Friday, July 29, 2022

Completely Unrelated


Regent honeyeater: Endangered bird 'has forgotten its song' 
Mar 2021, BBC News

"They don't get the chance to hang around with other honeyeaters and learn what they're supposed to sound like," explained Dr Ross Crates.

During this painstaking search, he started to notice birds that were "singing weird songs".
He recalled: "They didn't sound anything like a regent honeyeater - they sounded like different species."

Songbirds learn their songs the same way that humans learn how to speak.

via: Crates Ross, et al. 2021. Loss of vocal culture and fitness costs in a critically endangered songbird. Proc. R. Soc. B. 2882021022520210225http://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2021.0225

"Even small numbers of extricates could synthesize a basic cognition support network. The outer fringe was full of such partially configured quasi-humans, fumbling together towards a mutant existence."
-Mass Transference Device, 2010

Image credit: An illustration of the chain-reaction process that underlies the photon avalanching mechanism Columbia Engineering researchers have realized in their nanoparticles. In this process, the absorption of a single low-energy photon sets off a chain reaction of energy transfers and further absorption events that result in many highly excited ions within the nanoparticle, which then release their energy in the intense emission of many higher-energy photons. Credit: Mikołaj Łukaszewicz/ Polish Academy of Sciences


Researchers find 12 semidetached mass-transfer massive binaries in galaxy M31
Apr 2022, phys.org

In this study, the researchers have found that the relationship between the mass ratio and the fill-out factor of the primary star reveals that they are in the stage of slow mass transfer from less massive components to their companions with the reversed mass ratio.

via Chinese Academy of Sciences: F.-X. Li et al, Semidetached Mass-transfer Massive Binaries in the Nearby Galaxy M31, The Astronomical Journal (2022). DOI: 10.3847/1538-3881/ac5685

Thursday, July 28, 2022

Fractals Are the Future


Topological synchronization of chaotic systems
Apr 2022, phys.org

Topological Synchronization, the Zipper Effect, and Chaos Coupling:

As chaotic systems are being coupled, the fractal structures of the different systems will start to assimilate with each other, taking the same form, causing the systems to synchronize.

And to say another way, fractals emerge from chaos, and at the same time, they provide structure to the chaos, which allows it to snap into a higher order of complexity with other chaoses (I do hear someone saying this is a legit scrabble word).

Chaos is random and unpredictable. Scientists hate it. You have no way of knowing what the system is going to do. Like the three-body problem of three stars orbiting each other, one will eventually get kicked out, but you have no way of knowing how it will happen, you can only measure the probability.

They do follow the "strange attractor" pattern though, where if given enough time, a pattern will emerge, not exact, but a shape recognizable enough that you can make a better prediction. Pendulums do this, and the famous water wheel analogy does too, except that each time you do it, the pattern will be different, unique to the pre-existing conditions of that moment alone -- the pendulum will make a new attractor pattern every time you run it. 

But within that pattern are fractals, and it's the fractals of all the attractor patterns of all the chaotic systems out there that act as the bridge to synch them up.

They showed that as chaotic systems are being coupled, the fractal structures start to assimilate each other causing the systems to synchronize. If the systems are strongly coupled, the fractal structures of the two systems will eventually become identical, causing a complete synchronization between the systems.

They termed this phenomenon Topological Synchronization.

Above image credit: Cell Division - Pixabay - 2022


Cut to the David Byrne experiment, where he's trying to find backup dancers:
Noemie began with an exercise I’ve never forgotten. It consisted of four simple rules:
  • Improvise moving to the music and come up with an eight-count phrase. (In dance, a phrase is a short series of moves that can be repeated.)
  • When you find a phrase you like, loop (repeat) it.
  • When you see someone else with a stronger phrase, copy it.
  • When everyone is doing the same phrase the exercise is over.
It was like watching evolution on fast-forward, or an emergent lifeform coming into being. At first the room was chaos, writhing bodies everywhere. Then one could see that folks had chosen their phrases, and almost immediately one could see a pocket of dancers who had all adopted the same phrase. The copying had begun already, albeit just in one area. This pocket of copying began to expand, to go viral, while yet another one now emerged on the other side of the room. One clump grew faster than the other, and within four minutes the whole room was filled with dancers moving in perfect unison. 
-How Music Works, David Byrne, 2012 (p67-68)
 
And back again:
"When the two chaotic systems are weakly coupled, the process usually starts with only particular fractal structures becoming identical. These are sets of sparse fractals that rarely will emerge from the activity of the chaotic system.

Synchronization starts when these rare fractals take a similar form in both systems. To get complete synchronization there must be a strong coupling between the systems. Only then will dominant fractals, that emerge most of the time from the system's activity, also become the same. 

They called this process the Zipper Effect.
But does David Byre approve?

via Bar-Ilan University, Israel: Nir Lahav et al, Topological synchronization of chaotic systems, Scientific Reports (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-06262-z
 
Post Script:
Think about how the complexity of neuron-firing in the brain is a chaotic system, and how fractals are at play here.

Fractal brain networks support complex thought
Oct 2021, phys.org

via Dartmouth College: High-level cognition during story listening is reflected in high-order dynamic correlations in neural activity patterns, Nature Communications (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25876-x

Can consciousness be explained by quantum physics? Research is closer to finding out
Jul 2021, phys.org

via Cristiane de Morais Smith and Xian-Min Jin at Shanghai Jiaotong University: Xu, XY., Wang, XW., Chen, DY. et al. Quantum transport in fractal networks. Nat. Photon. (2021).

And you know Isaac Asimov already got us there:
Isaac Asimov's Robot Dreams -- a robot named Elvex (LVX-1) is updated with "fractal geometry" because the offending young scientist though it would "produce a brain pattern with more complexity, possibly closer to that of a human". The robot begins to dream about self-preservation, in direct opposition to the Laws of Robots, and is subsequently killed ("killed").


Wednesday, July 27, 2022

Word Olympics


Wordporn is a word I use to tag articles that make the word part of my brain excited. But after listening to a recent talk about hyper-heteronormalization algorithms on porn websites at a computer enthusiast conference, and maybe something about the normalization of porn in general, I left thinking maybe word-porning like food porn, sports porn, or car porn is a bad idea. 

