How to train your brain to overcome tinnitus

An international research team has developed an app that they say can reduce the debilitating impact of tinnitus in weeks, using a training course and sound therapy delivered via a smartphone app. 

The team from universities in Australia, New Zealand, France and Belgium report these findings today in the journal Frontiers in Audiology and Otology

The initial research trial worked with 30 sufferers. Almost two-thirds experienced a “clinically significant improvement.” The team is now planning larger trials in the UK, in collaboration with University College London Hospital. 

Introducing MindEar

“Tinnitus is common, affecting up to one in four people. It is mostly experienced by older adults but can appear for children,” said Dr Fabrice Bardy, an audiologist at Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland, lead author of the paper, and co-founder of MindEar, a company set up to commercialize the MindEar technology.

Millions looking for a solution

Tinnitus is not a disease in itself. It’s usually a symptom of another underlying health condition, such as damage to the auditory system or tension occurring in the head and neck.

For some, tinnitus goes away without intervention. For others, it can be debilitatingly life-changing, affecting hearing, mood, concentration, sleep and in severe cases, causing anxiety or depression, Bardy notes. “About 1.5 million people in Australia, 4 million in the UK, and 20 million in the USA have severe tinnitus.”

“One of the most common misconceptions about tinnitus is that there is nothing you can do about it; that you just have to live with it,” he says. “This is simply not true. Professional help from those with expertise in tinnitus support can reduce the fear and anxiety attached to the sound patients experience.” 

“Cognitive behavioral therapy is known to help people with tinnitus, but it requires a trained psychologist. That’s expensive, and often difficult to access,” says Professor Suzanne Purdy, Professor of Psychology at Waipapa Taumata Rau, University of Auckland. 

“Even before we are born, our brains learn to filter out sounds that we determine to be irrelevant, such as the surprisingly loud sound of blood rushing past our ears, explains Purdy. As we grow, our brains further learn to filter out environmental noises such as a busy road, an air conditioner or sleeping partners.

“Unlike an alarm, tinnitus occurs when a person hears a sound in the head or ears, when there is no external sound source or risk presented in the environment and yet the mind responds with a similar alert response.

“The sound is perceived as an unpleasant, irritating, or intrusive noise that can’t be switched off. The brain focuses on it insistently, further training our mind to pay even more attention.

“Tinnitus is not a disease in itself. It’s usually a symptom of another underlying health condition, such as damage to the auditory system or tension occurring in the head and neck.”

Cognitive behavioral therapy + mindfulness + relaxation exercises + sound therapy

Enter MindEar. “MindEar uses a combination of cognitive behavioral therapy, mindfulness and relaxation exercises as well as sound therapy to help you train your brain’s reaction so that we can tune out tinnitus. The sound you perceive fades in the background and is much less bothersome,” she says. 

An app, “MindEar,” is available free for iPhone or Android smartphone users.

“In our trial, two-thirds of users of our bot saw improvement after 16 weeks. This was shortened to only 8 weeks when patients additionally had access to an online psychologist,” says Bardy. 

“MindEar aims to help people to practice focus through a training program, equipping the mind and body to suppress stress hormones and responses, and thus reducing the brain’s focus on tinnitus.

“Although there is no known cure for tinnitus, there are management strategies and techniques that help many sufferers find relief. Based on the evidence from this trial, the MindEar team are optimistic that there is a more accessible, rapidly available and effective tool available for the many of those affected by tinnitus still awaiting support.”

MindEar is based on the research work of an international multi-disciplinary team composed of audiologists (Dr Laure Jacquemin, Dr Michael Maslin), psychologists (Prof Suzanne Purdy and Dr Cara Wong) and ENTs (Prof Hung Thai Van), led by Bardy, based at the University of Auckland.

Citation: Bardy, F., Jacquemin, L., Wong, C. L., Maslin, M. R., & Purdy, S. C. (2024). Delivery of internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy combined with human-delivered telepsychology in tinnitus sufferers through a chatbot-based mobile app. Frontiers in Audiology and Otology, 1, 1302215. https://doi.org/10.3389/fauot.2023.1302215 (open-access)

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Putting your child in front of a TV might hurt their ability to process the world—new data

Babies and toddlers exposed to television or video viewing may be more likely to exhibit atypical sensory behaviors, according to data from researchers at Drexel’s College of Medicine published today in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.

