp


On Common Sense, Machine Learning and Big Data
Common sense, or a skewed perception of reality that perpetuates the status quo as normal, natural and unquestionable, is an expression of hegemonic power. The concept of common sense describes commonly held — yet nonetheless fragmented and heterogenous - knowledge that often goes unquestioned as fact (Gramsci,1926/1971). 
 
According to critical theorist Hito Steyerl's (2023) power analysis of machine learning technologies, the power of the owning class depends on its seizure of data. Thus, the discussion of for-profit technology, and speci!cally various applications that track, record, and classify user data, can never be liberatory, despite the claims of the companies, industries, and institutions promising safety, accessibility, efficiency, and sustainability (Bender and Hanna, 2025; Benjamin, 2019).

The “common sense” of AI, that is, the widely-held belief that AI is a foregone conclusion, functions as an articulation of hegemonic power. In this frame, we seek to understand how the labor movement can meaningfully intervene.

AI is not simply a discursive formation that stands as a “common sense” foregone conclusion, it also obfuscates large-scale, transnational coordination of resources, labor, and people who make up the infrastructures that are required for arti!cial intelligence. This matters because it broadens the base for possible coalition building to be mobilized in these “processes of subtraction” (Steyerl, 2023, p. 12).

Data and Society, 2026


See Figure 1 - The four strategies on the left negotiate with the common sense of AI, giving it power and weight, as these strategies work with AI as it is, instead of disengaging with the common sense of AI, and pushing these technologies to work that are commons-based or people-centered.

Robots in Human Clothing, ie The Corporate Flesh Engine
Amazon has long referred to their Mechanical Turk platform as artificial intelligence, but there have always been humans doing the often-underpaid work of classifying and sorting content of all types, increasingly in the Global South (Crawford, 2021; Gonzalez-Cabello et al., 2025). This hidden labor has been referred to as “ghost work” (Gray and Suri, 2019; Muldoon et al., 2024) and “human-fueled automation” (Irani, 2019), drawing attention to the people who power AI systems. 

Synthetic Performers (i.e., entirely digitally-produced performers created through generative AI). The [new negotiated contract] establishes guidelines around the creation and use of “digital replicas” and “synthetic performers.”

Digital replicas are digital reproductions of an actor's voice or likeness. The contract described two types of digital replicas: “employment-based digital replicas” and “independently created digital replicas.”

Employment-based digital replicas are those that are created during the actors’ physical participation in work through methods such as scanning, which can then be used to depict the actor in scenes they did not actually perform.

Independently created digital replicas are made without the actor's physical participation and can perform in scenes that they did not perform. The parameters of consent and compensation vary depending on the type of technology utilized. The guidelines for synthetic performers created through generative AI are less robust than those for digital replicas. Synthetic performers are entirely digitally-produced performers created through generative AI that do not resemble a recognizable actor and are not voiced by a person. The contract requires that studios who want to use a synthetic performer must notify and provide the union with opportunities to bargain over the usage of a synthetic performer in lieu of hiring a human performer. A document drafted by the union with frequently asked questions on AI notes that “for wholly synthetic assets, [studios] cannot use them without notifying the union and bargaining. Had we not done that, there was nothing stopping them from using these synthetic assets without anyone's consent.”

The contract also notes that if studios create a synthetic performer through prompting a generative AI system using a performer's name and their “principal facial feature” — the mouth, nose, eyes, or ears — that is recognizable, studios must bargain with the performer and obtain their consent.

However, for synthetic performers and independently created digital replicas, there are exceptions for consent with regards to uses protected by the First Amendment. A summary of the tentative agreement lists these exceptions as “comment, criticism, scholarship, satire or parody, use in a docudrama, or historical or biographical work.” In the aforementioned types of projects, studios do not need to obtain consent from performers to use their digital doubles.

--Source: Big Data & Society. Dis/engaging the ‘common sense’ of AI: Labor strategies 
from the 2023 SAG-AFTRA around data-driven technologies. Mar 2 2026. Emma May, Britt Paris and Serita Sargent, Rutgers School of Communication & Information.