Wednesday, July 31, 2024

Scientists Wax Superlative on Climate Disaster in Action


After reading many thousands of articles about science, and listening to the way scientists talk, some things become really obvious - like the fact that scientists don't use informal language often, and especially informal superlatives, like "nah this is just crazy" or "yeah you guys are completely screwed". So when you see it, you take note:

Ocean heat and La Nina combo likely mean more Atlantic hurricanes this summer
May 2024, phys.org

This May, ocean heat in the main area where hurricanes develop has been as high as it usually is in mid-August. "That's crazy,"

He says "that's crazy", and scientists don't say that, in fact it's like a thing that scientists are very unlikely to say; they just don't talk that way, so when you hear it, you know it's oh shit time.

via National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration



New study finds Earth warming at record rate, but no evidence of climate change accelerating
Jun 2024, phys.org

Once again, the climate is so screwed up that scientists, known for using the most boring language possible, what I will jokingly call their aggressively anti-superlative approach to communicating, are using words like "gobsmacking", and that's all you really need to know:

Scientists had theorized a few explanations for the massive jump in September 2023, which Hausfather called "gobsmacking."

Wednesday's report didn't find enough warming from other potential causes. The report said the reduction of sulfur pollution from shipping - which had been providing some cooling to the atmosphere - was overwhelmed last year by carbon particles put in the air from Canadian wildfires. (still debate about this apparently)

Note what they're saying is that this is exactly what we expected: "The year was within the range of what was predicted, albeit it was at the upper edge of the range. Acceleration if it were to happen would be even worse, like hitting a global tipping point, it would be probably the worst scenario. But what is happening is already extremely bad and it is having major impacts already now. We are in the middle of a crisis."

via 57 scientists from around the world using United Nations-approved methods: Piers M. Forster et al, Indicators of Global Climate Change 2023: annual update of key indicators of the state of the climate system and human influence, Earth System Science Data (2024). DOI: 10.5194/essd-16-2625-2024

Social Math and the Particle Physics of People


As a teenager I spent my lunch hour staring at strangers in the mall, trying to figure out their relationship to each other based on no criteria whatsoever, mostly because I was reading Deepak Chopra, the Celestine Prophecy, and Carlos Castaneda, and I thought maybe you really could develop superpowers and see invisible energy fields connecting people together. I did not develop Kirlian vision, but I did learn how to read mostly invisible body language and subtle interpersonal dynamics. Maybe there was some rudimentary social network mapping going on as well:


Math can help people identify the bonds of friendship
Apr 2023, phys.org

People use statistical information to determine bonds between people. It found that children as young as five can enter a room and use statistics on social cues to determine whether two people are friends.

Researchers presented participants with diagrams of social networks that showed lines drawn between two main characters and other people in the group. Participants were told that these lines indicated friendship, and importantly, researchers did not show a line connecting the two main characters. Researchers then asked participants how likely it was that the two main characters were friends.

Both children and adults thought the two main characters were friends when they had a lot of overlap in their social connections in common. This pattern was found in children as young as five years old.

Participants were also able to conclude the strength of social connections from the size of the network. For example, when a character had many mutual connections with someone with a smaller network, participants saw this as more meaningful than having many mutual connections with someone with a larger social network.

via University of Waterloo: Claudia G. Sehl et al, The social network: How people infer relationships from mutual connections., Journal of Experimental Psychology: General (2022). DOI: 10.1037/xge0001330

Totally unrelated image credit: AI Art - Artificial Meat_2 - 2024


Spike in major league home runs tied to climate change
Apr 2023, phys.org

With enough data, you can see all kinds of things

While the researchers attribute only 1% of recent home runs to climate change, they found that rising temperatures could account for 10% or more of home runs by 2100 if greenhouse gas emissions and climate change continue unabated.

"There's a very clear physical mechanism at play in which warmer temperatures reduce the density of air. Baseball is a game of ballistics, and a batted ball is going to fly farther on a warm day," said senior author Justin Mankin, an assistant professor of geography.

The researchers analyzed more than 100,000 major league games and 220,000 individual hits to correlate the number of home runs with the occurrence of unseasonably warm temperatures. 

via Dartmouth: Christopher W. Callahan et al, Global warming, home runs, and the future of America's pastime, Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (2023). DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-D-22-0235.1


The more stakeholders are included in policy planning, the better their policies protect them
Jun 2023, phys.org

This relates to network science in that it relies on a big complex system (of people and decision making) for maximum effect

"It's a big deal that we found empirical evidence that stakeholder integration leads to better protection. There are very few published papers that show this connection empirically."

"I was pretty stunned. I thought this was going to be a different paper." (Surprise!)

via University of California Santa Barbara: Debra Perrone et al, Stakeholder integration predicts better outcomes from groundwater sustainability policy, Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-39363-y

AI Art - Artificial Meat_3 - 2024

Ridesourcing platforms thrive on socio-economic inequality, say researchers
Apr 2024, phys.org

Platforms that offer rides to passengers, such as Uber and DiDi, thrive on socio-economic inequality. It explains why in some cities ridesourcing services can be big players in the mobility system, while in other cities they don't get off the ground. 

"In cities like Amsterdam, with relatively low inequality, short travel distances and well-established bicycle and public transport networks, Uber is unlikely to flourish," researcher Arjan de Ruijter explains. "Therefore, transport authorities in such cities should rather focus on providing shared bikes and scooters to improve station access."

Conversely, in cities marked by significant inequality, like Johannesburg or Rio de Janeiro, Uber-like ridesourcing platforms thrive. Various explanations, taking into account driver's and passenger's behavior, emerge in the study. The platform capitalizes on a workforce willing to accept lower wages, leading to a service with limited waiting times for passengers. Moreover, it acknowledges the demand for mobility on demand among the affluent segments of unequal societies, willing to pay for a premium-like service.

"In a society with high inequality, companies can charge higher commissions to drivers, as drivers have limited alternative labor opportunities."

