Scientific American - April 2019
Scientific American - April 2019
Scientific American - April 2019
The forgotten compound that can A vaccination program Insights into their shocking
repair damaged tissue PAGE 56 gone wrong PAGE 38 attack mechanisms PAGE 62
MIND READER
A new brain-machine interface detects what the user wants
S
PLU
QUANTUM
GRAVITY
IN A LAB
Could new experiments APRIL 2019
pull it off? PAGE 48 © 2019 Scientific American ScientificAmerican.com
A pr il 2 0 1 9
VO LU M E 3 2 0 , N U M B E R 4
48
N E U R OT E C H PHYSIC S
24 The Intention Machine 48 Quantum Gravity
A new generation of brain-machine in the Lab
interface can deduce what a person Novel experiments could test
wants. By Richard Andersen the quantum nature of gravity
INFR A STRUC TURE
on a tabletop. By Tim Folger
32 Beyond Seawalls MEDICINE
Fortified wetlands and oyster reefs 56 A Shot at Regeneration
can protect shorelines better than A once forgotten drug compound
hard structures. By Rowan Jacobsen could rebuild damaged organs.
By Kevin Strange and Viravuth Yin
P U B L I C H E A LT H
38 The Dengue Debacle A N I M A L P H Y S I O LO G Y
In April 2016 children in the Philip- 62 Shock and Awe
pines began receiving the world’s Understanding the electric eel’s
first dengue vaccine. Almost two unusual anatomical power.
By Kenneth C. Catania ON THE C OVE R
years later new research showed Tapping into the brain’s neural circuits lets people
that the vaccine was risky for many M AT H E M AT I C S with spinal cord injuries manipulate computer
kids. The campaign ground to 70 Outsmarting cursors and robotic limbs. Early studies underline
a halt, and the public exploded a Virus with Math the need for technical advances that make
brain-machine interfaces faster and more
in outrage. What went wrong? How calculus helped to drive versatile. The latest versions may begin to realize
By Seema Yasmin and the fight against HIV. the promise of direct neural communication.
Madhusree Mukerjee By Steven Strogatz Illustration by Mark Ross.
ON THE WEB
Scientific American (ISSN 0036-8733), Volume 320, Number 4, April 2019, published monthly by Scientific American, a division of Springer Nature America, Inc., 1 New York Plaza, Suite 4600, New York, N.Y. 10004-1562. Periodicals
postage paid at New York, N.Y., and at additional mailing offices. Canada Post International Publications Mail (Canadian Distribution) Sales Agreement No. 40012504. Canadian BN No. 127387652RT; TVQ1218059275 TQ0001.
Publication Mail Agreement #40012504. Return undeliverable mail to Scientific American, P.O. Box 819, Stn Main, Markham, ON L3P 8A2. Individual Subscription rates: 1 year $49.99 (USD), Canada $59.99 (USD), International
$69.99 (USD). I nstitutional Subscription rates: Schools and Public Libraries: 1 year $84 (USD), Canada $89 (USD), International $96 (USD). Businesses and Colleges/Universities: 1 year $399 (USD), Canada $405 (USD),
International $411 (USD). Postmaster: Send address changes to Scientific American, Box 3187, Harlan, Iowa 51537. Reprints inquiries: (212) 451-8415. To request single copies or back issues, call (800) 333-1199.
Subscription inquiries: U.S. and Canada (800) 333-1199; other (515) 248-7684. Send e-mail to [email protected].
Printed in U.S.A. Copyright © 2019 by Scientific American, a division of Springer Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved.
Scientific American is part of Springer Nature, which owns or has commercial relations with thousands of scientific publications (many of them can be found at www.springernature.com/us). Scientific American maintains
a strict policy of editorial independence in reporting developments in science to our readers. Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
BOARD OF ADVISERS
Leslie C. Aiello Edward W. Felten Lene Vestergaard Hau Satyajit Mayor Daniela Rus
President, Wenner-Gren Foundation Director, Center for Information Mallinckrodt Professor Senior Professor, National Center Andrew (1956) and Erna Viterbi Professor
for Anthropological Research Technology Policy, Princeton University of Physics and of Applied Physics, for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Electrical Engineering and Computer
Science and Director, CSAIL, M.I.T.