Children may become disengaged and disinterested in activities, seeking more intense stimulation in an environment, or being overwhelmed by sensations like loud sounds or bright lights, according to the researchers.

They found that by 33 months, children exposed to greater TV viewing by their second birthday were more likely to develop atypical sensory processing behaviors, such as “sensation seeking” and “sensation avoiding,” as well as “low registration”—being less sensitive or slower to respond to stimuli, such as their name being called.

The team pulled 2011-2014 data on television or DVD-watching by babies and toddlers at 12–18 and 24–months from the National Children’s Study of 1,471 children (50% male) nationwide.

The findings suggest:

  • At 12 months, any screen exposure compared to no screen viewing was associated with a 105% greater likelihood of exhibiting “high” sensory behaviors instead of “typical” sensory behaviors related to low registration at 33 months 
  • At 18 months, each additional hour of daily screen time was associated with 23% increased odds of exhibiting “high” sensory behaviors related to later sensation avoiding and low registration.
  • At 24 months, each additional hour of daily screen time was associated with a 20% increased odds of “high” sensation seeking, sensory sensitivity, and sensation avoiding at 33 months.

Important implications

The findings add to a growing list of concerning health and developmental outcomes linked to screen time in infants and toddlers, including language delayautism spectrum disorderbehavioral issuessleep struggles, attention problems and problem-solving delays.

“This association could have important implications for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and autism, as atypical sensory processing is much more prevalent in these populations,” said lead author Karen Heffler, MD, an associate professor of Psychiatry in Drexel’s College of Medicine.

“Repetitive behavior, such as that seen in autism spectrum disorder, is highly correlated with atypical sensory processing. Future work may determine whether early life screen time could fuel the sensory brain hyperconnectivity seen in autism spectrum disorders, such as heightened brain responses to sensory stimulation.”

The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) discourages screen time for babies under 18–24 months. Live video chat is considered by the AAP to be okay, as there may be benefit from the interaction that takes place. AAP recommends time limitations on digital media use for children 2 to 5 years to typically no more than 1 hour per day.

“Parent training and education are key to minimizing, or hopefully even avoiding, screen time in children younger than two years,” said senior author David Bennett, PhD, a professor of Psychiatry in Drexel’s College of Medicine.”

Digital media

Although the current paper looked strictly at television or DVD watching, and not media viewed on smartphones or tablets, it does provide some of the earliest data linking early-life digital media exposure with later atypical sensory processing across multiple behaviors.

The authors said future research is needed to better understand the mechanisms that drive the association between early-life screen time and atypical sensory processing.

Citation: Heffler KF, Acharya B, Subedi K, Bennett DS. Early-Life Digital Media Experiences and Development of Atypical Sensory Processing. JAMA Pediatr. Published online January 08, 2024. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/article-abstract/2813443

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Novel compound protects against infection by virus that causes COVID-19, preliminary studies show

Dana-Farber Cancer Institute scientists have discovered in a study that a version of a “stapled lipopeptide” compound may protect against infection by the coronavirus that causes COVID-19, as noted today in the journal Nature Communications

The scientists have launched a human clinical trial of this compound by chemically stabilizing a key coronavirus peptide molecule. If the compound proves effective as a nasal spray in the trial, it could be the basis for a new drug to prevent or treat COVID-19, say the study authors. 

Lipopeptide compounds foil a mechanism used by many types of viruses to enter and infect cells, say the reserchers. These compounds may also be effective against other dangerous and potentially deadly viruses, such as RSV, Ebola, and Nipah, as the authors also demonstrate in their study.

A critical gap in protecting people from COVID-19 infection

Vaccines, monoclonal antibodies, and small-molecule drugs have played a crucial role in protecting people from life-threatening COVID-19 infection, but “there remains a critical gap in the treatment arsenal,” says Loren Walensky, MD, PhD, Physician and Principal Investigator, Linde Program in Cancer Chemical Biology at Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center.

Walensky led the research at Boston University’s National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratories (NEIDL). 