"On the other hand, in societies with low inequality, all else being equal, pricing strategies must attract more selective job seekers, resulting in lower commission rates."

via Delft University of Technology: Arjan de Ruijter et al, Ridesourcing platforms thrive on socio-economic inequality, Scientific Reports (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-024-57540-x


Families will change dramatically over the years to come, says study
Jan 2024, phys.org

Gentle reminder 

  • The number of relatives that an individual has is expected to decrease by more than 35% in the near future. 
  • In 1950, a 65-year-old woman had an average of 41 living relatives. By 2095, a woman of the same age will have an average of only 25 living relatives.
  • The number of cousins, nieces, nephews and grandchildren will decline sharply, while the number of great-grandparents and grandparents will increase significantly.
  • The effects will be felt less in North America and Europe and more in South America and the Caribbean. 

via Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, University of Buenos Aires, and University of Amsterdam: Diego Alburez-Gutierrez et al, Projections of human kinship for all countries, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (2023). DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2315722120

Tuesday, July 30, 2024

So Many Ways To Fake, So Many Fakes To Make

 

No this is not an electronic music DJ, it's a scientist doing science things: Christoph Gruber of e-Conversion Cluster of Excellence Nano Energy Group at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich - Jun 2024 [link]

There's so many different kinds of fakes. Some fakes are just for fun. Some fakes are made with the purpose to trick people. Some are simply so stupid they don't know they're fake. 
We're reaching back here, to October of 2023, because this story has so many levels:

“Real Water” that poisoned dozens contained chemical from rocket fuel
Oct 2023, Ars Technica

Just here for the Reals:

A jury this week awarded $228.5 million to seven plaintiffs in their case against Nevada-based water company Real Water, which sold alkaline water tainted with hydrazine, a highly toxic chemical found in fuel for rockets and spacecraft (and which caused liver failure in people).

And there's more:

Two other defendants, Hanna Instruments and Milwaukee Instruments, which were alleged to have made faulty water testing meters that contributed to Real Water's toxicity, were also found liable for compensatory damages but not punitive damages.

But I can't help but follow this story, because this why it's so hard to talk about these things, and to explain to people why they're dangerous -- because not only do they not do what they say they do, the stuff they do to create their magical products is itself completely removed from any scientific basis in reality:

According to the DOJ's 2021 complaint and testimony in the trial over the last few weeks, Real Water processed municipal tap water "by carbon filtration, reverse osmosis filtration, ultraviolet light filtration, and ozone filtration." Then potassium chloride is added and the water goes through a proprietary "ionizer" apparatus to apply an electrical current to the water. [The ionizer is later described as "titanium tubes electrified with what looked like jumper cables used to charge a car battery."] This allegedly created positively charged and negatively charged solutions. Real Water employees would discard the positively charged solution and keep the negatively charged solution.

That initial batch of negatively charged solution would then go through the "ionizer" apparatus and be separated again. The resulting negatively charged solution would then be treated with potassium hydroxide (a form of lye), potassium bicarbonate (sometimes used in baking powders), and magnesium chloride (a salt used in nutritional supplements and for de-icing roads); this formed an "E2 concentrate" product, which, when diluted, formed their alkaline water product.

Environmental engineer and expert witness Issam Najm said that in the charged water, nitrogen gas naturally found in air could have reacted with water to form hydrazine (N2H4), or, during the electrolysis, ammonia (NH3) was formed first, before reacting with hydroxide to form hydrazine.

And let's not forget that the companies they paid to test their bogus product were in fact themselves bogus; you can't make this stuff up.


Chinese network behind one of world’s ‘largest online scams’
May 2024, The Guardian

76,000 fake websites created.
That's all.


Finally, because we just can't tell anymore what's real and what's fake; is this article even real?

A fully edible robot could soon end up on our plate, say scientists
Jun 2024, phys.org

RoboFood - a project which aims to marry robots and food.

Robotic food could reduce electronic waste, help deliver nutrition and medicines to people and animals in need, monitor health, and even pave the way to novel gastronomical experiences.

"Bringing robots and food together is a fascinating challenge" 

For example, gelatin can replace rubber, rice cookies are akin to foam, a chocolate film can protect robots in humid environments, and mixing starch and tannin can mimic commercial glues.

"There is a lot of research on single edible components like actuators, sensors, and batteries" 

In 2023, Italian Institute of Technology researchers realized the first rechargeable edible battery using riboflavin (vitamin B2) and quercetin (found in almonds and capers) in the battery poles, adding activated carbon to facilitate electron transport and nori algae, used to wrap sushi, to prevent short circuits, and packaged with beeswax.

After integrating all components, scientists need to miniaturize them, increase the shelf life of robotic food… and give robots a pleasant taste.

via Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne Laboratory of Intelligent Systems: Dario Floreano et al, Towards edible robots and robotic food, Nature Reviews Materials (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41578-024-00688-9

Chaos Control


This is about weather forecasting, which is still hard because of the lack of small-scale data, which leads to the introduction of small initial errors, which multiply in chaotic systems to become big errors. This is how chaos works. When you hear that scientists are getting better at "controlling chaos", you know we're in for some sh*t:

New theoretical framework unlocks mysteries of synchronization in turbulent dynamics
Jan 2024, phys.org
 
Japan - "By considering this turbulence phenomenon as 'synchronization of a small vortex by a large vortex' and by mathematically attributing it to the 'stability problem of synchronized manifolds,' we have succeeded in explaining this critical scale theoretically for the first time," explains Dr. Inubushi.

via Tokyo University of Science, Hitotsubashi University, Rissho University and Osaka University: Masanobu Inubushi et al, Characterizing Small-Scale Dynamics of Navier-Stokes Turbulence with Transverse Lyapunov Exponents: A Data Assimilation Approach, Physical Review Letters (2023). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.131.254001



