Scientists learning a lot about Pluto’s atmosphere

According to ClapWay, the latest pictures of Pluto reveal that it is encircled by layers of “vast haze”. “This is our first gaze at weather conditions in Pluto’s situation”, New Horizons inventor Michael Summers said.

Flowing ice as well as an unexpected extended haze are among some of the newest features discovered by NASA’s New Horizons mission, which shows distant Pluto to be an icy world of mystery. As a result, methane breaks down, and more complex hydrocarbons begin forming; specifically, ethylene and acetylene, both of which have been found in Pluto’s atmosphere.

This revelation, scientists believe, is the reason why Pluto’s surface has had its red-like color. “At Pluto’s temperatures of minus-390 degrees Fahrenheit, these ices can flow like a glacier”, explained New Horizons Geology, Geophysics, and Imaging deputy team leader Bill McKinnon.

“We’ve only seen surfaces like this on active worlds like Earth and Mars”, said mission co-investigator John Spencer of SwRI.

The research illustrates clear sheets of mist in Pluto’s nitrogen, co2 and methane situation. The images captured were obtained 280,000 miles (450,000 km) away from Pluto. However, the mission is not yet over, as the spacecraft is still sending photographs of the dwarf planet on Earth, and these new pictures are unprecedented.

As the data from New Horizons continues to slowly make its way back to Earth, experts have been revealing more about what they’ve managed to find so far on Pluto and its moon Charon. The spacecraft is healthy and all systems are operating at a normal function.

Moreover, the features that are on Pluto’s moon Charon are about to be named after popular science fiction heroes. The International Astronomical Union, which is in charge of approving the names of celestial bodies, said that the features on Pluto’s moon Charon should have names that are of fictional destinations, vessels, explorers, as well as milestones.

http://natmonitor.com/2015/07/29/scientists-learning-a-lot-about-plutos-atmosphere/

Sri Lanka to be first country in the world with universal Internet access

July 29, 2015

(credit: Google)

Sri Lanka may soon become the first country in the world to have universal Internet access. On July 28, the government of Sri Lanka signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Google to launch Project Loon, according to Sri Lanka Internet newspaper ColumboPage.

Google is providing high-altitude balloons, using the standard telco high-speed 4G LTE protocol, according to Project Loon project lead Mike Cassidy, in a video (below), “so anyone with a smart phone will be able to get Internet access. … “Since launching a handful of balloons in New Zealand at our Project launch in 2013 we’ve flown millions of test kilometers around the world trying to learn what it will take to provide connectivity to everyone, anywhere, with balloons.”

Project Loon began with a pilot test in June 2013, when 30 balloons were launched from New Zealand’s South Island and beamed Internet to a small group of pilot testers, Google notes. … “Looking ahead, Project Loon will continue to expand the pilot, with the goal of establishing a ring of uninterrupted connectivity at latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere.”*

“In a few months we will truly be able to say: Sri Lanka covered,” said Sri Lanka Foreign, Telecommunications and IT Minister Mangala Samaraweera.

Long-time Sri Lanka resident and telecommunications pioneer Arthur C. Clarke would be proud.

* “Project Loon is just one way Google is looking to expand Internet coverage around the globe,” PC Magazine reports. “Last year, it bought satellite maker Skybox for $500 million to help improve its maps, but also Internet access and disaster relief. Earlier in the year, Google also bought Titan Aerospace, a company that makes solar-powered, near-orbital drones that can fly for about five years nonstop.”

Project Loon: Scaling Up
July 29, 2015

(credit: Google)

Sri Lanka may soon become the first country in the world to have universal Internet access. On July 28, the government of Sri Lanka signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Google to launch Project Loon, according to Sri Lanka Internet newspaper ColumboPage.

Google is providing high-altitude balloons, using the standard telco high-speed 4G LTE protocol, according to Project Loon project lead Mike Cassidy, in a video (below), “so anyone with a smart phone will be able to get Internet access. … “Since launching a handful of balloons in New Zealand at our Project launch in 2013 we’ve flown millions of test kilometers around the world trying to learn what it will take to provide connectivity to everyone, anywhere, with balloons.”