Needed: fast-acting, easy-to-administer and resistance-proof agents

“The constant evolution of the virus and the emergence of new variants has markedly decreased the effectiveness of immune-based approaches, requiring periodic reformulation of vaccines,” Walensky explained.

“What has been missing are fast-acting, easy-to-administer, and resistance-proof agents that can be used before or after exposure to the virus to directly prevent infection or reduce symptoms.

“Our study is an encouraging indication that stapled lipopeptides offer that potential. The results were very encouraging,” Walensky remarks. “The animals in each group that received the inhibitor maintained their weight, an indication that they remained well despite viral exposure. 

“Examination of their noses showed a relative drop in viral titers compared to the untreated control group. And evaluation of their lung tissue found that the animals were significantly protected from severe pneumonia, a common complication of COVID-19.”

Unlike mRNA vaccines, the stapled lipopeptides developed by Walensky’s lab act directly on SARS-CoV-2 (the coronavirus responsible for COVID-19) by interfering with the ability to infect healthy cells. This is especially promising for people with weakened immune systems, either due to their disease or treatment with immunosuppressive agents, such as chemotherapy.

“Imagine being able to protect yourself from COVID-19 or other disruptive respiratory viruses with a simple nasal spray that you could use to avoid infection at a large gathering or after exposure to a close contact who turns out to test positive for SARS-CoV-2,” said Walensky.

Digging deeper

Walensky’s lab has pioneered the development and application of stapled peptides for nearly 20 years.  These unique agents consist of natural peptides—a stretch of amino acids in a defined sequence whose bioactive structure is chemically stabilized by an installed “staple” and, in this case, further linked to a lipid, which is believed to help concentrate the stapled peptide at the site of viral infection—the membrane surface of the otherwise healthy cell. 

The new study shows that stapled lipopeptides are exceptionally stable, resisting extremes of temperature and chemical conditions, an important feature for persistence both inside and outside the body. The design strategy not only prevents peptide degradation in the body upon administration, but also remedies prior challenges with shipment and storage, such as the required cold chain for COVID-19 vaccines.

In 2010, Walensky’s lab first developed double-stapled peptides that target the same key step in the process by which the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) binds to, and then infects, human cells, causing AIDS.  The stapled peptides mimicked the virus’s “landing gear,” a bundle of six coils or “helices” of the virus that comes together, enabling the virus to fuse with the membrane of the host cell. 

The therapeutic approach, known as fusion inhibition, prevents the virus from entering the cell to off-load its nucleic acid blueprint, which otherwise turns the cell into a virus-producing factory.  The stapled peptide, which mimics one of the coiled regions, disrupts formation of the fusion apparatus, halting infection at its source.

In 2014, Walensky’s team developed analogous stapled peptides targeting this same feature of the RSV virus, which can cause severe respiratory illness and even respiratory failure in the elderly and very young alike.  They showed that administering the stapled peptide as a nose drop could prevent RSV infection in mice and also prevent the spread of established nasal infection from migrating to the lungs.

When the COVID-19 pandemic broke out in early 2020, Walensky’s lab promptly converted one of the coiled motifs of the SARS-CoV-2 six-helix bundle into a stapled peptide in an effort to develop a therapeutic for pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis.

“Remarkably, the viral peptide sequence that we use to block the fusion apparatus is 100% identical between SARS-CoV-2 and SARS1, which emerged as a deadly respiratory virus in 2003,” notes Walensky.  He points out that, in contrast to the viral sequences that mutate frequently to evade immune-based therapies, the virus’s fusion sequences are rarely altered due to the critical role of six-helix bundle assembly in promoting viral infection.

In cooperation with researchers expert in highly pathogenic viruses at the NEIDL, Walensky’s team began developing dozens of stapled peptide fusion inhibitors for anti-viral testing, altering the location of the staple and the linker between the staple and the lipid, to determine which version worked best against the broadest spectrum of SARS-CoV-2 variants. Ironically, as the virus evolved to evade vaccines and monoclonal antibodies, the more effective the stapled lipopeptides became, owing to the essential nature of the fusion mechanism they target.