We keep making the same mistakes with spreadsheets, despite bad consequences
Jan 2024, Ars Technica

Industry studies [from 1998!] show that 90 percent of spreadsheets containing more than 150 rows have at least one major mistake:

In general, errors seem to occur in a few percent of all cells, meaning that for large spreadsheets, the issue is how many errors there are, not whether an error exists. These error rates, although troubling, are in line with error rates in programming and other human cognitive domains. In programming, we have learned to follow strict development disciplines to eliminate most errors. Surveys of spreadsheet developers indicate that spreadsheet creation, in contrast, is informal, and that few organizations have comprehensive policies for spreadsheet development. 

via Raymond Panko at University of Hawaii: Panko, R. R. (1998). What We Know About Spreadsheet Errors. Journal of Organizational and End User Computing (JOEUC), 10(2), 15-21. http://doi.org/10.4018/joeuc.1998040102

Monday, July 29, 2024

Planet Money, Urban Planning, and the Redistribution of Social Order


No plan survives first contact with the enemy, but we can try. Or we can continue to let the richest 1% of the population make those decisions for us. Either way, it's probably a good idea to keep these things in mind:

Enhancing resilience of urban public transport systems through greater network interconnectedness
Jan 2024, phys.org

Safe-to-Fail urban mobility: Multi-modal public transportation networks integrate different modes of transportation (rail, franchised buses, green minibuses, light rail, ferries and trams) to improve resiliance to failures.

"Our findings suggest that interconnectedness offers a distinct approach to enhancing transportation resilience, beyond simply improving each system in isolation or introducing an entirely new system" 

via City University of Hong Kong: Zizhen Xu et al, Interconnectedness enhances network resilience of multimodal public transportation systems for Safe-to-Fail urban mobility, Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-39999-w



Research identifies characteristics of cities that would support young people's mental health
Mar 2024, phys.org

Another example of how consumerism breeds loneliness. Public space makes social capital, whereas private space makes money. When you have to spend money in order to see other people, it's depressing.

They used an initial survey starting in April 2020 to a panel of more than 400 individuals from 53 countries, including 327 young people ages 14 to 25, from a cross-section of fields, including education, advocacy, adolescent health, mental health and substance use, urban planning and development, data and technology, housing, and criminal justice. Then they administered three sequential surveys to panelists beginning in April 2020 that asked panelists to identify elements of urban life that would support mental health for young people.

The findings suggest that creating a mental health-friendly city for young people requires investments across multiple interconnected sectors like transportation, housing, employment, health, and urban planning, with a central focus on social and economic equity.

They also require urban planning policy approaches that commit to systemic and sustained collaboration, without magnifying existing privileges through initiatives like gentrification and developing green spaces at the expense of marginalized communities in need of affordable housing.

via Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health’s Department of Mental Health: Collins, P.Y., Sinha, M., Concepcion, T. et al. Making cities mental health friendly for adolescents and young adults. Nature 627, 137–148 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-07005-4


Public transit agencies may need to adapt to the rise of remote work, says new study
Apr 2024, phys.org

Something something opportunity 

"Transit agencies need to be very concerned"

"People mostly rely on transit to go to work. On the other hand, many people rely on vehicles for trips other than going to work - shopping, restaurants and leisure activities. Transit agencies could provide more services during the off-peak hours in residential areas to better serve remote workers."

via University of Florida, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Peking University: Impacts of remote work on vehicle miles traveled and transit ridership in the USA, Nature Cities (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s44284-024-00057-1

Friday, July 26, 2024

Never Go Full Robot


Evaluating truthfulness of fake news through online searches increases chances of believing misinformation
Dec 2023, phys.org

Searching to evaluate the truthfulness of false news articles actually increases the probability of believing misinformation.

Data voids are areas of the information ecosystem that are dominated by low quality information. They  be playing a consequential role in the online search process, sometimes leading to the appearance of non-credible information at the top of search results.

But we're not here for the results, we're here for the methods:

In order to study how people use the internet to search for the truthfulness of news, these scientists recruited their participants through Qualtrics and Amazon's Mechanical Turk, "tools frequently used in running behavioral science studies".

So let's make this point now, that these half-robot, semibot, half-automated services, which apparently support some of our behavioral science research, are getting closer to full-robot because the users (the workers, the mechanical turkers) are using AI to help them do their work, and so we may see some of our behavioral science research get lower in quality over time. And you thought there was a reproducability crisis in behavioral science before!

via NYU Center for Social Media and Politics and Stanford Law School: Kevin Aslett, Online searches to evaluate misinformation can increase its perceived veracity, Nature (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06883-y

Post Script:
Mechanical Turker is a word and you should probably know it.

Calling All Alphas


Using this picture just for the prompt: 
A flowchart of scientific icons that represents a partner ecosystem for use as a slide background. modern. brand colours are #024da1 and #37b884. blues and greens. ultrahd, kodak colour quality, 8k.

First, just what you've been waiting for, a robot that can read braille:

3D-printed hairs: Professor developing tiny sensors to detect flow and environmental changes
Oct 2023, phys.org

Tiny, 3D-printed sensors that look like human hairs can sense sustained pressures, quick pressures,  temperature changes, and sliding force -- Uses could include minimally-invasive surgical robots equipped with cilia mechanoreceptors to better detect minute changes in pressure or temperature, industrial machines that can measure air or water flow, a robot that can read braille.

via Virginia Commonwealth University: Phillip Glass et al, 3D‐Printed Artificial Cilia Arrays: A Versatile Tool for Customizable Mechanosensing, Advanced Science (2023). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202303164


Next, there's a couple themes mixing and matching here, but the idea is that the Big Data revolution of the last decade is really the Big Training Set for the artificial minds of the future. We're getting another planet's worth of mental labor here, like having an extra few million chemists, physicists, biologists. But then there's the overall computing infrastructure that we've amassed, and that we can apparently use the latent energy, the idle power in between processes, to run calculations. So the computer can perform calculations, on itself, while it does these other things, maybe we would call it a meta-computer, or meta-computation, or sentience (jk). In the end we see that humans are still, and will be for a long time, an essential ingredient:

Google’s DeepMind finds 2.2M crystal structures in materials science win
Nov 2023, Ars Technica

The trove of theoretically stable but experimentally unrealized combinations identified using an AI tool known as GNoME is more than 45 times larger than the number of such substances unearthed in the history of science, according to a paper published in Nature on Wednesday.