Maybe word candy will do. I wonder where all this word-porning came from anyway. Maybe it started with food porn. I find a 2010 article in Gastronomica, The Journal for Food Studies titled "Food Porn", where the author attempts to find the origin of the phrase, but uses the phrase "sex porn" and I just had to stop there, because that's an interesting retronym if I've ever heard one. 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Retronym



Scientists prepare for 'anthropulse' as COVID-19 travel restrictions ease
Mar 2022, phys.org

Anthropulse

via University of St Andrews: Studying pauses and pulses in human mobility and their environmental impacts, Nature Reviews Earth and Environment (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s43017-022-00276-x


Novel theory of entropy may solve materials design issues
Mar 2022, phys.org

Zentropy
Zentropy theory notes that the thermodynamic relationship of thermal expansion, when the volume increases due to higher temperature, is equal to the negative derivative of entropy with respect to pressure, i.e., the entropy of most material systems decreases with an increase in pressure. This enables Zentropy theory to be able to predict the change of volume as a function of temperature at a multiscale level, meaning the different scales within a system. Every state of matter has its own entropy, and different parts of a system have their own entropy.
via Pennsylvania State University: Zi-Kui Liu et al, Zentropy Theory for Positive and Negative Thermal Expansion, Journal of Phase Equilibria and Diffusion (2022). DOI: 10.1007/s11669-022-00942-z


A diffractive neural network that can be flexibly programmed
Mar 2022, phys.org

Programmable Artificial Intelligence Machine (PAIM).

via Southeast University, Peking University and Pazhou Laboratory in China: Che Liu et al, A programmable diffractive deep neural network based on a digital-coding metasurface array, Nature Electronics (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41928-022-00719-9


The 25 happiest US city park systems, ranked by scientists
Apr 2022, phys.org

The Hedonometer

via University of Vermont: Gauging the happiness benefit of US urban parks through Twitter, PLoS ONE (2022). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0261056


Study improves the understanding of superconductivity in magic-angle twisted trilayer graphene
Apr 2022, phys.org

Magic-Angle Twisted Trilayer Graphene

They just keep adding more words. First it was twisted graphene, then they found a magic angle to the twist that made it even more conductive, and then they realized the graphene sandwiches, maybe nanosandwiches.

via Brown University: Xiaoxue Liu et al, Isospin order in superconducting magic-angle twisted trilayer graphene, Nature Physics (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-022-01515-0


Treating diabetes without drugs? Novel non-pharmacologic treatments are on the horizon
Apr 2022, phys.org

Bioelectronic Medicine

It modulates the body's nervous system.

via Yale: Victoria Cotero et al, Stimulation of the hepatoportal nerve plexus with focused ultrasound restores glucose homoeostasis in diabetic mice, rats and swine, Nature Biomedical Engineering (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41551-022-00870-w


In a sea of magic angles, 'twistons' keep electrons flowing through three layers of graphene
Apr 2022, phys.org

Twistons

(vs magic-angle twisted trilayer graphene, who wins?)

via Columbia University Quantum Initiative: Simon Turkel, Joshua Swann, et al. Orderly disorder in magic-angle twisted trilayer graphene. Science 376, 193-199 (2022) DOI: 10.1126/science.abk1895


Researchers identify a new treatment for metabolic syndrome
Apr 2022, phys.org

A Receptor Trap

"We used the discovery of the asprosin-receptor to develop a new drug called a receptor trap," 

via University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center: Mishra et al, Protein tyrosine phosphatase receptor δ serves as the orexigenic asprosin receptor, Cell Metabolism (2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.cmet.2022.02.012


Optical vortex crystals for photonic simulations of complex systems
Apr 2022, phys.org

This one's packed: twisted light generators, light vortices, ordered light crystals, nanostructured optical devices, metasurface array, laser cavity

via Italian Institute of Technology: Marco Piccardo, Vortex laser arrays with topological charge control and self-healing of defects, Nature Photonics (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41566-022-00986-0.


A protein that detects cold and menthol may also be key to migraine headaches
Apr 2022, phys.org

Migraineurs

"Those who experience migraine are known as migraineurs"

via University of Southern California: Chao Wei et al, Transient receptor potential melastatin 8 (TRPM8) is required for nitroglycerin and calcitonin gene-related peptide induced migraine-like pain behaviors in mice, Pain (2022). DOI: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000002635


Research discovers new bacteria that stick to plastic in the deep sea to travel around the ocean
Apr 2022, phys.org

The Plastisphere

Deep-sea bacteria traveling on plastic particles comprise the 'plastisphere'. Don't forget that the anthropocene is then in fact mostly defined by the plastisphere, albeit the one that's in the geological record.

Also: Newcastle University scientists have found new types of plastic loving bacteria that stick to plastic in the deep sea that may enable them to 'hitchhike' across the ocean.

Thinking about the Metabolism of the Anthroposphere and other very large systems, and how it's thought that the dinosaurs changed the biosphere by transporting seeds across the primeval Earth and over millions of years. 

What happens in a million years now that we've given a very small slice of the bacteria kingdom the means to travel across the globe in ways never seen before?

via Newcastle University: Max R. Kelly et al, Bacterial colonisation of plastic in the Rockall Trough, North-East Atlantic: An improved understanding of the deep-sea plastisphere, Environmental Pollution (2022). DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119314


Direct printing of nanodiamonds at the quantum level
May 2022, phys.org

Just Quantum Nanodiamonds

via University of Hong Kong: Zhaoyi Xu et al, On‐Demand, Direct Printing of Nanodiamonds at the Quantum Level, Advanced Science (2021). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202103598

Just Let Someone Else Do It


What if one day someone thought it would be a good idea to "protect" nature's ideas, and make it against the law to use biomimetic designs as being in violation of intellectual property? Kind of how one global superpower thinks that (highly protected) innovative technological advances grow on trees, so they're fair game to copy from another global superpower, when in fact they are the result of tons of investment in research and development, as well as the maintenance of an open market that encourages competition and novel solutions. 

So what if someone thought that if we can't respect the investment that Nature has made in creating all these really effective design solutions, then we're not allowed to use them in technologies that destroy nature's R&D factory (i.e. Earth)? Stranger things happen. 

Image credit: Powered a microprocessor continuously for a year using nothing but ambient light and water, Paolo Bombelli, 2022 [link]


The surprising structural reason your kitchen sponge is disgusting
Feb 2022, phys.org

Pattern Language already knows this.

Some bacteria thrive in a diverse community while others prefer a solitary existence. And a physical environment that allows both kinds to live their best lives leads to the strongest levels of biodiversity.

via Duke University: Feilun Wu et al, Modulation of microbial community dynamics by spatial partitioning, Nature Chemical Biology (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41589-021-00961-w

Notes:
  • A Pattern Language - Towns, Buildings, Construction. Christopher Alexander, Sara Ishikawa, Murray Silverstein. Oxford University Press. New York. 1977.
  • Pattern 240 - Half Inch Trim


Water as a 'glue' for elasticity enhanced, wet attachment of biomimetic structures
Apr 2022, phys.org

Octopus, clingfish and larva use soft biological cups to attach to surfaces under water. Elasticity-enhanced hydrodynamics improved self-healing and high suction at the cup substrate interface to convert water into "glue." The concept of water glue can therefore be used for...