Then, in partnership with the laboratory of Richard Bowen, DVM, PhD, of Colorado State University and the newly formed Red Queen Therapeutics of Cambridge, Massachusetts that licensed the Dana-Farber technology, the Walensky lab began testing the inhibitors in hamsters.  The studies evaluated a lead stapled lipopeptide as a preventive and therapeutic agent.  The animals were randomly selected to receive an inhibitor before and/or after nasal inoculation with SARS-CoV-2.

“Similar to what we saw with RSV, nasal treatment with a stapled peptide fusion inhibitor – even if given after inoculation with SARS-CoV-2 – prevented the infection from adversely affecting the lungs and causing severe disease,” Walensky comments.

A second set of studies explored whether the inhibitors could help reduce transmission of the virus from one hamster to another.  Again, the results were encouraging.  “Animals that weren’t treated consistently lost weight.  Those that received treatment, either before or after exposure to an infected hamster, preserved their weight,” Walensky notes.  Correspondingly, viral loads in the noses and lungs of treated animals were lower than in untreated animals.

The fact that many viruses with pandemic potential rely on the six-helix bundle to enter and infect cells suggests that stapled lipopeptides developed by Walensky’s lab can be adapted to block or reduce infection by other viruses “on demand.”

“Red Queen Therapeutics was founded on the conviction that this novel technology from the Walensky lab would be broadly applicable in successfully combating viral threats, using a pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis paradigm, and COVID presents a proving ground as well as an important opportunity in its own right,” said Ron Moss, M.D., CEO of Red Queen Therapeutics. “We are excited to validate data in this publication with our human trials in SARS-CoV-2 now under way and anticipate having data to share later this quarter,” he added.

“This approach has the potential to fill an important gap in our arsenal against COVID-19 and other viruses that cause severe respiratory and hemorrhagic diseases,” Walensky relates.  “Imagine being able to protect yourself from COVID-19 or other disruptive respiratory viruses with a simple nasal spray that you could use to avoid infection at a large gathering or after exposure to a close contact who turns out to test positive for SARS-CoV-2. 

That is the promise this work holds, not only for otherwise healthy individuals, but especially for immunocompromised patients who remain most at risk of severe infection. As a Dana-Farber chemical biology lab that specializes in studying mechanisms of cancer chemoresistance in children, my group has also been interested in tackling the secondary causes of morbidity and mortality in our patients, and that includes life-threatening infections by treatment-resistant bacteria and viruses.     

The research was supported by the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, a grant from the Massachusetts Consortium on Pathogen Readiness and the National Institutes of Health to the NEIDL, and the Pre-clinical Services Program of the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases, which funded in part the animal testing performed at Colorado State University.

Citation: Bird, G.H., Patten, J.J., Zavadoski, W. et al. A stapled lipopeptide platform for preventing and treating highly pathogenic viruses of pandemic potential. Nat Commun 15, 274 (2024). https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-023-44361-1 (open-access)

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Game-changing organoid model to study human cerebellar development and disease

USC scientists have pioneered a novel human brain organoid model that generates all the major cell types of the cerebellum. This a hindbrain region predominantly made up of two cell types necessary for movement, cognition, and emotion: granule cells and Purkinje neurons. 

This marks the first time that scientists have succeeded in growing Purkinje cells, which possess the molecular and electrophysiological features of functional neurons in an all-human system. 

The cerebellum controls movement and plays important roles in cognitive functions, including language, spatial processing, working memory, executive functions, and emotional processing.  

Targeting conditions like autism and ataxia disorders

Degeneration of Purkinje cells is associated with various neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative disorders, including autism spectrum disorder and cerebellar ataxia, a condition that affects muscle movement. 

Other neurons within the organoids—both excitatory neurons that share information, and inhibitory neurons that inhibit the sharing of information—formed circuits and showed coordinated network activity, demonstrating that they were also functional nerve cells. 

These breakthroughs in organoid-directed brain modeling have been published recently in the journal Cell Stem Cell.

New treatments for brain tumor, other diseases

The organoid model creates a platform for discovering new treatments for variety of diseases. Organoids form human-specific progenitor cells, which are associated with medulloblastoma, the most prevalent metastatic brain tumor in children. This makes the organoids a potentially useful model for studying and finding treatments for this pediatric cancer.

This project was funded by the Robert E. and May R. Wright Foundation, The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, and the Edward Mallinckdot, Jr. Foundation.