DeepMind's AI system AlphaGeometry able to solve complex geometry problems at a high level
Jan 2024, phys.org

via Google's DeepMind and NYU: Trieu H. Trinh et al, Solving olympiad geometry without human demonstrations, Nature (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06747-5


Chemists use blockchain to simulate more than 4 billion chemical reactions essential to origins of life
Jan 2024, phys.org

Great - this whole thing is freaking me out but not sure why; combining distributed computing with biological research is the plot for a good algorithmic overlord origin story though:

Researchers chose a set of starting molecules likely present on early Earth, including water, methane, and ammonia, and set rules about which reactions could occur between different types of molecules, then translated this information into a language understandable by computers, then used the blockchain to calculate which reactions would occur over multiple expansions of a giant reaction network.

They generate the network using Golem, a platform that orchestrates portions of the calculations over hundreds of computers across the world, which receive cryptocurrency in exchange for computing time. For a fraction of the cost, in two or three months, we finished a task of 10 billion reactions, 100k times bigger than we did previously."

The resulting network, termed NOEL for the Network of Early Life, started off with more than 11 billion reactions, which the team narrowed down to 4.9 billion plausible reactions. NOEL contains parts of well-known metabolic pathways like glycolysis, close mimics of the Krebs cycle, which organisms use to generate energy, and syntheses of 128 simple biotic molecules like sugars and amino acids.

Curiously, of the 4.9 billion reactions generated, only hundreds of reaction cycles could be called "self-replicating," which means that the molecules produce additional copies of themselves.

The part that scares: "With a platform like Golem you can connect your institution's network and harness the entire idle power of its computers to perform calculations. You could create this computing infrastructure without any capital expenditure."

via Korea Institute for Basic Science, the Polish Academy of Sciences, and Allchemy: Emergence of metabolic-like cycles in blockchain-orchestrated reaction networks., Chem (2024). DOI: 10.1016/j.chempr.2023.12.009.


Widely used AI tool for early sepsis detection may be cribbing doctors' suspicions
Feb 2024, phys.org

Humans all the way down 

The Epic Sepsis Model is an electronic medical record software that automatically generates sepsis risk estimates in the records of hospitalized patients, and serves 54% of patients in the United States and 2.5% of patients internationally.

"Sepsis has all these vague symptoms ... We still miss a lot of patients with sepsis"

The hope is that AI predictions could be instrumental in making that happen, but at present, they don't seem to be getting more out of patient data than clinicians are.

"We suspect that some of the health data that the Epic Sepsis Model relies on encodes, perhaps unintentionally, clinician suspicion that the patient has sepsis"

When including the predictions made by the AI at all stages of the patient's hospital stay, the AI could correctly identify a high-risk patient 87% of the time. However, the AI was only correct 62% of the time when using patient data recorded before the patient met criteria for having sepsis. Perhaps most telling, the model only assigned higher risk scores to 53% patients who got sepsis when predictions were restricted to before a blood culture had been ordered.

via University of Michigan: Fahad Kamran et al, Evaluation of Sepsis Prediction Models before Onset of Treatment, NEJM AI (2024). DOI: 10.1056/AIoa2300032

Post Script: Public service announcement - mostly any study, report, quip, or advertisement you hear about "what an AI can do" is worthless (when in reference to commercial entities like ChatGPT or OpenAI). We measure it however we want, with no means of normalizing our inquiries, and we can't even see into the base algorithms anyway because they're all proprietary. It takes a study like this to find out what's really going on, and it's for a system that's already implemented in "54% of patients in the United States and 2.5% of patients internationally" (^above)

Wednesday, July 24, 2024

Art Things


Banksy's 'Valentine's day mascara' mural freezer removed
Feb 2023, CNN Style

The mural shows a 1950s housewife with a swollen eye apparently pushing a man into an abandoned chest freezer, but the chest freezer was real, while the rest was painted on the wall. Then the freezer was stolen. So now the refrigerator is a work of art, in part, and art history is being re-written by the day. This was done for Valentine's Day, 2023.

Banksy: Artist confirms new London tree mural is his own work
Mar 2024, BBC News

Islington Council said its graffiti removal team is aware of the artwork and won't remove it.

I'm not even sure how to say this without it coming out wrong, but like you know your society is fucked up when the people are so wholeheartedly supporting illegal activity:

Crowds have gathered to see the mural, with one local saying they were "proud" their street had been chosen.

"It feels like a personal message to us residents, we just feel so proud," said Wanja Sellers, who lives along the street from the mural.

I am left wondering if there is no such thing as public art anymore? Public anything? What happens when there's no more public assets (public art, public music, public space, public parks, public restrooms, public water fountains, public benches, public transit, public public)? People start making their own, illegally, and the rest of the people start supporting it. Please rewind to the movie Death Wish, when hoodlums used a spraycan to terrorize, vandalize, rape and murder a middle class architect and his family living on the Upper West Side of New York City in 1974. Graffiti, and the spraycan specifically, was the ultimate symbol of societal dysfunction, collapse even. It was the mark of the beast, the trumpet of the apocalypse. Today, well things are much different. (Then again, Angela Davis's afro was scary as hell to a lot of Americans and now it's a Halloween costume.)

Post Script: 
The council believes the cherry tree in the foreground of the artwork is around 40-50 years old and is in declining health, with decay and fungi damage. It says it has been maintaining and pruning the tree for some time - both for safety, and to help prolong its lifespan - and will continue working to keep the tree alive. A resident says "It's spring now, and this tree should be bursting forth with leaves, but Banksy must have cycled past and thought how miserable it looks."