Did he just say "water glue?"

via Leibniz Institute for New Materials in Germany and Mechanical Science and Engineering at U. of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: Yue Wang et al, Water as a "glue": Elasticity-enhanced wet attachment of biomimetic microcup structures, Science Advances (2022). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abm9341

Also, via Weizmann Institute and Oxford: Uri Raviv et al, Fluidity of water confined to subnanometre films, Nature (2002). DOI: 10.1038/35092523


Plant-inspired TransfOrigami microfluidics
May 2022, phys.org

Origami isn't biomimetic (is it?), but it does show up often in this arena...

Bioinspired transformable microfluidics with stimuli-responsive materials embedded to respond to temperature, humidity, and light irradiance.

via Mechanical Engineering at the University of Hong Kong: Yi Pan et al, Plant-inspired TransfOrigami microfluidics, Science Advances (2022). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abo1719

Also: Xiaoshi Qian et al, Artificial phototropism for omnidirectional tracking and harvesting of light, Nature Nanotechnology (2019). DOI: 10.1038/s41565-019-0562-3


A water-repellent nanomaterial inspired by nature
Sep 2021, phys.org

"Novel superhydrophobic films" can stay dry even when submerged underwater.

If you've been paying attention to biomimicry at all, you would already know this is based on the lotus leaf, which is really good at repelling water.

In this case, they're using fullerenes (a special Epcot-center-like arrangement of carbon molecules) to create finger-shaped fullerites. Instead of etching the surface of the material, which is what we would normally have to do, they add these fullerites to a gel and apply it.

via University of Central Florida NanoScience Technology Center: Rinku Saran et al, Organic Non‐Wettable Superhydrophobic Fullerite Films, Advanced Materials (2021). DOI: 10.1002/adma.202102108


Nature-inspired self-sensing materials could lead to new developments in engineering
May 2022, phys.org

Mixing a common form of industrial plastic with carbon nanotubes allows the otherwise nonconductive plastic to carry an electric charge throughout its structure.

When the structure is subjected to mechanical loads, its electrical resistance changes. This phenomenon, known as piezoresitivity, gives the material the ability to "sense" its structural health.

The high-resolution 3D printing method allows "mesoscale porous architecture, which helps to reduce each design's overall weight and maximize mechanical performance", but when I hear "porous", all I think is bacterials growth and chemical reservoirs. If this becomes a norm in the fabrication of building materials, it would make the microbiology of buildings into a whole new animal. We might even have to start seeing the building as being alive. 

via University of Glasgow: Jabir Ubaid et al, Multifunctionality of Nanoengineered Self‐Sensing Lattices Enabled by Additive Manufacturing, Advanced Engineering Materials (2022). DOI: 10.1002/adem.202200194


The future of data storage is double-helical, research indicates
Mar 2022, phys.org

I am the storage now.

"DNA is one of the best options, if not the best option, to store archival data especially," said Chao Pan, a graduate student at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and a co-author on this study.

Its longevity rivaled only by durability, DNA is designed to weather Earth's harshest conditions—sometimes for tens of thousands of years—and remain a viable data source. Scientists can sequence fossilized strands to uncover genetic histories and breathe life into long-lost landscapes.

via Beckman Institute for Advanced Science and Technology: S. Kasra Tabatabaei et al, Expanding the Molecular Alphabet of DNA-Based Data Storage Systems with Neural Network Nanopore Readout Processing, Nano Letters (2022). DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.1c04203


Immune to hacks: Inoculating deep neural networks to thwart attacks
Mar 2022, phys.org

An immune-inspired defense system for neural networks 

Immune systems are about to blast off into phase one of the hype cycle. 

via University of Michigan: Ren Wang et al, RAILS: A Robust Adversarial Immune-Inspired Learning System, IEEE Access (2022). DOI: 10.1109/ACCESS.2022.3153036

Sun-loving bacteria skyscrapers harvested for waste electrons, Gabriella Bocchetti, 2022. Researchers from the University of Cambridge used 3D printing to create grids of high-rise ‘skyscrapers’ where sun-loving bacteria can grow quickly. The researchers were then able to extract the bacteria’s waste electrons, left over from photosynthesis, which could be used to power small electronics. [link]

Tiny 'skyscrapers' help bacteria convert sunlight into electricity
Mar 2022, phys.org

Bacteria batteries that run on wasted electrons.

The approach is competitive against traditional methods of renewable bioenergy generation and has already reached solar conversion efficiencies that can outcompete many current methods of biofuel generation.

"The electrodes have excellent light-handling properties, like a high-rise apartment with lots of windows," said Zhang. 

via University of Cambridge: Jenny Zhang, 3D-printed hierarchical pillar array electrodes for high-performance semi-artificial photosynthesis, Nature Materials (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-022-01205-5.


Algae-powered computing: Scientists create reliable and renewable biological photovoltaic cell
May 2022, phys.org

Comparable in size to an AA battery, contains a type of non-toxic algae called Synechocystis that naturally harvests energy from the sun through photosynthesis. The tiny electrical current this generates then interacts with an aluminum electrode and is used to power a microprocessor.

"We were impressed by how consistently the system worked over a long period of time—we thought it might stop after a few weeks but it just kept going"

via University of Cambridge and Arm:  P. Bombelli et al, Powering a microprocessor by photosynthesis, Energy & Environmental Science (2022). DOI: 10.1039/D2EE00233G


Self-propelled, endlessly programmable artificial cilia
May 2022, phys.org

Single-material, single-stimuli programmable microstructure that can outmaneuver even living cilia. 

Unlike previous research, which relied mostly on complex multi-component materials to achieve programmable movement of reconfigurable structural elements, Aizenberg and her team designed a microstructure pillar made of a single material—a photoresponsive liquid crystal elastomer that realign and change shape when light hits it.

"We showed that we can program the choreography of this dynamic dance by tailoring a range of parameters, including illumination angle, light intensity, molecular alignment, microstructure geometry, temperature, and irradiation intervals and duration," said Michael M. Lerch, a postdoctoral fellow in the Aizenberg Lab and co-first author of the paper.

"When these pillars are grouped together, they interact in very complex ways because each deforming pillar casts a shadow on its neighbor, which changes throughout the deformation process," said Li. "Programming how these shadow-mediated self-exposures change and interact dynamically with each other could be useful for such applications as dynamic information encryption."

via Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences: Shucong Li et al, Self-regulated non-reciprocal motions in single-material microstructures, Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04561-z


Monday, July 25, 2022

Just Future Things


Google loses Sonos patent case, starts stripping functionality from speakers
Jan 2022, Ars Technica

From the comment section:
Considering the update is going to come from Google, encrypted, and the devices basically need to be able to phone home to Google to be worth a damn in the first place, there's likely nothing you can do to avoid the update and continue getting any use out of them (username Erifnomi).

The future is now -- you can buy a physical product, and think you own it, but the product doesn't work without the software inside.

Success -- there is no longer any such thing as ownership, at least not by consumers. 

You don't believe me? BMW's car seat heaters aren't activated without a subscription. The heating elements are there, but the on-button doesn't belong to you. (Ars Technica cleared this up a bit, since it's apparently not what it sounds like, although it is more confusing than it probably should be.)