Jonathan Foley Harvard University of Fundamental Research
Robin E. Bell Eugenie C. Scott
Research Professor, Lamont-Doherty Executive Director and William R. Hopi E. Hoekstra John P. Moore
Chair, Advisory Council,
Earth Observatory, Columbia University and Gretchen B. Kimball Chair, Alexander Agassiz Professor Professor of Microbiology and
National Center for Science Education
California Academy of Sciences of Zoology, Harvard University Immunology, Weill Medical
Emery N. Brown Terry Sejnowski
Jennifer Francis Ayana Elizabeth Johnson College of Cornell University
Edward Hood Taplin Professor of Professor and Laboratory
Medical Engineering and of Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Founder and CEO, Donna J. Nelson Head of Computational
Computational Neuroscience, M.I.T., Research Center Ocean Collective Professor of Chemistry, Neurobiology Laboratory,
and Warren M. Zapol Professor Kaigham J. Gabriel Christof Koch University of Oklahoma Salk Institute for Biological Studies
of Anesthesia, Harvard Medical School President and Chief Executive Officer, President and CSO, Robert E. Palazzo Meg Urry
Charles Stark Draper Laboratory Allen Institute for Brain Science Dean, University of Alabama Israel Munson Professor of Physics
Vinton G. Cerf
Harold “Skip” Garner Morten L. Kringelbach at Birmingham College and Astronomy, Yale University
Chief Internet Evangelist, Google
Executive Director and Professor, Associate Professor and Senior of Arts and Sciences
George M. Church Michael E. Webber
Primary Care Research Network Research Fellow, The Queen’s College, Rosalind Picard Co-director, Clean Energy Incubator,
Director, Center for Computational
and Center for Bioinformatics University of Oxford Professor and Director, Affective and Associate Professor,
Genetics, Harvard Medical School
and Genetics, Edward Via College Robert S. Langer Computing, M.I.T. Media Lab Department of Mechanical Engineering,
Rita Colwell of Osteopathic Medicine David H. Koch Institute Professor, Carolyn Porco University of Texas at Austin
Distinguished University Professor, Michael S. Gazzaniga Department of Chemical Leader, Cassini Imaging Science George M. Whitesides
University of Maryland College Park Director, Sage Center for the Study Engineering, M.I.T. Team, and Director, CICLOPS, Professor of Chemistry and
and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Mind, University of California, Space Science Institute
Meg Lowman Chemical Biology, Harvard University
of Public Health Santa Barbara Senior Scientist and Lindsay Chair Lisa Randall Amie Wilkinson
COVER IMAGE BY MARK ROSS
Drew Endy Carlos Gershenson of Botany, California Academy of Professor of Physics, Professor of Mathematics,
Professor of Bioengineering, Research Professor, National Sciences, and Rachel Carson Center Harvard University University of Chicago
Stanford University Autonomous University of Mexico for Environment and Society, Ludwig Martin Rees Anton Zeilinger
Nita A. Farahany Alison Gopnik Maximilian University Munich Astronomer Royal and Professor Professor of Quantum Optics,
Professor of Law and Philosophy, Professor of Psychology and John Maeda of Cosmology and Astrophysics, Quantum Nanophysics,
Director, Duke Initiative for Affiliate Professor of Philosophy, Global Head, Computational Institute of Astronomy, Quantum Information,
Science & Society, Duke University University of California, Berkeley Design + Inclusion, Automattic, Inc. University of Cambridge University of Vienna
EDITORIAL
Please refrain from misattributing pop
CHIEF FEATURES EDITOR Seth Fletcher CHIEF NEWS EDITOR Dean Visser CHIEF OPINION EDITOR Michael D. Lemonick
ular sayings to celebrities. “Rethinking FEATURES
the ‘Anthropocene,’ ” by the Editors [Sci- SENIOR EDITOR, SUSTAINABILITY Mark Fischetti SENIOR EDITOR, SCIENCE AND SOCIETY Madhusree Mukerjee
SENIOR EDITOR, CHEMISTRY / POLICY / BIOLOGY Josh Fischman SENIOR EDITOR, TECHNOLOGY / MIND Jen Schwartz
ence Agenda], quotes Albert Einstein as SENIOR EDITOR, SPACE / PHYSICS Clara Moskowitz SENIOR EDITOR, EVOLUTION / ECOLOGY Kate Wong
which at an earlier age might have been PRODUCT MANAGER Ian Kelly WEB PRODUCER Jessica Ramirez
CONTRIBUTOR S
sufficient. We must revolutionize our
EDITORIAL David Biello, Deboki Chakravarti, Lydia Denworth, W. Wayt Gibbs, Ferris Jabr,
thinking, revolutionize our actions, and Anna Kuchment, Robin Lloyd, Melinda Wenner Moyer, George Musser,
Christie Nicholson, John Rennie, Ricki L. Rusting
must have the courage to revolutionize re- ART Edward Bell, Bryan Christie, Lawrence R. Gendron, Nick Higgins
lations among nations of the world. Cli-
EDITORIAL ADMINISTRATOR Ericka Skirpan SENIOR SECRETARY Maya Harty
chés of yesterday will no longer do today,
and will, no doubt, be hopelessly out of
date tomorrow.” PRESIDENT
Dean Sanderson
Steven Wenner C ohasset, Mass.