Examining why egg yolk was used in Old Masters' oil paints
Mar 2023, phys.org

The work involved creating two types of oil-based paints, both with yolk added. One mixture consisted of nothing but yolk and oil. The other had yolk, oil and pigments to add coloring. The team also created similar paints without using egg yolk. The group then used the paints to create paintings that could be used for testing purposes. Such tests included taking measurements of moisture amounts and movement, oxidation, time to dry and heat capacity.
  • stronger bonding between pigment particles for stiffer paint
  • reduced wrinkling of the paint to protect the paint against high humidity
  • antioxidants in the yolk prevent yellowing
  • more pigment to the oil to create more vivid images

via Institute for Mechanical Process Engineering and Mechanics at Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Department of Chemistry and Industrial Chemistry and at University of Pisa, Institute of Chemistry of Organo Metallic Compoundsin Pisa, and Doerner Institut in Munich: Ophélie Ranquet et al, A holistic view on the role of egg yolk in Old Masters' oil paints, Nature Communications (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-36859-5

Louise dancing on her 60th birthday - art by Jillian Edelstein  for Breast Cancer Now in Gallery of Hope at London's Saatchi Gallery - Apr 2024

AI photos show people with secondary breast cancer their lost future
Apr 2024, BBC News

I'm sure there's a history for this, but I'm not familiar with it. People have been aware of their own impending death for a long time, not just because of advances in cancer diagnoses (the guy with the "black spot" in Treasure Island anyone?). And artists have been making shit up forever, it's kind of what they do. All that being said, wow this is bonkers -

Using AI and photos taken by renowned photographer Jillian Edelstein, the images make up the Gallery of Hope at London's Saatchi Gallery.

Louise Hudson, from Caldicot, Monmouthshire, is one of those who took part.

Now 58, she was first diagnosed with breast cancer in July 2022 which then spread to her liver. In February an MRI scan showed lesions on her brain and she was told she had a life expectancy of about six months.

Louise's image at the exhibition shows her celebrating her 60th birthday by performing with her amateur dance company Chelsea Ballet, while her husband of 30 years Barry looks on with pride.
Michel-Marie Carquillat - Joseph-Marie Jacquard woven in silk on a Jacquard loom, 55 x 34 cm - 1839 

The Most Famous Image in the Early History of Computing : History of Information

Just in case this gets lost in the oncominig artificial info wars and subsequent death of the internet, I copy here:

In 1839 weaver Michel-Marie Carquillat, working for the firm of Didier, Petit et Cie, in Lyon, France wove in fine silk a Portrait of Joseph-Marie Jacquard. The image, including caption and Carquillat’s name, taking credit for the weaving, measures 55 x 34 cm.; the full piece of silk including blank margins measures 85 x 66 cm.

This image, of which perhaps only about 20 examples survived, was woven on a Jacquard loom using 24,000 Jacquard cards, each of which had over 1000 hole positions. The process of mis en carte, or converting the image details to punched cards for the Jacquard mechanism, for this exceptionally large and detailed image, would have taken several workers many months, as the woven image convincingly portrays superfine elements such as a translucent curtain over glass window panes.

The Jacquard loom did no computation, and for that reason it was not a digital device in the way we think of digital today. However the method by which Jacquard stored information in punched cards by either punching a hole in s standardized space in a card or not punching a whole in that space is analogous to a zero or one or an on and off switch.
  • The Jacquard method was used by Charles Babbage
  • It confirmed the potential of using punched cards for the input, programming, output and storage of information in the design and conception of the first general-purpose programmable computer the Analytical Engine.
  • It also challenged existing notions that machines were incapable of subtlety, and blurred the clear lines between industrial production and the arts. 
  • See Swade, The Cogwheel Brain. Charles Babbage and the Quest to Build the First Computer. 2000. 107-8.
  • More than once this woven image was mistaken for an engraved image.
  • In 2012 the only publically recorded examples were those in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Science Museum in London, The Art Institute of Chicago, and the Computer History Museum, Mountain View, California.
  • The image was the subject of the book by James Essinger entitled, Jacquard's Web. How a Hand Loom led to the Birth of the Information Age (2004).


Tuesday, July 23, 2024

The Multisensory Multiplex Measures More Than You Think


This title means absolutely nothing, but it's unsettling to think "time" is as malleable as it is. 

Physicists develop highly robust time crystal
Feb 2024, phys.org

It's made of indium gallium arsenide, in which the nuclear spins act as a reservoir for the time crystal. The crystal is continuously illuminated so that a nuclear spin polarization forms through interaction with electron spins. And it is precisely this nuclear spin polarization that then spontaneously generates oscillations, equivalent to a time crystal.

A periodic time crystal was demonstrated in 2022 in a Bose-Einstein condensate but lived for just a few milliseconds. This one lasted for 40 minutes, or 10 million times longer. 

via TU Dortmund University: A. Greilich et al, Robust continuous time crystal in an electron–nuclear spin system, Nature Physics (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-023-02351-6



The intricate dance of time and touch: Insights from the somatosensory cortex
Feb 2024, phys.org

The perception of time is intricately intertwined with touch, emerging within the tactile sensory representation.

Optogenetic intervention influenced perceived intensity in rats trained to assess vibration intensity while disregarding duration. Conversely, optogenetic intervention influenced perceived duration in animals trained to evaluate vibration duration while disregarding intensity.

"Since both percepts involve an overlapping set of neurons, we describe the two signals as 'multiplexed' in the somatosensory cortex.

via International School of Advanced Studies SISSA: Sebastian Reinartz et al, Direct contribution of the sensory cortex to the judgment of stimulus duration, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-45970-0


White House wants Moon to have its own time zone
Apr 2024, BBC News

The White House wants US space agency Nasa to develop a new time zone for the Moon - Coordinated Lunar Time (LTC).