Surely my eyeballs must belong to me, right? Right? Once again, you, the proverbial consumer, are a sucker (not you, but the proverbial you), and I repeat -- nothing belongs to you. 

Products, all products, are not meant to be used, they are meant to be purchased, and that is all. Have you ever wondered why it's possible for you to spend $25 on a pair of fancy scissors, which come in a skin-tight impenetrable package, which requires such force to open it (and which would be so much easier if you had I don't know a pair of scissors) that you damage the product in the process of trying to remove it from its package..? How about a $250 piece of furniture? Same. Surely a $2,500 refrigerator manufacturer would not commit such a heinous crime against their own consumers? But that's missing the point, because the refrigerator was never meant to be used by you, only purchased by you. After that, the manufacturer could care less what happens. (Unless of course they can extract data from you via their product, in which case they will care a lot). Registration and warranties? You must be new here, please register with your phone number before continuing.


Mass. lawmakers want to tweak connected car “right to repair” law
Jan 2022, Ars Technica

Massachusetts had "right to repair" laws since 2013, but now they're trying to update those laws for the digital age -- the new law would require carmakers explain what data gets taken from your car and sent elsewhere.

(Now would be a good time to remember one of the "laws of data collection" from Erik Larson's The Naked Consumer - data will always be used for purposes it was not intended for.)

Luckily we won't even have to fight about it, since some carmakers are already deactivating the telematics in the car regardless (thanks!). 

Sidenote:
Ford is recalling 40k 2021 Ford Expedition and Lincoln Navigator SUVs and 100k 2020 - 2022 Corsair, Escape and Maverick hybrids because they could spontaneously combust while parked. They ask you to park "outside and away from structures" until they figure out what's wrong. (?!) Got it. [engadget link, July 2022]

Post Script:
“Open the pod bay doors, HAL.”
"I'm sorry, Dave. I'm afraid I can't do that."

Double Inversions and Meta Recursions


At the risk of appearing to support quantum consciousness...it sure looks like consciousness is about as hard to study as a quantum particle, and for somehow similar reasons. 

For a quantum-entangled proton, the moment you "observe" it, even if that observation is a single photon of light needed to detect the entangled proton, the moment you hit it with your detector-photon, you irreversibly change the entangled photon. Schrödinger's cat is both dead and alive only until you open the box to look. Then it's either one or the other, but not both.

Another way of saying this is that quantum experiments are so sensitive, that the measurer (you and your measuring device) must be part of the measurement. But this logically impossible, albeit fun to think about, and to think about thinking about.

Research on consciousness is something like this. If you design a study to investigate a particular theory, the study itself will help to prove that theory. But if you try to investigate a different and competing theory, the study will prove that theory instead. And so on.


The nature of consciousness experiments found to largely determine their results
Mar 2022, phys.org

"Moreover, when you put together all of the findings that were reported in these experiments, it seems like almost the entire brain is involved in creating the conscious experience, which is not consistent with any of the theories. In other words, it would appear that the real picture is larger and more complex than any of the existing theories suggest. It would seem that none of them is consistent with the data, when aggregated across studies, and that the truth lies somewhere in the middle."

Also, and most importantly, remember this whenever you see other studies on consciousness.

via Tel-Aviv University: Itay Yaron et al, The ConTraSt database for analysing and comparing empirical studies of consciousness theories, Nature Human Behaviour (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41562-021-01284-5


Same goes for studies on brains in general:
For accuracy, brain studies of complex behavior require thousands of people
Mar 2022, phys.org

The results of most studies are unreliable because they involved too few participants.

Using publicly available data sets—involving a total of nearly 50,000 participants—the researchers analyzed a range of sample sizes and found that brainwide association studies need thousands of individuals to achieve higher reproducibility. Typical brainwide association studies enroll just a couple dozen people.

Such so-called underpowered studies are susceptible to uncovering strong but spurious associations by chance while missing real but weaker associations. Routinely underpowered brainwide association studies result in a glut of astonishingly strong yet irreproducible findings that slow progress toward understanding how the brain works, the researchers said.

But don't despair just yet:

"The field of genomics discovered a similar problem about a decade ago with genomic data and took steps to address it. The NIH (National Institutes of Health) began funding larger data-collection efforts and mandating that data must be shared publicly, which reduces bias and as a result, genome science has gotten much better. Sometimes you just have to change the research paradigm. Genomics has shown us the way."

via Washington University School of Medicine: Scott Marek, Reproducible brain-wide association studies require thousands of individuals, Nature (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04492-9




Something something consciousness study:
Largest ever psychedelics study maps changes of conscious awareness to neurotransmitter systems
Mar 2022, phys.org

Interesting because they use words, by way of testimonials, and a good dose of machine learning:

The researchers gathered 6,850 testimonials from people who took a range of 27 different psychedelic drugs. In a first-of-its-kind approach, they designed a machine learning strategy to extract commonly used words from the testimonials and link them with the neurotransmitter receptors that likely induced them. The interdisciplinary team could then associate the subjective experiences with brain regions where the receptor combinations are most commonly found—these turned out to be the lowest and some of the deepest layers of the brain's information processing layers.

via McGill University: Galen Ballentine et al, Trips and neurotransmitters: Discovering principled patterns across 6850 hallucinogenic experiences, Science Advances (2022). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.abl6989.


Post Script on the Nature of Unreliability:
New maps show airplane contrails over the US dropped steeply in 2020
Mar 2022, phys.org

I'm not adding this here because of the drop in contrails. I'm adding it because today I learned:

About half of the aviation industry's contribution to global warming comes directly from planes' carbon dioxide emissions. The other half is thought to be a consequence of their contrails. The signature white tails are produced when a plane's hot, humid exhaust mixes with cool humid air high in the atmosphere. Emitted in thin lines, contrails quickly spread out and can act as blankets that trap the Earth's outgoing heat.

So contrails are bad. But contrails are often confused with chemtrails, which are a popular conspiracy theory. In fact, you can usually guess someone's ability to be a careful thinker by whether they even know the difference between chemtrails and contrails (Not too much different from knowing the difference between astronomy and astrology). Because if you're with someone who's looking at a contrail, and makes some sinister comment about chemtrails, then there's a pretty good chance they also think the government is very intentionally performing multi-generational chemogenetic experiments on the population.

But now I realize that making sinister comments about contrails is totally normal. 

via MIT: Vincent R Meijer et al, Contrail coverage over the United States before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, Environmental Research Letters (2022). DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac26f0


Reporting bias makes homeopathy trials look like homeopathy works
Mar 2022, Ars Technica

The Achilles heel of the randomized control trial (RCT) - the meta-study. Yes, apparently, homeopathic proponents, and the like, don't realize that meta-studies exist. 

"There's always a bias toward publishing positive results—ones where the treatments have an effect."

The secret? Just don't publish the negative results. Got it.