Project Loon began with a pilot test in June 2013, when 30 balloons were launched from New Zealand’s South Island and beamed Internet to a small group of pilot testers, Google notes. … “Looking ahead, Project Loon will continue to expand the pilot, with the goal of establishing a ring of uninterrupted connectivity at latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere.”*

“In a few months we will truly be able to say: Sri Lanka covered,” said Sri Lanka Foreign, Telecommunications and IT Minister Mangala Samaraweera.

Long-time Sri Lanka resident and telecommunications pioneer Arthur C. Clarke would be proud.

* “Project Loon is just one way Google is looking to expand Internet coverage around the globe,” PC Magazine reports. “Last year, it bought satellite maker Skybox for $500 million to help improve its maps, but also Internet access and disaster relief. Earlier in the year, Google also bought Titan Aerospace, a company that makes solar-powered, near-orbital drones that can fly for about five years nonstop.”

Project Loon: Scaling Up

July 29, 2015

(credit: Google)

Sri Lanka may soon become the first country in the world to have universal Internet access. On July 28, the government of Sri Lanka signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Google to launch Project Loon, according to Sri Lanka Internet newspaper ColumboPage.

Google is providing high-altitude balloons, using the standard telco high-speed 4G LTE protocol, according to Project Loon project lead Mike Cassidy, in a video (below), “so anyone with a smart phone will be able to get Internet access. … “Since launching a handful of balloons in New Zealand at our Project launch in 2013 we’ve flown millions of test kilometers around the world trying to learn what it will take to provide connectivity to everyone, anywhere, with balloons.”

Project Loon began with a pilot test in June 2013, when 30 balloons were launched from New Zealand’s South Island and beamed Internet to a small group of pilot testers, Google notes. … “Looking ahead, Project Loon will continue to expand the pilot, with the goal of establishing a ring of uninterrupted connectivity at latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere.”*

“In a few months we will truly be able to say: Sri Lanka covered,” said Sri Lanka Foreign, Telecommunications and IT Minister Mangala Samaraweera.

Long-time Sri Lanka resident and telecommunications pioneer Arthur C. Clarke would be proud.

* “Project Loon is just one way Google is looking to expand Internet coverage around the globe,” PC Magazine reports. “Last year, it bought satellite maker Skybox for $500 million to help improve its maps, but also Internet access and disaster relief. Earlier in the year, Google also bought Titan Aerospace, a company that makes solar-powered, near-orbital drones that can fly for about five years nonstop.”

Project Loon: Scaling Up

http://www.kurzweilai.net/sri-lanka-to-be-first-country-in-the-world-with-universal-internet-access

Scientists successfully edit human immune-system T cells

New CRISPR research has implications for autoimmune diseases, AIDS, and cancer
July 29, 2015

Efficient editing (cutting out) of CXCR4, a protein receptor that HIV can use to infect T cells (credit: Kathrin Schumann et al./PNAS)

In a project led by investigators at UC San Francisco , scientists have devised a new strategy to precisely modify human immune-system T cells, using the popular genome-editing system known as CRISPR/Cas9. T cells play important roles in a wide range of diseases, from diabetes to AIDS to cancer, so this achievement provides a path toward CRISPR/Cas9-based therapies for many serious health problems, the scientists say. It also provides a versatile new tool for research on T cell function.

Specifically, the researchers disabled a protein on the T-cell surface called CXCR4, which can be exploited by HIV when the virus infects T cells and causes AIDS. The group also successfully shut down PD-1. Scientists have shown that using drugs to block PD-1 coaxes T cells to attack tumors.

The CRISPR/Cas9 system makes it possible to easily and inexpensively edit genetic information in virtually any organism. T cells, which circulate in the blood, are an obvious candidate for medical applications of the technology, as these cells are at the center of many disease processes, and could be easily gathered from patients, edited with CRISPR/Cas9, then returned to the body to exert therapeutic effects.