Because of the different gravitational field strength on the Moon, time moves quicker there relative to Earth - 58.7 microseconds every day.

This might not seem like much, but it can have a significant impact when trying to synchronise spacecraft.

Time is currently measured on Earth by hundreds of atomic clocks stationed around our planet which measure the changing energy state of atoms to record time to the nanosecond. If they were placed on the Moon, over 50 years they would be running one second faster.


Image viewing experiments challenge theory of universal internal clock
Apr 2024, phys.org

The Universal Internal Clock (does not exist)

  • 170 volunteers participated
  • In the first two experiments, volunteers looked at photographs with varying degrees of size and clutter, and were asked how long they believed they had been looking at the images.
  • In the second two experiments, volunteers also estimated how memorable the photos were.
  • The took a memory test the following day.

  • Volunteers tended to overestimate the amount of time they viewed cluttered scenes, while underestimating the amount of time they viewed tidy areas.
  • Perception of time varied depending on the memorability of an image.
  • Volunteers were more accurate in their assessment of how much time had passed for the most memorable images
  • Experiments suggest that time perception is influenced by sensory perception.

via George Mason University: Alex C. Ma et al, Memorability shapes perceived time (and vice versa), Nature Human Behaviour (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41562-024-01863-2


Friday, July 19, 2024

The Large Photon Destroyer


Light is the next electricity. It runs quantum computers, it blows GPU-based neural networks out of the water, and it makes computing parameters like speed, bandwidth, power, etc., perform on scales we do not understand. The way the internet changed society is the way light will change computing. 

Scientists compute with light inside hair-thin optical fiber
Jan 2024, phys.org

I'll bet it does

"We can encode a lot of information on a single particle of light. On its spatial structure, on its temporal structure, on its color. And if you can compute with all of those properties at once, that unlocks a massive amount of processing power."

via Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh: Inverse design of high-dimensional quantum optical circuits in a complex medium, Nature Physics (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-023-02319-6.

Somewhat related image credit: the quantum tornado machine for black hole research - Leonardo Solidoro for University of Nottingham - Mar 2024


Key innovation in photonic components could transform supercomputing technology
Feb 2024, phys.org

Trying to get to the point because I'll bet it's important:

Programmable photonic integrated circuits (PPICs) - The key to the advance has been to apply innovative concepts to the fabrication of the required silicon-based parts. Crucially, the manufacturing process can be used with conventional silicon wafer technology. This makes it compatible with the large-scale production of photonic chips essential to commercial applications.

At the heart of the new advance are tiny components that can interconvert optical, electronic, and mechanical changes to perform the variety of communication and mechanical functions needed by an integrated circuit.

They reduced the power consumption to femtowatt levels, which is over a million times an improvement compared to the previous state of the art.

In a move away from the dependence on temperature changes required by the dominant "thermo-optic" systems currently in use, these new components manipulate a feature of light waves called "phase" and control the coupling between different parallel waveguides, which guide and constrain the light. 

via Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology and Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology: Dong Uk Kim et al, Programmable photonic arrays based on microelectromechanical elements with femtowatt-level standby power consumption, Nature Photonics (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41566-023-01327-5


Neural networks made of light: Research team develops AI system in optical fibers
Feb 2024, phys.org

NVIDA called, wants deep hype back

"We utilize a single optical fiber to mimic the computational power of numerous neural networks"

via Leibniz-Institut für Photonische Technologien: Bennet Fischer et al, Neuromorphic Computing via Fission‐based Broadband Frequency Generation, Advanced Science (2023). DOI: 10.1002/advs.202303835

PENTATRAP device for measuring quantum states - MPIK - Apr 2024

All-light communication network bridges space, air and sea for seamless connectivity
Feb 2024, phys.org

"The all-light communication could be used in oceans and lakes, for example, where sensors gather ecological data and communicate with surface buoys. The data could then be sent wirelessly over the water surface or across long-distance transmission links between cities. The network can also connect to the internet via a modem, granting people who might be in a remote ocean location, for example, access to the backbone network for information sharing."

  • They used blue light for underwater communication because seawater has a reduced absorption window for blue-green light, allowing it to travel farther underwater compared to other wavelengths.
  • White LEDs are used to transmit information between objects, such as buoys or ships that are above water.
  • For connections with airborne devices such as drones, deep ultraviolet light is used. This provides solar-blind communication, which prevents interference from sunlight.
  • Finally, for point-to-point communication in free space, near-infrared laser diodes were applied because they emit directional light with high optical power. 

via Nanjing University and Suzhou Lighting Chip Monolithic Optoelectronics Technology Co: Linning Wang et al, All-light communication network for space-air-sea integrated interconnection, Optics Express (2024). DOI: 10.1364/OE.514930


Using sound waves for photonic machine learning: Study lays foundation for reconfigurable neuromorphic building blocks
Apr 2024, phys.org

I don't really understand this but it's important 

  • reconfigurable neuromorphic building blocks
  • photonic machine learning

The researchers use light to create temporary acoustic waves in an optical fiber. The sound waves generated in this way can for instance enable a recurrent functionality in a telecom optical fiber, which is essential to interpreting contextual information such as language.

The sound waves have a much longer transmission time than the optical information stream. Therefore, they remain in the optical fiber longer and can be linked to each subsequent processing step in turn. 

FYI - A traditional fully connected neural network on a computer faces difficulties capturing context because it requires access to memory. In order to overcome this challenge, neural networks have been equipped with recurrent operations that enable internal memory and are capable of capturing contextual information.

Optoacoustic REcurrent Operator (OREO) - harnesses the intrinsic properties of an optical waveguide without the need for an artificial reservoir or newly fabricated structures.

via Stiller Research Group at the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Light and the Englund Research Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Steven Becker, Dirk Englund, and Birgit Stiller, An optoacoustic field-programmable perceptron for recurrent neural networks, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-47053-6.