To deal with that issue, the field has settled on preregistering clinical trials. In these cases, the design of the trial, the outcomes being measured, and other details are placed in a public database before the trial even starts. 

via Department for Evidence-based Medicine and Evaluation, Danube University Krems, Austria and RTI International, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina: BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine, 2019. DOI: 10.1136/bmjebm-2021-111846 


Bonus:
Vitamins, supplements are a 'waste of money' for most Americans
Jun 2022, phys.org

Based on a systematic review of 84 studies, the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) new guidelines state there was "insufficient evidence" that taking multivitamins, paired supplements or single supplements can help prevent cardiovascular disease and cancer in otherwise healthy, non-pregnant adults.

"The harm is that talking with patients about supplements during the very limited time we get to see them, we're missing out on counseling about how to really reduce cardiovascular risks, like through exercise or smoking cessation," Linder said.

via Northwestern University: Multivitamins and Supplements—Benign Prevention or Potentially Harmful Distraction?, JAMA (2022).

Thursday, July 21, 2022

Anthropogenic Metabolic Disorder


While the wheels are finally starting to roll on the apocalypse train, it's gotten harder for fossil fuel businesses to hide behind their multi-generational psychological operations campaign on the people of the civilized world. (Western France is facing a "heat apocalypse", experts have warned, BBC July 2022.)

Yet, just as this is happening, it's also becoming apparent that pretty much every single thing we do, we do it wrong, and we are destroying the planet in the process.

It's hard to know whether the agricultural industrial complex is organized enough to hide their own contributions to climate change behind the fossil fuel industry, or if we really just didn't know, but it's becoming apparent that industrial farming is a larger climate problem than we thought.

Emissions tied to the international trade of agricultural goods are rising
May 2022, phys.org

Earth system scientists at the University of California, Irvine and other institutions have drawn the clearest line yet connecting consumers of agricultural produce in wealthier countries in Asia, Europe and North America with a growth in greenhouse gas emissions in less-developed nations, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere.

Trade in land-use emissions—which come from a combination of agriculture and land-use change—increased from 5.1 gigatons of carbon dioxide equivalent (when factoring in other greenhouse gas emissions such as nitrous oxide and methane) per year in 2004 to 5.8 gigatons in 2017.

Land-use change—including clearing of carbon-absorbing forests to create space for farms and pastures—contributed roughly three-quarters of the amount of greenhouse gases driven by the global trade of agricultural goods between 2004 and 2017.

"Roughly a quarter of all human greenhouse gas emissions are from land use"

via University of California, Irvine: Chaopeng Hong et al, Land-use emissions embodied in international trade, Science (2022). DOI: 10.1126/science.abj1572

Image credit: Mostly unrelated CFD-porn: Yellow areas indicate low velocity wakes that extend downstream of wind turbines, and the algorithm identifies clusters of turbines (represented by colored rectangles) that can be optimized as a group to obtain a gain in power production. Credit: University of Texas at Dallas

Estimates of the carbon cycle—vital to predicting climate change—are incorrect, researchers show
Apr 2022, phys.org

Key parts of the global carbon cycle used to track movement of carbon dioxide in the environment are not correct

"Either the amount of carbon coming out of the atmosphere from the plants is wrong or the amount coming out of the soil is wrong."

When animals eat plants, the carbon moves into the terrestrial ecosystem. It then moves into the soil or to animals. And a large amount of carbon is also exhaled—or respirated—back into the atmosphere.

I don't know what these numbers mean, but I thought I should add them for context: Using the gross primary productivity of carbon dioxide's accepted number of 120 petagrams, the amount of carbon coming out through soil respiration should be in the neighborhood of 65 petagrams. ... but it's about 95 petagrams, meaning the gross primary productivity should be around 147. For scale, the difference between the currently accepted amount of 120 petagrams and this estimate is about three times the global fossil fuel emissions each year.

Why? The first possibility is that the remote sensing approach may be underestimating gross primary production. The other is the upscaling of soil respiration measurements, which could be overestimating the amount of carbon returned to the atmosphere.

via Virginia Tech and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory: Historically inconsistent productivity and respiration fluxes in the global terrestrial carbon cycle, Nature Communications (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-29391-5

Post Script:
Australia election: How climate is making Australia more unliveable
May 2022, BBC News

MftF:
Australia is facing an "insurability crisis" with one in 25 homes on track to be effectively uninsurable by 2030, according to a Climate Council report. Another one in 11 are at risk of being underinsured.

Post Apocalypse:
Chinese volunteers live in Lunar Palace 1 closed environment for 370 days
Mar 2021, phys.org

The Lunar Palace 1 biosphere is made up of three modules. Two hold facilities for growing food—the third serves as home for the occupants. Air is supplied by the plants, as is the food. Water was recycled during the experiment. The occupants collected it from condensation on surfaces made for that purpose. Also, urine and feces were used as fertilizer. The volunteers also made a type of bread from mealworms that were fed mushrooms, which were grown on plant waste.

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

Oops I Accidentally Kuhned the Universe


AKA Moiré Gravity

Graphene - after many years, I still find it hard to believe that two-dimensional materials aren't talked about more in the news. Isn't the news one big hype machine? If I told you that the discovery of one single material has already been so revolutionary that it requires its own branch of science, a new branch of science, just to understand it, wouldn't you want to know more about that?

Maybe it's because companies can't make money off it yet. No, it's definitely because companies can't make money off it yet (because most news is advertising, which is paid for by the companies who make "newsworthy" things, and we're not talking about the ads, but the content itself, which is a subtle and pervasive form of advertising that some folks might call psychological operations, or just cultural indoctrination).

So I thought graphene was a big deal; I still do. But then this comes out, and now I just give up. 


Bilayer graphene inspires two-universe cosmological model
May 2022, phys.org

This is where true excitement comes from: "The pair of scientists stumbled upon this new perspective..." (i.e., accidental discovery)

They realized that experiments on the electrical properties of stacked sheets of graphene produced results that looked like little universes and that the underlying phenomenon might generalize to other areas of physics.

Stacked graphene's exceptional electrical properties and possible connection to our reality having a twin comes from the special physics produced by patterns called moiré patterns. Moiré patterns form when two repeating patterns—anything from the hexagons of atoms in graphene sheets to the grids of window screens—overlap and one of the layers is twisted, offset, or stretched.

Galitski and Parhizkar realized that the physics in two sheets of graphene could be reinterpreted as the physics of two two-dimensional universes where electrons occasionally hop between universes. 

But wait (cosmological shenanigans) - Whenever researchers attempt to use observations to approximate the cosmological constant, the value they calculate is much smaller than they would expect based on other parts of the theory. More importantly, the value jumps around dramatically depending on how much detail they include in the approximation instead of homing in on a consistent value. This lingering challenge is known as the cosmological constant problem, or sometimes the "vacuum catastrophe."