A CRISPR/Cas9 breakthrough

Cas9, an enzyme in the CRISPR system that makes cuts in DNA and allows new genetic sequences to be inserted, is generally introduced into cells by using viruses or circular bits of DNA called plasmids. Then, in a separate step, a genetic construct known as single-guide RNA, which steers Cas9 to the specific spots in DNA where cuts are desired, is also placed into the cells.

Until recently, however, editing human T cells with CRISPR/Cas9 has been inefficient, with only a relatively small percentage of cells being successfully modified. And while scientists have had some success in switching off genes by inserting or deleting random sequences, they have not yet been able to use CRISPR/Cas9 to paste in (or “knock in”) specific new sequences to correct mutations in T cells.

Now, as reported in an open-access paper online in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences on July 27, 2015, the team has cracked these problems by streamlining the delivery of Cas9 and single-guide RNA to cells.

In lab dishes, the group assembled Cas9 ribonucleoproteins (RNPs), which combine the Cas9 protein with single-guide RNA. They then used a method known as electroporation, in which electrical field essentially punches tiny holes in membranes to make them more permeable so that these RNPs can we quickly delivered to the interior of the cells.

With these innovations, the researchers successfully edited CXCR4 and PD-1, even knocking in new sequences to replace specific genetic “letters” in these proteins. The group was then able to sort the cells, using markers expressed on the cell surface, to help pull out successfully edited cells for research, and eventually for therapeutic use.

The new work was done under the auspices of the Innovative Genomics Initiative (IGI), a joint UC Berkeley-UCSF program co-directed by Berkeley’s Jennifer Doudna, PhD, who is world-renowned for her pioneering research on CRISPR/Cas9, and Jonathan Weissman, PhD, professor of cellular and molecular pharmacology at UCSF and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) investigator.

Doudna, professor of chemistry and of cell and molecular biology at Berkeley, an HHMI investigator and co-corresponding author of the new paper, said that the research is a significant step forward in bringing the power of CRISPR/Cas9 editing to human biology and medicine.”

‘Designer babies’ concern

Recent reports of CRISPR/Cas9 editing of human embryos for possible heritable germline modification have stirred up an ethical controversy. But with this new protocol, T cells are created anew in each individual, so modifications would not be passed on to future generations, explained Alexander Marson, PhD, a UCSF Sandler Fellow and an affiliate member of the IGI, and senior and co-corresponding author of the new study.

“There’s actually well-trodden ground putting modified T cells into patients. There are companies out there already doing it and figuring out the safety profile, so there’s increasing clinical infrastructure that we could potentially piggyback on as we work out more details of genome editing,” Marson said. “I think CRISPR-edited T cells will eventually go into patients, and it would be wrong not to think about the steps we need to take to get there safely and effectively.”

He hopes that Cas9-based therapies for T cell-related disorders, which include autoimmune diseases as well as immunodeficiencies such as “bubble boy disease,” will enter the clinic in the future.

The research was supported by a gift from Jake Aronov, and by the UCSF Sandler Fellows Program, the National Institutes of Health, the National MS Society, and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Abstract of Generation of knock-in primary human T cells using Cas9 ribonucleoproteins

T-cell genome engineering holds great promise for cell-based therapies for cancer, HIV, primary immune deficiencies, and autoimmune diseases, but genetic manipulation of human T cells has been challenging. Improved tools are needed to efficiently “knock out” genes and “knock in” targeted genome modifications to modulate T-cell function and correct disease-associated mutations. CRISPR/Cas9 technology is facilitating genome engineering in many cell types, but in human T cells its efficiency has been limited and it has not yet proven useful for targeted nucleotide replacements. Here we report efficient genome engineering in human CD4+ T cells using Cas9:single-guide RNA ribonucleoproteins (Cas9 RNPs). Cas9 RNPs allowed ablation of CXCR4, a coreceptor for HIV entry. Cas9 RNP electroporation caused up to ∼40% of cells to lose high-level cell-surface expression of CXCR4, and edited cells could be enriched by sorting based on low CXCR4 expression. Importantly, Cas9 RNPs paired with homology-directed repair template oligonucleotides generated a high frequency of targeted genome modifications in primary T cells. Targeted nucleotide replacement was achieved in CXCR4 and PD-1 (PDCD1), a regulator of T-cell exhaustion that is a validated target for tumor immunotherapy. Deep sequencing of a target site confirmed that Cas9 RNPs generated knock-in genome modifications with up to ∼20% efficiency, which accounted for up to approximately one-third of total editing events. These results establish Cas9 RNP technology for diverse experimental and therapeutic genome engineering applications in primary human T cells.