Internet can achieve quantum speed with light saved as sound
Apr 2024, phys.org

Same thing as above

A small drum can store data sent with light in its sonic vibrations, and then forward the data with new light sources when needed again.

via University of Copenhagen's Niels Bohr Institute: Mads Bjerregaard Kristensen et al, Long-lived and Efficient Optomechanical Memory for Light, Physical Review Letters (2024). DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.100802

Wednesday, July 17, 2024

Topological Knot Gobbler


Watching two squirrels chase each other up, down, and all around a tree, a revelation came to me - why would we expect the "spatial organization" part of the brain to be limited to two-dimensional hexagonal tiles? These animals spend most of their time running around on trees, not on the ground. Their world is not flat. Their "surface" is a constantly curving tree trunk. Insects, same thing. For them, the basis of spatial dimension is not a flat plane, it's a curved plane. Up, down, and gravity in general are not constants. The default is a curved surface, not the other way around. And that's the more flexible model of the two, so why wouldn't it be the base model?

The idea that the spatial-brain is 2-D is a very human-based bias. It shouldn't be hard to accept the fact that not long after the hexagonal grid brain model was confirmed ("grid cells" 2005), the hyperdimensional toroid model came on the scene (2022). In other words, the brain thinks the landscape is a toroid. 

What's happening in the rapid upheaval of our understanding of space (quantum gravity, Moiré lattices etc.) might be less disorienting if we considered this. I'm not sure how we do this, re-wiring our brains to perform in topological space, but I bet psychedelic mushrooms would help. Or DMT:
The Hyperbolic Geometry of DMT Experiences at the Harvard Science of Psychedelics Club in the year 2020, with Andrés Gómez Emilsson from the Qualia Research Institute

And finally, aside from the spatial implications, topology seems to be a fertile area of study for discoveries on the nature of all things quantum, as seen below. 



Team discovers thousands of new transformable knots
Sep 2023, phys.org

They discovered thousands of new transformable knots including three novel shapes that the humble figure-eight knot can assume, doubling the number documented to date in scientific literature.

via EPFL Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne Geometric Computing Laboratory: Michele Vidulis et al, Computational Exploration of Multistable Elastic Knots, ACM Transactions on Graphics (2023). DOI: 10.1145/3592399


Molecular knots, left and right: How molecules form knots
Oct 2023, phys.org

They created a computational model for molecular knots, and mostly for optical topology.

via Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz, Germany: Yani Zhao et al, Can Polymer Helicity Affect Topological Chirality of Polymer Knots?, ACS Macro Letters (2023). DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.2c00600


Topologically structured light detects the position of nano-objects with atomic resolution
May 2023, phys.org

Just superoscillatory light, optical metrology, and topologically structured light.

via University of Southampton and Nanyang Technological University: Tongjun Liu et al, Picophotonic localization metrology beyond thermal fluctuations, Nature Materials (2023). DOI: 10.1038/s41563-023-01543-y


Researchers demonstrate that quantum entanglement and topology are inextricably linked
Jan 2024, phys.org

Skyrmion topology to be specific:

"We achieved this experimental milestone by entangling two identical photons and customizing their shared wave-function in such a way that their topology or structure becomes apparent only when the photons are treated as a unified entity" 

In the realm of condensed matter physics, skyrmions are highly regarded for their stability and noise resistance. 

"Our work presents a paradigm shift: the topology that has traditionally been thought to exist in a single and local configuration is now nonlocal or shared between spatially separated entities" says Ornelas.

Expanding on this concept, the researchers utilize topology as a framework to classify or distinguish entangled states. They envisage that "this fresh perspective can serve as a labeling system for entangled states, akin to an alphabet," says Dr. Isaac Nape, a co-investigator.

via Structured Light Laboratory in the School of Physics at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa, string theorist Robert de Mello Koch from Huzhou University in China, previously from Wits University: Pedro Ornelas et al, Non-local skyrmions as topologically resilient quantum entangled states of light, Nature Photonics (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41566-023-01360-4

AI Art - Pink Healthy Ovary - 2024

Quantum physicists develop robust and ultra-sensitive topological quantum device
Jan 2024, phys.org

They were the first to realize the topological skin effect on a microscopic scale in a semiconductor material. This quantum phenomenon was initially demonstrated at a macroscopic level three years ago—but only in an artificial metamaterial, not a natural one. This is therefore the first time that a tiny, semiconductor-based topological quantum device that's both highly robust and ultra-sensitive has been developed.

via Würzburg-Dresdner Exzellenzcluster for Complexity and Topology in Quantum Matter: Kyrylo Ochkan et al, Non-Hermitian topology in a multi-terminal quantum Hall device, Nature Physics (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41567-023-02337-4


Classifying quantum secrets: Pendulum experiment reveals insights into topological materials
Mar 2024, phys.org

Interesting analog (quantum analog)

They built an array of 50 coupled pendula, with string lengths that slightly varied from one pendulum to the other. The strings of each neighboring pair of pendula were connected at a controlled height, such that each one's motion would affect its neighbors' motion.