Galitski and Parhizkar created a mathematical model (which they call moiré gravity) by taking two copies of Einstein's theory of how the universe changes over time and introducing extra terms in the math that let the two copies interact. 

Playing with their model, they showed that two interacting worlds with large cosmological constants could override the expected behavior from the individual cosmological constants. The interactions produce behaviors governed by a shared effective cosmological constant that is much smaller than the individual constants. The calculation for the effective cosmological constant circumvents the problem researchers have with the value of their approximations jumping around because over time the influences from the two universes in the model cancel each other out.

This idea arose spontaneously when they were working on a seemingly unrelated project...

via Joint Quantum Institute: Alireza Parhizkar et al, Strained bilayer graphene, emergent energy scales, and moiré gravity, Physical Review Research (2022). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevResearch.4.L022027

Also: Alireza Parhizkar, Victor Galitski, Moiré Gravity and Cosmology. arXiv:2204.06574v1 [hep-th], arxiv.org/abs/2204.06574


And then this, completely different group of scientists, reported in the same month:

Ghostly 'mirror world' might be cause of cosmic controversy
May 2022, phys.org

New research suggests an unseen "mirror world" of particles that interacts with our world only via gravity that might be the key to solving a major puzzle in cosmology today—the Hubble constant problem.

Just a reminder: The Hubble constant is the rate of expansion of the universe today. Predictions for this rate—from cosmology's standard model—are significantly slower than the rate found by our most precise local measurements. This discrepancy is one that many cosmologists have been trying to solve by changing our current cosmological model.

"Basically, we point out that a lot of the observations we do in cosmology have an inherent symmetry under rescaling the universe as a whole. This might provide a way to understand why there appears to be a discrepancy between different measurements of the Universe's expansion rate."

"In practice, this scaling symmetry could only be realized by including a mirror world in the model—a parallel universe with new particles that are all copies of known particles," said Cyr-Racine. "The mirror world idea first arose in the 1990s but has not previously been recognized as a potential solution to the Hubble constant problem.

via University of New Mexico and University of California Davis: Francis-Yan Cyr-Racine et al, Symmetry of Cosmological Observables, a Mirror World Dark Sector, and the Hubble Constant, Physical Review Letters (2022). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.128.201301

Hide Your Hypotheses, Machine Learning is Coming


Big data, machine learning, artificial intelligence - whatever you want to call it - is moving so fast, and making predictions so unexpected, that it's almost making us look stupid. But we're not. That's how science is supposed to work. 

Image credit: Copy of Ernst Haeckel's 1886 Tree of Life by Paul D Stewart


New research shows gene exchange between viruses and hosts drives evolution
Jan 2022, phys.org

First a reminder of how complicated this all is:

"The first comprehensive analysis of viral horizontal gene transfer..."

HGT allows genes to jump between species including viruses and their hosts. If the gene does something useful, it can sweep through the population and become a feature of that species. This can lead to a rapid emergence of new abilities, as opposed to the more incremental changes that result from smaller mutations.

via  University of British Columbia: Nicholas A. T. Irwin et al, Systematic evaluation of horizontal gene transfer between eukaryotes and viruses, Nature Microbiology (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41564-021-01026-3


Study finds new patterns of antibiotic resistance spread in hospitals
Apr 2022, phys.org

What's really happening is so much more complicated that we thought. You think you know, but you have no idea:

The findings suggest that specific genes, rather than entire organisms, were circulating in hospitals—in some cases, for many years. Notably, the team discovered antibiotic resistance gene transfer between bacteria, connecting patient infections in new ways and also helping to explain the large diversity of CRE species and strains in these hospitals. Typically, hospitals would not connect outbreaks of different CRE species such as E. coli and Klebsiella, but the research team says that information from Salamzade's tool could make hospitals more aware of potential hospital reservoirs for gene exchange and inform epidemiological investigations into antibiotic resistant infections.

"Hospital epidemiology would never find this with more traditional methods," said Earl. "I would argue that this is the kind of thing even our standard genomics approaches wouldn't find. It really took having a hypothesis, building up an approach to allow us to test that hypothesis in a really rigorous way, and then stepping back to look at the data."

via Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard: Rauf Salamzade et al, Inter-species geographic signatures for tracing horizontal gene transfer and long-term persistence of carbapenem resistance, Genome Medicine (2022). DOI: 10.1186/s13073-022-01040-y


Researchers adapt social network analysis to model virus evolution
May 2022, phys.org

Even basic assumptions are wrong:

New research from Western University suggests some viruses evolve more like a dynamic social network—rather than a rigid tree, as was previously believed—recombining with one another to create a web of intersecting subtypes. 

via University of Western Ontario: Abayomi S. Olabode et al, Revisiting the recombinant history of HIV-1 group M with dynamic network community detection, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2022). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108815119


New research shows gene exchange between viruses and hosts drives evolution
Jan 2022, phys.org

Just a reminder of how complicated this all is:

"The first comprehensive analysis of viral horizontal gene transfer..."

HGT allows genes to jump between species including viruses and their hosts. If the gene does something useful, it can sweep through the population and become a feature of that species. This can lead to a rapid emergence of new abilities, as opposed to the more incremental changes that result from smaller mutations.

via  University of British Columbia: Nicholas A. T. Irwin et al, Systematic evaluation of horizontal gene transfer between eukaryotes and viruses, Nature Microbiology (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41564-021-01026-3


Mostly unrelated posts, just highlighting the scientific method hard at work:
Counting bug splats on vehicle license plates shows numbers of flying insects has dropped significantly
May 2022, phys.org

Participants were asked to clean their license plates before heading out on a journey in their vehicle and then to photograph and count the number of bugs they found splattered on the plates when they returned.

The researchers found the number of splats recorded dropped dramatically over the course of the study—total numbers were 58.5% lower at the end of the study than at the beginning (2004 - 2021).

via Kent Wildlife Trust: The Bugs Matter Citizen Science Survey


Self-eliminating genes tested on mosquitoes
May 2022, phys.org

Temporary, self-deleting genetic changes that don't permanently alter wild populations' genetic makeup

via Texas A&M University: Keun Chae et al, Engineering a self-eliminating transgene in the yellow fever mosquito, Aedes aegypti, PNAS Nexus (2022). DOI: 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac037


Post Script:
I'm not sure what to call it, but I'm seeing a pattern emerge, maybe a new category of headlines, something about the unforeseen implications of the climate apocalypse?