references:
Kathrin Schumann, Steven Lin, Eric Boyer, Dimitre R. Simeonov, Meena Subramaniam, Rachel E. Gate, Genevieve E. Haliburton, Chun J. Ye, Jeffrey A. Bluestone, Jennifer A. Doudna, and Alexander Marson. Generation of knock-in primary human T cells using Cas9 ribonucleoproteins. PNAS, July 2015 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1512503112 (open access)
related:
In CRISPR Advance, Scientists Successfully Edit Human T Cells
CRISPR/Cas9 coverage on KurzweilAI News

http://www.kurzweilai.net/scientists-successfully-edit-human-immune-system-t-cells

Alberta has more overweight or obese people than national average, report indicates

Men, individuals aged 45-64 and residents of northern part of the province most affected
CBC News Posted: Jul 29, 2015 10:57 AM MT Last Updated: Jul 29, 2015 12:54 PM MT

A new report indicates six in 10 Albertans are overweight or obese, higher than the national average. (Shutterstock)

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Fact Sheet: A look at obesity in Alberta
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external links.)

Nearly six out of 10 people in Alberta are overweight or obese, according a new report from the Health Quality Council of Alberta.

The findings are almost four per cent higher than the national average, which indicates five in 10 Canadians — or 54 per cent — are overweight or obese.

Canada’s obesity rate higher since global recession: OECD
​Canada’s obesity rates triple in less than 30 years
Northern smoking, drinking rates highest in Canada: 2014 health report
The greatest incidence of obesity in the Health Quality Council of Alberta (HQCA) study was in men, people between ages 45 and 64, and residents in the northern part of the province.

“The rise in obesity is a worldwide public health issue, and is associated with an increased risk of chronic disease and more frequent use of health-care services, and so the HQCA decided to explore this issue further,” said HQCA board chair Dr. Tony Fields in a release.

The information in the report was gathered through a 2014 survey that asked Albertans how they used health-care services and their overall satisfaction with the system.

Through that survey of 4,424 adults, weight and height numbers were collected to determine body mass index (BMI), with overweight 25 to 29.9, and obesity above 30.

Those figures found about 35 per cent were overweight and some 24 per cent were obese. As well:

Four in 10 Albertans reported being overweight in 2014, while two in 10 reported being obese.
Obesity is more common in the Alberta Health Services north and south zones, while rates are lowest in Calgary and Edmonton.
Being overweight is more common among males than females at 42.4 per cent compared to 27.5 per cent.
There have been no significant changes in the prevalence of overweight or obesity among people in Alberta since 2012.
“With this report, we aimed to understand the impact of overweight and obesity on quality of life and our health-care system, and to provide rationale for the role of primary health care in weight management,” said Andrew Neuner, chief executive officer for the HQCA, in a release.

There is a long list of chronic conditions that have been linked to being overweight or obese, including diabetes, heart disease, asthma, high blood pressure, depression and anxiety.

The HQCA said the report will also help health-care providers determine the best way to help overweight or obese individuals with weight management.

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/alberta-has-more-overweight-or-obese-people-than-national-average-report-indicates-1.3172436

Face Recognition Method Works in Utter Darkness

JUL 29, 2015 12:55 PM ET // BY TRACY STAEDTER

If perfected, face recognition technology could aid law enforcement with spotting known terrorists or other criminals walking through a mall or an airport, for example.

So far, however, the technology has not been perfected. Even the best systems available today only work well using photographs taken in good light without shadows.