The system obeyed Newton's laws of motion, but the precise lengths of the pendula and the connections between them created a magical phenomenon: Newton's laws caused the wave of the pendula's motion to approximately obey Schrödinger's equation. Therefore, the motion of the pendula, which is visible in the macroscopic world, reproduces the behaviors of electrons in periodic systems such as crystals.

via the Nuclear Research Center, Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of Mechanical Engineering, and School of Physics and Astronomy at Tel Aviv University: Izhar Neder et al, Bloch oscillations, Landau–Zener transition, and topological phase evolution in an array of coupled pendula, Proceedings of the Nation


'Tube map' around planets and moons made possible by knot theory
Apr 2024, phys.org

Knot Theory

In recent decades, space missions have increasingly relied on the ability to change the course of a satellite's path through space without using fuel by finding 'heteroclinic connections', usually calculated by using vast computing power to churn through one option after another or by making an 'intelligent guess' and then investigating it further. A new technique uses an area of math called knot theory to quickly generate rough trajectories.

via University of Surrey: Danny Owen et al, Applications of knot theory to the detection of heteroclinic connections between quasi-periodic orbits, Astrodynamics (2024). DOI: 10.1007/s42064-024-0201-0


Tuesday, July 16, 2024

Wearing Someone Else's Skin


Scientists 3D-print hair follicles in lab-grown skin
Nov 2023, phys.org

I can't even put the picture here, it's too much. Follow the link if you insist.

via Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute: Carolina Motter Catarino et al, Incorporation of hair follicles in 3D bioprinted models of human skin, Science Advances (2023). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.adg0297



Analysis of ancient Scythian leather samples shows two were made from human skin
Dec 2023 phys.org

It was found in Herodotus' writings reports of Scythians removing the skin from the right hand of an enemy and using it to make leather for their quivers. These researchers used paleoproteomics techniques to analyze 45 leather samples collected from 14 Scythian dig sites and found 2 of human skin.

via The Globe Institute at University of Copenhagen, Institute of Archaeology of the National Academy of Sciences of Ukraine: Luise Ørsted Brandt et al, Human and animal skin identified by palaeoproteomics in Scythian leather objects from Ukraine, PLOS ONE (2023). DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0294129


3D printed electronic skin provides promise for human-machine interaction
Jan 2024, phys.org

Nanoengineered hydrogels that exhibit tunable electronic and thermal biosensing capabilities.

via Texas A&M University College of Engineering and the Indian Institute of Technology: Shounak Roy et al, 3D Printed Electronic Skin for Strain, Pressure and Temperature Sensing, Advanced Functional Materials (2024). DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202313575


'Electronic skin' continuously monitors nine markers that indicate a stress response
Jan 2024, phys.org

CARES (consolidated artificial-intelligence-reinforced electronic skin)

The introduction of a nickel-based compound helps to stabilize against breakdown of body fluids the enzymatic-based sensors such as those that detect lactate or glucose, as does a new polymer added to the ion-based sensors, which detect biomarkers like sodium or potassium.

via California Institute of Technology: Changhao Xu et al, A physicochemical-sensing electronic skin for stress response monitoring, Nature Electronics (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41928-023-01116-6

AI Art - High Tech 4-Dimensional Liquid Metal 2 - 2024

An e-skin that can detect tactile information and produce tactile feedback
Mar 2024, phys.org

This e-skin integrates multimodal magnetic tactile sensing with vibration feedback, overcoming the bidirectional transmission limitations of current e-skin tech. It uses a flexible magnetic film, silicon elastomer, Hall sensor array, actuator array, and microcontroller unit.

via Tsinghua University: Shilong Mu et al, Dual-modal Tactile E-skin: Enabling Bidirectional Human-Robot Interaction via Integrated Tactile Perception and Feedback, arXiv (2024). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2402.05725


Developing artificial skin that can regenerate skin and transmit sensation at the same time
Apr 2024, phys.org

Smart bionic artificial skin can restore even permanently damaged tactile senses by fusing biocompatible materials and a tactile function delivery system implemented with electronic devices.

The artificial skin developed by the team is a hydrogel composed of collagen and fibrin, the main components of skin, that can detect even small pressure changes by inserting crack-based tactile sensors.

The sensed pressure changes are converted into electrical signals, via a wireless powered pressure-frequency modulation (WPPFM) circuit, which are then transmitted to the nerves by tactile nerve interfacing electrodes, allowing the device to perform the same tactile functions as the skin.

The researchers also found that collagen and fibrin, which are responsible for skin's elasticity and tissue connectivity, trigger the proliferation and differentiation of skin cells around the wound to promote skin regeneration.

via National Research Council of Science and Technology, Post-Silicon Semiconductor Institute, Yonsei University, Sungkyunkwan University: Kyowon Kang et al, Bionic artificial skin with a fully implantable wireless tactile sensory system for wound healing and restoring skin tactile function, Nature Communications (2024). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-44064-7


Virtual skin contact: Smart textiles are making remote hugs tangible
Apr 2024, phys.org

Now we have to begin a sub-section of skin, because we have virtual skin:

The research team are developing ways to realize multi-sensory virtual encounters between individuals. 

They have developed films that are a mere 50 micrometers thick and that can be worn like a second skin. Just as our skin is our body's interface to the outside world, these ultrathin films are the body's interface to the virtual world. The goal is to create a lifelike sensation of touch from interactions between people in a virtual environment.

When incorporated into textiles, these high-tech films allow the child to experience being touched when the mother or father strokes a second smart textile elsewhere.

"The films, known as dielectric elastomers, act both as sensors—detecting the tactile input from mum or dad—and as actuators—that transmit these movements to the child," explained Professor Seelecke, who heads the Intelligent Material Systems Lab at Saarland University.

When functioning as a sensor, the film is able to recognize with very high precision how a hand or finger presses or stretches the film as it brushes over it. This physical deformation caused by the parent's hand is then reproduced exactly in a second textile that is in contact with the child's skin—giving the child the realistic impression of being stroked on the arm, for example.

via Saarland University, Centre for Mechatronics and Automation Technology and the German Research Center for Artificial Intelligence, at 2024 Hannover Messe


An e-skin that can detect tactile information and produce tactile feedback
Mar 2024, phys.org

This e-skin integrates multimodal magnetic tactile sensing with vibration feedback, overcoming the bidirectional transmission limitations of current e-skin tech. It uses a flexible magnetic film, silicon elastomer, Hall sensor array, actuator array, and microcontroller unit.

via Tsinghua University: Shilong Mu et al, Dual-modal Tactile E-skin: Enabling Bidirectional Human-Robot Interaction via Integrated Tactile Perception and Feedback, arXiv (2024). DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2402.05725