Lake Mead: Shrinking reservoir reveals more human remains
May 2022, BBC News

Mount Everest: Melting glaciers expose dead bodies
Mar 2019, BBC News

Thursday, July 14, 2022

Thinking About Sociothermodynamics


Twitter data reveals global communication network
Jul 2020, phys.org

I'd really like to read this study more in depth, but it's paywalled. So here's the methods: 
  • The scientists used the mentions mechanism in Twitter data to map the flow of information around the world. A mention in Twitter occurs when a user explicitly includes another @username in their tweet. This is a way to directly communicate with another user but is also a way to retransmit or retweet content.
  • The investigators examined Twitter data from December 2013 and divided the world into 8,000 cells, each approximately 100 kilometers wide. 
  • They measured modularity, a value that quantifies distance between communities on a network compared to a random arrangement. They also investigated a quantity known as betweenness centrality, which measures the number of shortest paths through each node.
  • 16 significant global communities. Three large communities exist in the Americas: an English-speaking region, Central and South American countries, and Brazil in its own group. Multiple communities exist in Europe, Asia and Africa.
  • Countries who had a common colonizer have a decreased preference of interaction (and suggests  hierarchical interactions with the colonizing country might inhibit interactions between former colonies).

via the MIT Media Lab and New England Complex Systems Institute: Leila Hedayatifar et al, Geographical fragmentation of the global network of Twitter communications, Chaos: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Nonlinear Science (2020). DOI: 10.1063/1.5143256


Geography can become a root cause for inequality when cities are built in a way that fragments social networks
Feb 2021, phys.org

We've known this with the Twitter mountain studies from years ago, but alas:
  • Urban planning directly influences the formation of social networks in a city 
  • Subsequently the socio-economic equality or inequality of its citizens
  • Social relations provide individuals with essential access to resources, information, economic opportunities and other forms of support
  • In towns with more evenly distributed social networks, the economic inequality tended to be much lower 
  • Dataset from Hungary, 2 million individuals from 500 towns via a social media platform used by 40% of the population 
  • "You cannot force people to interact if they don't want to", yet, towns and cities frequently make decisions about the built environment that will have effects on how their inhabitants can meet and interact

via Complexity Science Hub Vienna: G. Toth, J., R. Di Clemente, A. Jakobi, B. Sagvari, J. Kertesz, B. Lengyel, "Inequality is rising where social network segregation interacts with urban topology," Nature Communications (18 Feb 2021) DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21465-0


Mobility data reveals universal law of visitation in cities
May 2021, phys.org

The Sante Fe Institute is good at using scaling laws to determine the number of visitors to any location in a city. They use only these two variables -- how far visitors travel and how often they visit. 

"Imagine you are standing on a busy plaza, say in Boston, and you see people coming and going. This may look pretty random and chaotic, but the law shows that these movements are surprisingly structured and predictable. It basically tells you how many of these people are coming from 1, 2 or 10 kilometers away and how many are visiting once, twice or 10 times a month", says lead author Markus Schläpfer of ETH Zurich's Future Cities Laboratory. "And the best part is that this same regularity holds not only in Boston, but across cities worldwide."

Universally, they found that the number of visitors to any urban location scales as the inverse square of both travel distance from home and the visitation frequency. Like the gravitational pull of a large planet, an attractive city plaza with fine museums and famous shops draws relatively more visitors from more distant locations, though less frequently than those coming from nearby locations, their relative numbers being predictably determined by the inverse square law. A further surprising consequence of this new visitation law is that the same number of people visit the location whether they are coming from, say, 10km away 3 times a week, or from 3km away 10 times a week.

via the  Santa Fe Institute, MIT, and ETH Zürich: The universal visitation law of human mobility, Nature (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03480-9


Forget what you think you know about viral marketing, study suggests
Feb 2021, phys.org

Maybe advertising does work:

Even just a bit of advertising or other mass communication — "top-down" information that comes from outside the network — effectively equalizes the influence of everyone across the network [including the hub at the center, and against Malcolm Gladwell's network position priority described in Tipping Point.]

In instances where there is even a small amount of advertising — even when it is just a quarter of a percent as strong as word-of-mouth — there's virtually no difference between the influence of the person at the center of a network and those further out on the string.

"It takes only an incredibly weak amount of advertising to effectively neutralize the dominance of Mr. Popular." -UCLA professor of sociology Gabriel Rossman, who is also author of Climbing the Charts: What Radio Airplay Tells Us About the Diffusion of Innovation

via University of California, Los Angeles: Gabriel Rossman et al. Network hubs cease to be influential in the presence of low levels of advertising, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2013391118


Communication technology, study of collective behavior must be 'crisis discipline'
Jun 2021, phys.org

Sociothermodynamics code red:
  • Researchers now say that the study of collective behavior must rise to a "crisis discipline," just like medicine, conservation and climate science have done.
  • Social media platforms are driven to maximize engagement and profitability, not to ensure sustainability or accurate information—and the vulnerability of these systems to misinformation and disinformation poses a dire threat to health, peace, global climate and more.
  • No one, not even the platform creators themselves, have much understanding of how their design decisions impact human collective behavior, the authors argue.
  • Good reminder: Historically collective behavior has best been understood as when animals or people exhibit coordinated action without an obvious leader. This includes how fish school to evade predators or when a crowd spontaneously breaks into applause or becomes silent.

via University of Washington: Joseph B. Bak-Coleman el al., "Stewardship of global collective behavior," PNAS (2021). www.pnas.org/cgi/doi/10.1073/pnas.2025764118


Cities like Paris may be optimal urban form for reducing greenhouse gas emissions
Aug 2021, phys.org

  • The built environment accounts for 39% of all greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S.
  • Low-rise, high-density environments are the optimal urban form when looking to reduce greenhouse gas emissions over their whole life cycle
  • Challenges current conventional understanding that tomorrow's cities must be densely packed and stretch upwards to address and curb greenhouse gas emissions
  • Development should focus on minimizing whole-life carbon of buildings, not just the emissions from their operations or their materials
  • Simulating 5,000 environments based on real-world data to establish their lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions
  • Results show that density is indeed needed for a growing urban population, but height isn't

via University of Colorado at Boulder with Edinburgh Napier University: Francesco Pomponi et al, Decoupling density from tallness in analysing the life cycle greenhouse gas emissions of cities, npj Urban Sustainability (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s42949-021-00034-w


Material efficiency holds great potential for climate neutrality
Aug 2021, phys.org

In the case of residential buildings, wood construction and reducing the living space per capita show the greatest savings potential. 

via University of Freiburg: Stefan Pauliuk et al, Global scenarios of resource and emission savings from material efficiency in residential buildings and cars, Nature Communications (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25300-4

Wooden Fractal on Metal FSK - Thom Fractal Forums - 2017

Scientists meld Twitter and satellite views to understand epic impact
Aug 2021, phys.org

  • Unique look at two enormous global projects that are part of China's Belt and Road Initiative, in part to understand if early concerns about environmental damage emerged, and if public sentiment turned critical
  • Examined satellite images of the vast areas the projects covered to see how forests, grassland, bodies of water and other land types changed
  • Nighttime light imagery as a way of gauging economic changes (more lights means more economic development)
  • Carefully chosen keywords and hashtags on Twitter to understand communication before, during and after the construction projects
  • "Our analysis shows that both projects have led to a substantial loss of natural land but gains in artificial land," said Yingjie Li, a Ph.D. candidate at MSU-CSIS who is the paper's lead author. "Despite this, we found that, overall, public sentiment toward the projects was largely positive and improved over time, which contradicts the prevalent pessimism by the Belt and Road Project critics."
  • People in more developed areas of Kenya and Pakistan were more positive about the sweeping changes than people in less-developed regions

Question though -- how did they make sure that the Twitter data was from people and not robots? I'm looking at you, human flesh engine. And I'm looking at any post on Reddit's World News that has the word China in the title, and how it has dozens of comments instead of thousands, because it's been smashed by robots and the moderators can't help but cull the real comments along with the fake. Case in point -- the comment section for a recent article about the closing of Macau due to covid numbers (circa July 2022), despite over 50 comments, had not one single instance of the words "China", or even "Macau" or "gambling" or "gaming", because the whole conversation on the sub had been manipulated by the Chinese human flesh engine to avoid any discourse about China itself. 