How Face Recognition Tech Will Change Everything

But now researchers have developed a face recognition technology that works in utter darkness.

Computer scientists Saquib Sarfraz and Rainer Stiefelhagen from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Germany, created a system that analyzes dozens of infrared images of a person’s face and then compares them to dozens of images taken in daylight.

The comparisons are made with a computer program that works using a so-called deep neural network system designed to imitate the function of a human brain.

In a study published this week, Sarfraz and Stiefelhagen explain how the deep neural network analyzed 4,585 images taken in both infrared and visible light, and was able to establish a match in just 35 milliseconds.

“The presented approach improves the state-of-the-art by more than 10 percent,” Sarfraz and Stiefelhagen told MIT Technology Review.

Pay For Stuff With Your Face

But like other face recognition systems, this one is not perfect either.

Like daylight images of a person’s face, infrared images can also change with the environment. If it’s hot outside or if the person just finished a session at the gym, the heat map of the face could look very different from when it does when the person is cool and relaxed.

In Sarfraz’s and Stiefelhagen’s study, the 4,585 images represented 82 people and although the speed of the computer was fast, it was only about 80 percent accurate and worked best when it had many visible light images to compare with the infrared. In cases where it had only one visible light image, the system accuracy dropped to 55 percent.

Scientists are never discouraged by these kinds of results, though, because a bigger database and a more powerful neural network are not impossible.

And, as Technology Review points out, “interested customers are likely to be the military, law enforcement agencies and governments who generally have deeper pockets when it comes to security-related technology.

via MIT Technology Review

http://news.discovery.com/tech/biotechnology/face-recognition-method-works-in-utter-darkness-150729.htm

3D tech to preserve record of historic fort threatened by melting permafrost

CALGARY – A historic fort threatened by melting permafrost in one of the most remote locations on Earth might be preserved thanks to 3D technology.

Fort Conger on Ellesmere Island was established in 1875 by British explorers looking for the North Pole.

It also served as scientific headquarters for the ill-fated Lady Franklin Bay expedition and was used by U.S. polar explorer Robert Peary in his quest for the North Pole.

“Melting permafrost is causing the surface area to sink and erode and that’s damaging the wooden buildings,” said Peter Dawson, a University of Calgary archeology professor.

“A lot of these historical sites in the Arctic are actually being impacted by the effects of climate change,” he said.

“We were finding the depletion of sea ice was creating storm surges which were flooding some sites like Herschel Island and there’s a large turn-of-the-century … whaling settlement which has been flooded several times in the last 10 years.”

Dawson used a borrowed 3D digital scanner to record every building, rock and artifact at Fort Conger in 2010.

He intends to do the same thing next year with his own scanner after receiving a grant from the Canada Foundation for Innovation.

The scanner, about the size of a lunch box, sits on a tripod, rotates 360 degrees and emits beams of laser light millions of times a minute. It measures how long it takes the beams to strike the surface of a building or artifact and return to the scanner.

“We created a scan of the entire site — an area of about 32,000 square metres — and captured all of the standing structures and building foundations and artifacts. We now have basically a very accurate three-dimensional map and model of the site as it appeared at that time,” Dawson said.

By re-scanning next year, he will be able to record any additional damage and, if necessary, mitigation work can be done.

Damage from melting permafrost is just one of several risks as Arctic ice opens up and allows more adventure tour companies to operate in the region. That leads to more people wandering over deteriorating sites.

“You can get 40 or 50 passengers disembarking at a time and wandering around and it’s very difficult to monitor the impact these visitors are having,” said Dawson.

“They can pick up artifacts or accidentally damage a building.”

Lady Franklin Bay is an inlet on the northeastern shore of Ellesmere Island. The expedition in 1881 involved 25 men who set sail from Newfoundland to the bay, where they planned to collect a wealth of scientific data. Three years later, only six survivors returned. Many of the men starved to death after attempts to bring in relief supplies failed.