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT Michael Florek
Scientific American, 1 New York Plaza, Suite 4600, New York, NY 10004-1562 or [email protected]
ERRATA Letters may be edited for length and clarity. We regret that we cannot answer each one.
“Hidden Inferno,” by Shannon Hall, should Join the conversation online—visit Scientific American on Facebook and Twitter.
have described winds blowing potential H O W T O C O N TA C T U S
volcanic ash from the Laguna del Maule Subscriptions Reprints Permissions
region in Chile to Argentina as westerly, For new subscriptions, renewals, gifts, To order bulk reprints of articles For permission to copy or reuse material:
payments, and changes of address: Permissions Department, Scientific
not easterly. Further, it should not have de- U.S. and Canada, 800-333-1199;
(minimum of 1,000 copies):
American, 1 New York Plaza, Suite 4600,
Reprint Department,
scribed 1,200 degrees Celsius as 50 per- outside North America, 515-248-7684 or New York, NY 10004-1562; [email protected];
Scientific American,
www.ScientificAmerican.com www.ScientificAmerican.com/permissions.
cent hotter than 800 degrees C, because 1 New York Plaza, Please allow three to six weeks for processing.
Submissions
such comparisons break down at different To submit article proposals, follow the
Suite 4600,
Advertising
New York, NY
scales of temperature: in kelvins, the for- guidelines at www.ScientificAmerican.com. www.ScientificAmerican.com has electronic
Click on “Contact Us.” 10004-1562; contact information for sales representatives
mer temperature would be 37 percent hot- We cannot return and are not responsible 212-451-8415. of Scientific American in all regions of
ter than the latter. for materials delivered to our office. For single copies of back issues: 800-333-1199. the U.S. and in other countries.
For more than 2,000 years Chinese healers have used herbal
powders and tinctures, dust made from various animal parts
and strategically placed needles to treat a host of human ail-
ments. These are used in hundreds of nations globally, but the
practice in China is perhaps the most extensive, documented
and catalogued. Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) is based on
the concept of qi, a system of energy that flows along meridians
in the body to maintain health.
Over the past decade proponents of TCM have worked hard to
move it into the mainstream of global health care—and it appears
those efforts are coming to fruition. The latest (11th) version of quently make people sick rather than curing them. One particu-
the World Health Organization’s list known as the International larly troublesome ingredient, aristolochic acid, is commonly used
Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems in traditional remedies and has been linked to fatal kidney dam-
(I CD) will include these remedies for the first time. age and cancers of the urinary tract.
According to its own mandate, the WHO sets the norms and A 2018 study in the B ritish Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
standards for medical treatment around the globe and articulates tested 487 Chinese products taken by sick patients and discov-
“ethical and evidence-based policy options.” It categorizes thou- ered 1,234 hidden ingredients, including approved and banned
sands of diseases and influences how doctors treat them; how Western drugs, drug analogues and animal thyroid tissue. And in
insurers cover those treatments; and what kind of research is 2012 a team led by Megan Coghlan, then at Murdoch University
done on which ailments. More than 100 countries rely on the doc- of Australia, identified the DNA sequences in 15 samples of tradi-
ument to determine their medical agendas. tional medicines in the form of powders, tablets, capsules, bile
To include TCM in the ICD is an egregious lapse in evidence- flakes and herbal teas. The samples also contained plants that
based thinking and practice. Data supporting the effectiveness of produce toxic chemicals and animal DNA from vulnerable or
most traditional remedies are scant, at best. An extensive assess- endangered species (the Asiatic black bear and saiga antelope, for
ment was done in 2009 by researchers at the University of Mary- example) and other creatures protected by international laws.