Citation: Alexander Atamian et al. 2024. Human cerebellar organoids with functional Purkinje cells. Cell Stem Cell. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.stem.2023.11.013 (open-access)

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How to bypass the blood-brain barrier to deliver healing antibodies

The blood-brain barrier blocks the entry of antibodies into the brain as protection. But this also limits the potential use of antibody therapeutics to treat brain diseases, such as brain tumors.

More than 100 FDA-approved therapeutic antibodies are used by medical teams to treat cancers and autoimmune, infectious and metabolic diseases. Finding ways to transport therapeutic antibodies from the peripheral blood stream into the central nervous system could create effective treatments that act in the brain, say researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham

Bypassing the blood-brain barrier

In a study published in the journal Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, they report that the therapeutic antibody trastuzumab (also used as coating material for transplantable devices and a human monoclonal IgG1 antibody), was able to penetrate the blood-brain barrier in a mouse model. (Trastuzumab is used to treat breast cancer and several other cancers.) The biocompatible polymer used to achieve that was poly 2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine (PMPC).

“This simple methodology has great potential to serve as the platform to not only repurpose the current antibody therapeutics, but also encourage the design of novel antibodies for the treatment of brain diseases,” said Masakazu Kamata, Ph.D., leader of the study and an associate professor in the UAB Department of Microbiology.

Safe, non-toxic delivery of antibodies

In a mouse model, the polymer-modified trastuzumab did not induce neurotoxicity, did not show adverse effects in the liver, and did not disrupt the integrity of the blood-brain barrier.

“Those findings collectively indicate that PMPC conjugation achieves effective brain delivery of therapeutic antibodies, such as trastuzumab, without induction of adverse effects, at least in the liver, the blood-brain barrier or the brain,” Kamata said.

Other researchers seeking to breech the blood-brain barrier have investigated various ligands other than PMPC to boost transport, such as ligands derived from microbes and toxins, or endogenous proteins like lipoproteins. These generally have had undesirable surface properties — such as being highly immunogenic, highly hydrophobic or charged. PMPC does not exhibit those undesirable traits.

Support came from National Institutes of Health grants CA232015 and MH130183, an O’Neal Comprehensive Cancer Center at UAB Pre-R01 award, and National Science Foundation grant DMR-2208831.

Citation: Ren, J., Jepson, C. E., Nealy, S. L., Kuhlmann, C. J., Osuka, S., Azolibe, S. U., Blucas, M. T., Kharlampieva, E., & Kamata, M. (2023). Site-oriented conjugation of poly(2-methacryloyloxyethyl phosphorylcholine) for enhanced brain delivery of antibody. Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology, 11, 1214118. https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2023.1214118 https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2023.1214118

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Major cities on the U.S. Atlantic coast are sinking

In some cases, they’ve sunk as much as 5 millimeters per year—a decline at the ocean’s edge that outpaces global sea level rise, confirms new research from Virginia Tech and the U.S. Geological Survey.

Particularly hard-hit population centers such as New York City, Long Island, Baltimore, and Virginia Beach and Norfolk are seeing areas of rapid “subsidence,” or sinking land, alongside more slowly sinking or relatively stable ground, increasing the risk to roadways, runways, building foundations, rail lines, and pipelines, according to a study published in Proceedings of the National Academies of Sciences.

“Continuous unmitigated subsidence on the U.S. East Coast should cause concern,” say researchers at Virginia Tech’s Earth Observation and Innovation Lab. “This is particularly in areas with a high population and property density and a historical complacency toward infrastructure maintenance.”

The research includes a vast collection of data points measured by space-based radar satellites and using this highly accurate information to build digital terrain maps that show exactly where sinking landscapes present risks to the health of vital infrastructure.

How deep?

These groundbreaking new maps show that a large area of the East Coast is sinking at least 2 mm per year, with several areas sinking more than 5 mm per year, more than the current 4 mm per year global rate of sea level rise.

This affects more than 2 million people and 800,000 properties on the East Coast and several cities along the East Coast. And multiple critical infrastructures such as roads, railways, airports, and levees are affected by differing subsidence rates, the researchers found.

The new findings appear in “Slowly but surely: Exposure of communities and infrastructure to subsidence on the US east coast” in the open-access journal PNAS Nexus

How much has sunk?