“There’s a lot of really significant heritage sites that are associated with the heroic age of polar exploration and this includes the search for the Northwest Passage and the North Pole,” said Dawson.

“It was one of the first co-ordinated attempts by circumpolar nations to gain some sort of understanding about the Arctic climate.”

Follow @BillGraveland on Twitter

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Motorola launches Pulse and Surround wireless headphones

WASHINGTON: Motorola has launched two new Bluetooth headphones, the in-ear Moto Surround and over-ear Moto Pulse.

The Moto Pulse is a classic pair of on-ear headphones featuring 40mm speaker. It has 60-foot wireless range.

The Moto Surround is an on-ear headphone. It is waterproof and sweatproof, but Motorola also promises high-quality audio.

According to The Verge, the bigger Pulse lasts up to 18 hours on a charge while the smaller, waterproof Surround will give the users 12 hours of listening.

They also feature the standard ability to take voice calls and are compatible with iOS and Android.

In addition, Motorola Connect app allows the users to keep track of the headphones’ battery life from their phones and also track them down via Google Maps if they get lost.

Moto Pulse has been priced at $60, while Surround costs $70.

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/tech/more-gadgets/Motorola-launches-Pulse-and-Surround-wireless-headphones/articleshow/48269446.cms

bike compunt

We found this video titled “Build a better bike computer” at IEEE Spectrum. Gordon, Pi Towers’ resident pro bike racer and mountain bike nutcase (ask him to show you his X-rays some time) demurs: he says (I quote): “That’s big and stupid”. Gordon also shaves his legs, and says that he wants to fill his bike frame with helium; his cycling needs are the needs of the few.

The rest of us rather liked this Kindle bike hack.

This build uses the Kindle as a display – but, rather than sending information straight to the display, publishes speed, distance, and navigation data to a webpage, which the Kindle’s experimental browser then reads on the hoof fly wheel. Thanks are due to David Schneider, the mind behind; David, please ignore Gordon. He’s a curmudgeon.

https://www.raspberrypi.org/blog/bike-computer-for-the-myopic/

The brain’s got rhythm

First in-depth study to show how rhythms control communication between brain regions
July 28, 2015

A snapshot illustration showing how the anterior (blue) and posterior (orange) regions of the prefrontal cortex sync up to communicate cognitive goals to one another (credit: Bradley Voytek)

Like a jazz combo, the human brain improvises while its rhythm section keeps up a steady beat. But when it comes to taking on intellectually challenging tasks, groups of neurons tune in to one another for a fraction of a second and harmonize, then go back to improvising, according to new research led by UC Berkeley.

These findings, reported Monday (July 27) in the journal Nature Neuroscience, could pave the way for more targeted treatments for people with brain disorders marked by fast, slow, or chaotic brain waves (neural oscillations) — such as Parkinson’s disease, schizophrenia and autism, which are characterized in part by offbeat brain rhythms.

Keeping the beat

“The human brain has 86 billion or so neurons all trying to talk to each other in this incredibly messy, noisy and electrochemical soup,” said study lead author Bradley Voytek. “Our results help explain the mechanism for how brain networks quickly come together and break apart as needed.”

Working with cognitively healthy epilepsy patients, Voytek and fellow researchers at UC Berkeley’s Helen Wills Neuroscience Institute used electrocorticography (ECoG) — which places electrodes directly on the exposed surface of the brain — to measure neural oscillations as the patients performed cognitively challenging tasks. This showed how the rhythms control communication between brain regions.

They found that as the mental exercises became more demanding, theta waves at 4–8 Hertz (cycles per second) synchronized within the brain’s frontal lobe, enabling it to connect with other brain regions, such as the motor cortex.

“In these brief moments of synchronization, quick communication occurs as the neurons between brain regions lock into these frequencies, and this measure is critical in a variety of disorders,” said Voytek, an assistant professor of cognitive science at UC San Diego who conducted the study as a postdoctoral fellow in neuroscience at UC Berkeley.

There are five types of brain wave frequencies — Gamma, Beta, Alpha, Theta and Delta — and each are thought to play a different role. For example, Theta waves help coordinate neurons as we move around our environment, and thus are key to processing spatial information.