land: they looked at 70 review papers evaluating TCM, including Thus, the proliferation of traditional medicines would have sig-
acupuncture. None of the studies proved conclusive because the nificant environmental impacts on top of the negative health
data were either too paltry or did not meet testing standards. effects. It would contribute to the destruction of ecosystems and
To be sure, many widely used and experimentally validated increase the illegal trade of wildlife. China announced last Octo-
pharmaceuticals, including aspirin, decongestants and some anti- ber that it was legalizing the controlled trade of rhinoceros horn
cancer chemotherapies, were originally derived from plants or and tiger bone. (The move was postponed in November, following
other natural sources. Those drugs have all gone through exten- a global outcry.) Both are believed by practitioners to have the
sive clinical testing of safety and efficacy, however. Giving cre- power to cure a range of ailments, from fever to impotence—
dence to treatments that have not met those standards will although no study has found any beneficial outcome of ingesting
advance their use but will also diminish the WHO’s credibility. either. Allowing even the controlled harvest of otherwise endan-
China has been pushing for wider global acceptance of tradi- gered creatures will boost illegal poaching, critics say.
tional medicines, which brings in some $50 billion in annual rev- Until they undergo rigorous testing for purity, efficacy, dosage
enue for the nation’s economy. And in 2016 Margaret Chan, then and safety, the WHO should remove traditional medicines from
the WHO director, praised China’s plans to do so. But while it’s a its list. These remedies should be given the same scrutiny as oth-
good idea to catalogue TCM and make health workers aware of er treatments before being included in standard care practices.
treatments used by millions, their inclusion in the ICD recklessly
JOIN T HE CONVERSAT ION ONLINE
equates them with medicines that have undergone clinical trials. Visit Scientific American on Facebook and Twitter
In China, traditional medicines are unregulated, and they fre- or send a letter to the editor: [email protected]
Climate Fix
functions such as producing oxygen, filtering water and support-
ing biodiversity. Not only does all the world’s population depend
on forests to provide clean air, clean water, oxygen and medicines,
Keeping forests intact can go a long way but 1.6 billion people rely on them directly for their livelihoods.
Unfortunately, a huge amount of forest continues to be con-
toward saving the planet verted into agricultural lands to produce a handful of resource-
By Han de Groot intensive commodities—despite zero-deforestation commitments
from companies and governments. So now is the time to increase
Climate change disproportionately affects the world’s most vul- forest protection and restoration. This action will also address a
nerable people, particularly poor rural communities that depend number of other pressing global issues. For example, increasing
on the land for their livelihoods and coastal populations through- tree cover can help tackle the problem of food security in many
out the tropics. We have already seen the stark asymmetry of suf- areas: trees can enhance farm productivity and give farmers an-
fering that results from extreme weather events, such as hurri- other source of revenue through the sale of fruits, nuts or timber—
canes, floods, droughts, wildfires, and more. all the while storing carbon dioxide—in a practice known as agro-
For remedies, advocates and politicians have tended to look to- forestry. It is estimated that increased investment in this area
ward cuts in fossil-fuel use or technologies to capture carbon before could help sequester up to 9.28 gigatons of carbon dioxide while
it enters the atmosphere—both of which are crucial. But this focus saving a net $709.8 billion by 2050. In productive landscapes
has overshadowed the most powerful and cost-efficient carbon cap- where it would be difficult to increase tree cover dramatically,
ture technology in the world. Recent research confirms that forests agroforestry serves as an attractive compromise.
are absolutely essential in mitigating climate change, thanks to In less developed, rural areas—especially in the tropics—com-
their ability to absorb and sequester carbon. In fact, natural climate munity-based forest-management programs can forge pathways
solutions such as conservation and restoration of forests, along out of poverty. In the Petén region of Guatemala, for instance, com-
munity-managed forests boasted a near-zero deforesta-
tion rate from 2000 through 2013, as compared with
12 percent in nearby protected areas and buffer zones.
These communities have built low-impact, sustainable
forest-based businesses that have bolstered the economy
of the region enough to fund the creation of local schools
and health services. Their success is especially poignant
in a location where, outside these community-managed
zones, deforestation rates have increased 20-fold.