Virginia Tech and U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) scientists measured how much the land along the East Coast has sunk and which areas, populations, and critical infrastructure within 100 km of the coast are at risk of land subsidence. Subsidence can undermine building foundations; damage roads, gas, and water lines; cause building collapse; and exacerbate coastal flooding—especially when paired with sea level rise caused by climate change.

Citation: Ohenhen, L. O., Shirzaei, M., & Barnard, P. L. (2023). Slowly but surely: Exposure of communities and infrastructure to subsidence on the US east coast. PNAS Nexus, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgad426

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New AI tool detects cancer quicker, with sharper focus

Researchers have developed a new AI tool that interprets medical images with unprecedented clarity and could speed up disease diagnosis and image interpretation.

The tool, called iStar (Inferring Super-Resolution Tissue Architecture), was developed by researchers at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania.

The researchers say the iStat tool would allow doctors and researchers to see cancer cells that might otherwise have been virtually invisible. It could also determine whether safe margins were achieved through cancer surgeries and automatically provide annotation for microscopic images, paving the way for molecular disease diagnosis at that level.

A paper on the method was published today in Nature Biotechnology.

Deciding when immunotherapy is needed

Mingyao Li, PhD, a professor of Biostatistics and Digital Pathology, said iStar can automatically detect critical anti-tumor immune formations called “tertiary lymphoid structures,” a patient’s likely survival and favorable response to immunotherapy. This means, Li said, that iStar could be a powerful tool for determining which patients would benefit most from immunotherapy.

Li and her colleagues trained a machine-learning tool called the “Hierarchical Vision Transformer” on standard tissue images. It breaks down images into different stages, and these images are used to predict gene activities, often at near-single-cell resolution.

213 times faster than other AI tools

To test the efficacy of the tool, Li and her colleagues evaluated iStar on many different types of cancer tissue, including breast, prostate, kidney, and colorectal cancers, mixed with healthy tissues. iStar was able to automatically detect tumor and cancer cells that were hard to identify just by eye. iStar was also 213 times faster than other AI tools.

This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health (R01GM125301 and R01HG013185).

Citation: Zhang, D., Schroeder, A., Yan, H. et al. Inferring super-resolution tissue architecture by integrating spatial transcriptomics with histology. Nat Biotechnol (2024). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-023-02019-9

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A carbon-lite atmosphere could be a sign of water and life on a terrestrial planet

Scientists at MIT, the University of Birmingham, and elsewhere say that astronomers’ best chance of finding liquid water, and even life on other planets, is to look for the absence, rather than the presence, of carbon dioxide in their atmospheres. 

This new signature is within the sights of NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). The team says this new signature of relatively depleted carbon dioxide is the only sign of habitability that is detectable now.

“Now we have a way to find out if there’s liquid water on another planet. And it’s something we can get to in the next few years,” said Julien de Wit, assistant professor of planetary sciences at MIT.

The team’s findings will appear in Nature Astronomy.

Liquid water

Astronomers have so far detected more than 5,200 worlds beyond our solar system. But there’s been no way to directly confirm whether a planet is indeed habitable, meaning that liquid water exists on its surface. 

Venus, Earth, and Mars share similarities: all three are rocky and inhabit a relatively temperate region with respect to the sun. But Earth is the only planet among the three that currently hosts liquid water, and it has significantly less carbon dioxide in its atmosphere. 

“We assume that these planets were created in a similar fashion, and if we see one planet with much less carbon now, it must have gone somewhere,” Triaud says. “The only process that could remove that much carbon from an atmosphere is a strong water cycle involving oceans of liquid water. 

The team reasoned that if a similar depletion of carbon dioxide were detected in a far-off planet, relative to its neighbors, this would be a reliable signal of liquid oceans and life on its surface.

A roadmap to life

Once astronomers determine that multiple planets in a system host atmospheres, they can move on to measure their carbon dioxide content, to see whether one planet has significantly less than the others. If so, the planet is likely habitable, meaning that it hosts significant bodies of liquid water on its surface. 

To see whether life might actually exist, the team proposes that astronomers look for another feature in a planet’s atmosphere: ozone. Lifeforms emit oxygen, which reacts with the sun’s photons to transform into ozone—a molecule that is far easier to detect than oxygen itself. 