Off-tempo

In people with autism, the connection between Alpha waves and neural activity has been found to weaken when they process emotional images, according to Voytek. And people with Parkinson’s disease show abnormally strong Beta waves in the motor cortex, locking neurons into the wrong groove and inhibiting movement. Fortunately, electrical deep brain stimulation can disrupt abnormally strong Beta waves in Parkinson’s and alleviate symptoms,

For the study, epilepsy patients viewed shapes of increasing complexity on a computer screen and were tasked with using different fingers (index or middle) to push a button depending on the shape, color or texture of the shape. The exercise started out simply with participants hitting the button with, say, an index finger each time a square flashed on the screen. But it grew progressively more difficult as the shapes became more layered with colors and textures, and their fingers had to keep up.

As the tasks became more demanding, the oscillations kept up, coordinating more parts of the frontal lobe and synchronizing the information passing between those brain regions. “The results revealed a delicate coordination in the brain’s code,” Voytek said. “Our neural orchestra may need no conductor, just brain waves sweeping through to briefly excite neurons, like millions of fans in a stadium doing ‘The Wave.’”

Scientists at Brown University, the Department of Veterans Affairs, UCSF, Johns Hopkins University, and Stanford University were also involved in the research.

Abstract of Oscillatory dynamics coordinating human frontal networks in support of goal maintenance

Humans have a capacity for hierarchical cognitive control—the ability to simultaneously control immediate actions while holding more abstract goals in mind. Neuropsychological and neuroimaging evidence suggests that hierarchical cognitive control emerges from a frontal architecture whereby prefrontal cortex coordinates neural activity in the motor cortices when abstract rules are needed to govern motor outcomes. We utilized the improved temporal resolution of human intracranial electrocorticography to investigate the mechanisms by which frontal cortical oscillatory networks communicate in support of hierarchical cognitive control. Responding according to progressively more abstract rules resulted in greater frontal network theta phase encoding (4–8 Hz) and increased prefrontal local neuronal population activity (high gamma amplitude, 80–150 Hz), which predicts trial-by-trial response times. Theta phase encoding coupled with high gamma amplitude during inter-regional information encoding, suggesting that inter-regional phase encoding is a mechanism for the dynamic instantiation of complex cognitive functions by frontal cortical subnetworks.

references:
Bradley Voytek, Andrew S Kayser, David Badre, David Fegen, Edward F Chang, Nathan E Crone, Josef Parvizi, Robert T Knight, Mark D’Esposito.Oscillatory dynamics coordinating human frontal networks in support of goal maintenance. Nature Neuroscience, 2015; DOI: 10.1038/nn.4071
related:
It don’t mean a thing if the brain ain’t got that swing

http://www.kurzweilai.net/the-brains-got-rhythm

A simulated robot with bacterial brain

Models how bacteria might affect the mind (bacteria that act like tigers?); applications may include treating mental and physical illnesses, agriculture, and remediating oil spills
July 28, 2015

Computational Simulation of microbiome-host interactions. (A) A basic gene circuit forms the core of all simulated gene network behavior. (B) Green fluorescent protein (GFP, shown as a green dot) from this circuit is conceptualized to be detected by an onboard miniature, epifluorescent microscope (EFM). (C) A computational simulation of microbiome GFP production based upon an analytical model for the circuit in (A). In a built system, this protein fluorescence signal would be the light detected by the EFM. (D) The conceptualized robot uses onboard electronics to convert the measured light signals into electrical (voltage) signals. (E) Voltage signals meeting specific criteria activate pre-programmed robot motion subroutines. (F) The resulting emergent behavior potentially leads a robot to a carbon fuel depot. Here, robot behavior resulting from a simulation of the circuit in (A) is shown. The robot was programmed with motion subroutines that activate to seek arabinose (synthesized from glucose, orange square) depots following receipt of lactose (cyan triangles). (credit: Keith C. Heyde & Warren C. Ruder/Scientific Reports)

Virginia Tech scientist Warren Ruder, an assistant professor of biological systems engineering, has created an in silico (computer-simulated) model of a biomimetic robot controlled by a bacterial brain.