Landscape restoration promises an unparalleled re-
turn on investment, in terms of ecosystem services and
carbon sequestered and stored. It could potentially se-
quester up to 1.7 gigatons of carbon dioxide every year,
according to the International Union for Conservation
of Nature. Reforestation projects can also intersect neat-
ly and positively with human systems—restored forests
supply a renewed resource base and new economic op-
portunities for communities.
The Bonn Challenge, issued by world leaders with the
goal of bringing 150 million hectares of degraded lands
with improvements in land management, can help us achieve into restoration by 2020, has been adopted by 57 governments and
37 percent of our climate target of limiting warming to a maximum other organizations. Many groups have pledged to halve global de-
of two degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, even though they forestation by 2020 through the New York Declaration on Forests.
currently receive only 2.5 percent of public climate financing. And in an exemplary display of public-private-sector cooperation,
Forests’ power to store carbon dioxide is staggering: one tree the Cocoa and Forests Initiative in Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana and Co-
can store an average of about 48 pounds in one year. Intact forests lombia aims to end deforestation from cocoa cultivation.
could take in the CO2 emissions of some entire countries. More trees mean better lives on a more sustainable planet.
For this reason, policy makers and business leaders must cre-
JOIN T HE CONVERSAT ION ONLINE
ate and enforce policies to prevent deforestation; foster reforesta- Visit Scientific American on Facebook and Twitter
tion of degraded land; and promote the sustainable management or send a letter to the editor: [email protected]
N E U R OT E C H
Aroma
Therapy
A cochlear implant–like device
could one day restore smell
implantable device that could help people that will operate somewhat like a cochlear
with brain injuries decode and interpret implant, an electronic device that partially
everyday scents. restores hearing. Cochlear implants turn
Research on smell lags decades behind sounds into electrical signals that the brain
that on vision and hearing, says Joel Main- interprets; in a similar way, the VCU-Har-
land, an olfactory neuroscientist and associ- vard team hopes to convert chemical scents
ate member of the Monell Chemical Senses into useful electrical signals. Holbrook pub-
Center in Philadelphia, who is not involved lished a study in February in the International
in the new work. Smell studies receive less Forum of Allergy & Rhinology suggesting that
funding than research on other senses does, electrical stimulation in the nasal cavity and
he says. And smell involves many sensory sinuses can make a healthy person perceive
components. Whereas vision requires inter- an odor, even if it is not present. That is a
preting input from three types of receptors, long way from restoring a sense of smell in
taste involves 40 and olfaction 400. someone who has lost it, but it is an impor-
A surprisingly large number of people tant step along the way, Holbrook says.
have an impaired sense of smell—23 percent A cochlear implant has an external
of U.S. adults age 40 and older, according sound processor worn behind the ear that
to one national survey, and 62.5 percent of includes a microphone and microcomputer.
those age 80 and older, according to anoth- That component transmits signals to an
er. Such a decline can result from injury, internal piece under the skin that stimulates
chronic sinus problems, genetics or aging, nerves in the cochlea, the organ that con-
says VCU professor Richard Costanzo, who verts sound vibrations into nerve impulses.
has studied smell for four decades and is Similarly, the VCU-Harvard team envisions
co-leading the initiative to develop the new a device that would potentially fit under the
device. Often dismissed as inconsequential, nose—or on a pair of glasses—and include
smell contributes to taste, so people who an odor sensor and a small external micro-
cannot smell are at risk for malnutrition, processor, as well as an internal part to
as well as social isolation, Costanzo says. stimulate different areas of the olfactory
Some smell-restoration treatments bulb, Costanzo says.
exist, Mainland says, including smell train- Daniel Coelho, a cochlear implant sur-
ing, in which people repeatedly expose geon at VCU who is collaborating with
themselves to certain odors and practice Costanzo, says the researchers must still
M A R I N E B I O LO G Y
identifying them. Other treatments may refine sensors so they can discriminate
uncover specific causes of smell loss, such
as chronic sinusitis. But for someone with
among enough odors to be useful. The
plan is to miniaturize and expedite smell Coral
the damage Moorehead suffered, none of
these is effective.