The researchers say that if a planet’s atmosphere shows signs of both ozone and depleted carbon dioxide, it likely is a habitable, and inhabited world, which could lead to discoveries within the next few years.

Citation: Triaud, A. H., De Wit, J., Klein, F., Turbet, M., Rackham, B. V., Niraula, P., Glidden, A., Jagoutz, O. E., Peč, M., Petkowski, J. J., Seager, S., & Selsis, F. (2023). Atmospheric carbon depletion as a tracer of water oceans and biomass on temperate terrestrial exoplanets. Nature Astronomy, 1-13. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-023-02157-9

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New AI model could predict your lifespan, job, income and more

Researchers have created an AI model that uses sequences of life events—such as health history, education, job, and income—to predict everything from a person’s personality to their own mortality—for an entire country.

Built using transformer models, which power large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT, the new tool, life2vec, is trained on a data set pulled from the entire population of Denmark—6 million people. The data set was made available to the researchers by the Danish government.

The tool is capable of predicting the future, with an accuracy that exceeds state-of-the-art models, says Tina Eliassi-Rad, professor of computer science and the inaugural President Joseph E. Aoun Professor at Northeastern University in Boston.

Unique human-centered model

“Even though we’re using prediction to evaluate how good these models are, the tool shouldn’t be used for prediction on real people,” says Chenru Duan, lead author of a paper recently published in Nature Computational Science.

“It is a prediction model based on a specific data set of a specific population. These tools allow you to see into your society in a different way: the policies, rules and regulations. You can think of it as a scan of what is happening on the ground.”

By involving social scientists in the process of building this tool, the team hopes it brings a human-centered approach to AI development, one that doesn’t lose sight of the humans amid the massive data set their tool has been trained on. 

Confidential training data

A massive data set was used to train the life2vec model. The data is held by Statistics Denmark, the central authority on Danish statistics, and is tightly controlled because it includes a detailed registry of every Danish citizen. Although tightly regulated, it can be accessed by some members of the public, including researchers, according to the researchers.

The researchers hope the model can kickstart a public conversation about the power of these tools and how they should (and shouldn’t) be used.

Citation: Duan, C., Du, Y., Jia, H. et al. Accurate transition state generation with an object-aware equivariant elementary reaction diffusion model. Nat Comput Sci 3, 1045–1055 (2023). Also available: open-access draft arXiv version

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Listening to binaural beats stimulates cognitive performance

New research conducted at The University of Texas at Dallas investigates the impact of binaural beats (BB) on cognitive performance on language skills. BB is a sound that occurs from two tones (one in each ear) with slightly different frequencies.

There is a growing interest in using BB as a non-invasive neuromodulation to enhance cognitive performance, according to the researchers.

The experiment

Researchers in the Speech, Language and Music (SLAM) Lab at the Center for BrainHealth investigated how BB stimulation at beta and gamma frequencies effects people. The research was recently published in Cerebral Cortex

In the experiment, 60 participants’ electroencephalography (EEG) signals were recorded. Each participant was randomly assigned to one of three listening groups of differing frequencies (18-Hz beta BB, 40-Hz gamma BB, or pure-tone baseline) embedded in music, followed by a language comprehension task phase. 

18-Hz binaural beats showed best performance

Results showed that participants exposed to 18-Hz (beta-frequency) binaural beats had significantly higher accuracy and faster response times during the language comprehension task, particularly for complex sentences. They also had increased neural entrainment.

“This is the first neuroimaging study that elucidates the effect of BB on language processing at the neural level, said lead investigator Dr. Yune Lee, Assistant Professor at the School of Behavioral and Brain Sciences and Director of the Speech, Language, and Music (SLAM) Laboratory.

Higher accuracy and faster language response times

Minimal exposure to beta-frequency binaural beats resulted in significantly higher accuracy and faster language response times compared to control sounds. These results have implications for the potential use of BB in treating developmental language disorders.”

Citation: Kim, J., Kim, H., Kovar, J., & Lee, Y. S. Neural consequences of binaural beat stimulation on auditory sentence comprehension: An EEG study. Cerebral Cortex. https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhad459

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