Looking at the paper itself, we see only reference to "0.4 million unique users" but no mention to whether they tried to discriminate between real users and fake ones. Also, there is no mention of fake accounts in the "Study limitations".

via Michigan State University's Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability: Yingjie Li et al, Synthesizing social and environmental sensing to monitor the impact of large-scale infrastructure development, Environmental Science & Policy (2021). DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2021.07.020


Socioeconomic networks and built environments of cities contribute to lower rates of psychological depression
Aug 2021, phys.org

Luís Bettencourt's work that shows how the infrastructure networks of cities — and how people move about such networks — can lead to rapid increases in social interaction and entails higher rates of innovation and wealth production.

One main finding is that, on average, people have more contacts across a greater variety of functions when they live in larger cities. Understanding that social isolation is a significant risk factor for depression, it made sense that more socialization through these varied networks could be protective against depression.

"Mental health and cognition are the basis for agency and behavior, and urban environments do change how people think and act. -Bettencourt

via University of Chicago: Andrew J. Stier et al, Evidence and theory for lower rates of depression in larger US urban areas, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2022472118


Deep learning helps to predict traffic crashes before they happen
Oct 2021, phys.org

Typically, these types of risk maps are captured at much lower resolutions that hover around hundreds of meters, which means glossing over crucial details since the roads become blurred together. These maps, though, are 5x5 meter grid cells, and the higher resolution brings newfound clarity: The scientists found that a highway road, for example, has a higher risk than nearby residential roads, and ramps merging and exiting the highway have an even higher risk than other roads.

Previous attempts to predict crash risk have been largely "historical," as an area would only be considered high-risk if there was a previous nearby crash.

To evaluate the model, the scientists used crashes and data from 2017 and 2018, and tested its performance at predicting crashes in 2019 and 2020. Many locations were identified as high-risk, even though they had no recorded crashes, and also experienced crashes during the follow-up years.

Their data: density, speed, and direction of traffic, and satellite imagery that describes road structures, such as the number of lanes, whether there's a shoulder, or if there's a large number of pedestrians

via MIT's Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory and and the Qatar Center for Artificial Intelligence: Inferring high-resolution traffic accident risk maps based on satellite imagery and GPS trajectories.


A gender dimension of energy: Modern cooking fuels connected to quicker demographic transition
Dec 2021, phys.org

Switching to modern cooking fuels like gas or to electricity can improve the well-being of women in the global South, and eventually be connected to falling birth rates. ... Because it not only improves health, it also relieves women of the need to have many children to do time-consuming housework like fetching firewood or cooking on open fires. This frees up time to seek information and education—and eventually helps women realize their reproductive rights. This is a direct line connecting the switch from modern energies to the demographic transition,"

via Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research: Helga Weisz, Fertility transition powered by women's access to electricity and modern cooking fuels, Nature Sustainability (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41893-021-00830-3.


Physicists unify sociological theories that explain social stability
Feb 2022, phys.org

Homophily is everything. 

And they use the 100,000-person community of a game called Pardus for data. 

"Based on homophilic one-to-one interactions, the computer simulation produced a society that almost magically self-organized towards more stability."

I just love seeing the word "magically" appear in science articles. 

via Complexity Science Hub Vienna and the Santa Fe Institute: Tuan Minh Pham et al, Empirical social triad statistics can be explained with dyadic homophylic interactions, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2022). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2121103119


Immigration patterns are reflected in Facebook data on popular foods and drinks
Feb 2022, phys.org

Fucking genius:
Researchers have developed a novel strategy for using Facebook data to measure cultural similarity between countries, revealing associations between immigration patterns and people's food and drink interests. ... The method employs data on the top 50 food and drink preferences for any given country as captured by the Facebook Advertising Platform. ... For instance, the top 50 foods and drinks from Mexico are more popular in the U.S. than the top 50 U.S. foods and drinks are in Mexico, reflecting a greater degree of immigration from Mexico to the U.S. than vice versa.
But also, there's cultural evolutionary science in them data, because it isn't just food and drinks that are moving disproportionately between the countries. The metabolism of the anthroposphere.

via Public Library of Science, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany: Vieira CC, Lohmann S, Zagheni E, Vaz de Melo POS, Benevenuto F, Ribeiro FN (2022) The interplay of migration and cultural similarity between countries: Evidence from Facebook data on food and drink interests. PLoS ONE 17(2): e0262947. doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0262947


Using graph neural networks to measure the spatial homogeneity of road networks
May 2022, phys.org

  • 11,790 urban road networks in 30 cities worldwide, including cities from either developed countries or developing countries
  • "Traditional road network metrics based on simple measures only provide a coarse characterization of urban road networks."
  • They specifically trained the graph neural networks to learn the structure patterns of the road networks in the observed regions, so that they could then predict the structure of the network in the hidden region.
  • (Intercity and intracity homogeneity across all the cities is what they're looking for.)
  • The graph neural networks developed by this team of researchers could ultimately be used in different countries worldwide to measure the similarities between cities, evaluate urban policies and summarize urban activities. 

"Beyond road networks, the homogeneity theories of street views, land use, and other infrastructure networks could also be established. There is much more opportunity to find more deep insights into complex urban systems."

via Purdue University and Peking University: Jiawei Xue et al, Quantifying the spatial homogeneity of urban road networks via graph neural networks, Nature Machine Intelligence (2022). DOI: 10.1038/s42256-022-00462-y


Post Script:
Brookings Institution's Center on Social Dynamics and Policy, which applies complex systems science to the study of social dynamics and their implications for policy, mainly through the use of computational modeling and simulation. 

Santa Fe Institute, which focuses on complexity theory.

Complexity Science Hub Vienna, which is the focal point of complexity science in Europe (and "free of bureaucratic constraints for open-minded visionaries who are brave enough to step out of mainstream science"!)

New England Complex Systems Institute, which is dedicated to advancing analytics and its application to the challenges of society, and the interaction of complex systems with the environment.