processing such as that carried out by so-
called electronic noses, which are used for Reefugees
Smell, like all senses, is a multistep pro- bomb detection and identification of
cess. Scents, technically called odorant spoiled food. In addition, researchers must
Ancient corals migrated to
molecules, enter through the nose or determine the optimal surgical approaches escape warming waters
mouth and pass through a layer of mucus to safely implant a device that can stimu-
before binding to olfactory receptor neu- late the brain to perceive smells. As the planet and oceans c ontinue to
rons. This binding triggers electrical signals Developing such an olfactory implant heat up, sites where coral has recently
that reach certain spots in the brain’s olfac- will take years, Coelho says, but it is not thrived are becoming less and less hab-
tory bulb. “One nerve cell may respond to impossible. “It’s a pretty straightforward itable. For instance, thanks to extreme
a brownie but not to pound cake, and its idea. We’re not inventing anything radically ocean temperatures, much of Austra-
neighbor might do the opposite,” says Eric new,” he notes. Rather the team is putting lia’s Great Barrier Reef suffered mass
Holbrook, chief of rhinology at Massachu- existing technology together in a new way. bleaching in 2016 and 2017 that turned
setts Eye and Ear Hospital and an associate Moorehead, who injured himself falling parades of colorful coral into dull,
professor at Harvard Medical School. “One off a skateboard while trying to teach his white masses.
nerve cell probably responds to multiple then six-year-old how to ride, is not opti- But paleontologists have now dis-
chemicals, but they have some specificity.” mistic about regaining his sense of smell. covered a haven to which one region’s
ETHAN DANIELS Getty Images
Holbrook, who is collaborating with the But he could not pass up the opportunity reefs might relocate—via oceanic cur-
VCU team, is now trying to find a shortcut to help others, including the researchers. rents when corals are still in their free-
to stimulate the brain’s olfactory bulb and “It just kept seeming painfully obvious,” floating larval stage—to escape over-
then trigger a sensation of smell. Ultimate- Moorehead says, “that this is what I’m heating. By studying fossils in Daya Bay,
ly the researchers plan to create a device supposed to do.” —Karen Weintraub just northeast of Hong Kong in the
More biased
Implicit Association Test Score
SOURCE: “PATTERNS OF IMPLICIT AND EXPLICIT ATTITUDES, VOL. I: LONG-TERM CHANGE AND STABILITY FROM 2007 TO 2016,”
(toward typically
preferred group) 0.5 Disability
0.9
BY TESSA E. S. CHARLESWORTH AND MAHZARIN R. BANAJI, IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, VOL. 30, NO. 2; FEBRUARY 2019
Body weight
0.8
Age
0.4 Test showed Test showed 0.7
images of faces images of bodies
0.6
0.3
Skin tone
0.5
Race
Sexuality 0.4
0.2
Researchers analyzed data from
4.4 million implicit bias tests 0.3
completed by U.S. participants, controlling
for factors such as the time of year the test was taken.
Higher test scores indicate stronger implicit preferences 0.2 Participants’ explicit biases were
0.1
for straight, white, light-skinned, young, nondisabled assessed by asking them to select
or thin people. Scores for the body weight test shifted 0.1 statements expressing how much they favored
around 2011, when researchers started showing one group over another, such as “I strongly prefer
silhouettes of bodies rather than faces. young people to old people.”
Neutral 0 0
2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016
Tiny Dino
New Version!
ANIMAL FORENSIC S ty, who led the team that studied the
Paleo Killers
tures of what kinds of preda-
tors were active in long-van-
ished ecosystems, particu-
New technique identifies larly in areas where fossils
predators of ancient animals are scarce. “It’s really
powerful,” she says.