The study was inspired by real-world experiments where the mating behavior of fruit flies was manipulated using bacteria, and in which mice exhibited signs of lower stress when implanted with probiotics (“healthy” bacteria).

A math model of microbiome-controlled behavior

The deeper motivation for the study was to understand how the microbiome (the bacteria in the human body, thought to number ten times more than human cells) might influence human behavior. For example, some studies show that the gut microbiome influences human eating behavior and dietary choices to favor the survival of the bacteria. (See Do gut bacteria control your mind? for example.)

As explained in an open-access paper published recently in Scientific Reports, Ruder’s study revealed unique decision-making behavior by a bacteria-robot system by coupling and computationally simulating equations that describe three distinct elements: engineered gene circuits in E. coli, microfluid bioreactors, and robot movement.

In the mathematical model, the theoretical robot was equipped with sensors and a miniature microscope to measure the color. The hypothetical robot was designed to read E. coli bacterial gene expression levels (how much protein is created by specific genes), using light sensors in miniature microscopes. The bacteria turned green or red, depending on what they ate.

Bacteria that act like tigers?

Interestingly, the bacteria in the model began to approach a fuel source with “stalk-pause-strike” behavior, characteristic of predators.

Ruder’s modeling study also demonstrates that these sorts of biosynthetic experiments could be done in the future with a minimal amount of funds, opening up the field to a much larger pool of researchers.

Understanding the biochemical sensing between organisms could have far reaching implications in ecology, biology, and robotics, Ruder suggests.

In agriculture, bacteria-robot model systems could enable robust studies that explore the interactions between soil bacteria and livestock. In healthcare, further understanding of bacteria’s role in controlling gut physiology could lead to bacteria-based prescriptions (probiotics) to treat mental and physical illnesses. Ruder also envisions droids that could execute tasks such as deploying bacteria to remediate oil spills.

Bacteria effects on behavior

The findings also add to the ever-growing body of research about bacteria in the human body that are thought to regulate health and mood, and especially the theory that bacteria also affect behavior.

“We hope to help democratize the field of synthetic biology for students and researchers all over the world with this model,” said Ruder. “In the future, rudimentary robots and E. coli that are already commonly used separately in classrooms could be linked with this model to teach students from elementary school through the Ph.D.-level about bacterial relationships with other organisms.”

Ruder plans next to create a real-world version of the experiment, creating mobile robots with bioreactors on board that harbor living colonies of bacteria that direct the robot’s behavior.

The Air Force Office of Scientific Research funded the mathematical modeling of gene circuitry in E. coli, and the Virginia Tech Student Engineers’ Council has provided funding to move these models and resulting mobile robots into the classroom as teaching tools.

Virginia Tech | Scientist shows bacteria could control robots

Abstract of Exploring Host-Microbiome Interactions using an in Silico Model of Biomimetic Robots and Engineered Living Cells

The microbiome’s underlying dynamics play an important role in regulating the behavior and health of its host. In order to explore the details of these interactions, we created anin silico model of a living microbiome, engineered with synthetic biology, that interfaces with a biomimetic, robotic host. By analytically modeling and computationally simulating engineered gene networks in these commensal communities, we reproduced complex behaviors in the host. We observed that robot movements depended upon programmed biochemical network dynamics within the microbiome. These results illustrate the model’s potential utility as a tool for exploring inter-kingdom ecological relationships. These systems could impact fields ranging from synthetic biology and ecology to biophysics and medicine.

references:
Keith C. Heyde, Warren C. Ruder. Exploring Host-Microbiome Interactions using an in Silico Model of Biomimetic Robots and Engineered Living Cells. Scientific Reports, 2015; 5: 11988 DOI: 10.1038/srep11988 (open access)
related:
Virginia Tech scientist develops model for robots with bacterial brains

http://www.kurzweilai.net/a-simulated-robot-with-bacterial-brain