Nowadays detectives can use DNA analy- Terry and her team
sis to help catch a killer. But what happens used a scanning electron
when a crime scene has been exposed to microscope to examine
the elements for thousands of years? DNA the leftover bones that
does not always stay intact that long—so modern predatory birds
for a paleontologist trying to figure out regurgitate as pellets after
what kind of predator killed a long-dead a meal. They also looked at
fossil animal, the case often goes cold. the feces of carnivorous mam-
But a new method promises to help mals. “A bone that passes into
researchers identify these ancient killers. and out of a nocturnal owl is clearly
It relies on the fact that when a predator distinguishable from bones that have
gulps down the bones of its prey—say, been eaten by diurnal raptors” or mam-
when a swooping owl snatches and mals, Terry says. Patterns etched on bones
eats a small rodent in the night—the inside an owl’s stomach tend to be relative- These findings will help answer one
diner’s stomach juices leave behind ly short and close together; those from the of paleontologists’ most basic questions
microscopic etchings on the surface of stomach of a hawk or mammal tend to be about the fossils of animals they suspect
the victim’s bones. longer and more widely spaced, according were killed and eaten: “Whodunit?” As
These etchings occur in patterns that to the study, which was published last Joshua Miller, a paleobiologist at the Uni-
are unique to the type of predator that November in P ALAIOS. A
nd the patterns versity of Cincinnati, who was not involved
did the deed, making them a bit like finger- left by the modern-day owls and mam- in the new research, says, “You can actual-
prints that scientists can use to crack mals, Terry adds, were “indistinguishable” ly look at an individual bone and get some
unsolved cases, explains Rebecca Terry, from those found on fossil bones digested perspective on why that bone is where you
a paleontologist at Oregon State Universi- by similar predators long ago. found it. And that’s really neat.” —L ucas Joel
Successfully
words, was more important
than being close to finishing.
The researchers dubbed
Research reveals how to turn this finding “the Heming-
defeat to one’s advantage way effect,” for the author’s
building a robot, the sooner they can move self-reported tendency to stop writing only
People often say t hat “failure is the moth- forward and improve. Another confirmed when he knew what would happen next
er of success.” This cliché might have some that feedback on failures is most construc- in the story—so as to avoid writer’s block
truth to it, but it does not tell us how to tive when the giver comes across as caring, when he returned to the page. Manalo
actually turn a loss into a win, says Emman- and the receiver is prepared to weather believes that learning how to fail temporar-
uel Manalo, a professor of educational psy- negative emotions. ily can help people avoid becoming perma-
chology at Kyoto University in Japan. As a Manalo and his co-authors also contrib- nent failures at many tasks, such as com-
result, he says, “we know we shouldn’t give uted their own study focused on overcom- pleting a dissertation, learning a language
up when we fail—but in reality, we do.” ing one fundamental, everyday form of fail- or inventing a new technology.
Manalo and Manu Kapur, a professor of ure: not completing a task. They asked 131 Demystifying failure and teaching stu-
learning sciences at the Swiss Federal Insti- undergraduates to write an essay about dents not to fear it make goals more attain-
tute of Technology Zurich, put together a their school experiences. Half of the stu- able, says Stephanie Couch, executive
special issue of the journal T hinking Skills dents received instructions for structuring director of the Lemelson-MIT Program, a
and Creativity last December on benefiting their writing, and half were left to their own nonprofit organization dedicated to devel-
from failure. The issue’s 15 studies provide devices; all, however, were stopped prior to oping and supporting inventors. Couch,
teachers and educational researchers with finishing. Afterward the researchers found whose work was also featured in the spe-
a guide for achieving success. One study that those in the structured group were cial issue, adds that we “should really be
GETTY IMAGES
reported, for example, that the sooner and more motivated to complete their essays, thinking of failure as part of a process of
more often students fail at a task, such as compared with those who lacked guid- iterating toward success.” —Rachel Nuwer
APPLIED PHYSIC S “regular” the painting, the lower the entropy. ing from these patterns, the program could
Entropy
The new algorithm analyzes two-by- even be used to sort lesser-known works of
two grids of pixels within each painting art into specific artistic styles.
in Art
and scores them using the two metrics. Maximilian Schich, a professor of arts
Ribeiro and his colleagues observed that and technology at University of Texas at
shifts in the magnitude of complexity and Dallas, is in favor of the cross-disciplinary
Computer program uses physics entropy among various paintings mirror research. “One thing I think is very elegant
to find patterns in paintings stylistic shifts throughout art history. Mod- in this paper is that they look at the com-
ern art—with blended edges and loose plexity at the local level, the pixels and the
Many of Earth’s roughly 1,500 potential- University of Leeds in England, who was
ly active volcanoes are in remote areas, so not involved in the research. The observa-
LABORATORY AND
it can be difficult to regularly study ongoing tions, he states, “could ultimately help mit-
ANALYSIS LABORATORY
eruptions or identify new ones, says Simon igate the impacts of volcanic eruptions.”
Carn, a volcanologist at Michigan Techno- Currently DSCOVR transmits data to FFRF is a 501(c)(3) educational charity.
IMAGE ANALYSIS
logical University. “U.S. volcanoes are pret- Earth only when the satellite is in view of Deductible for income tax purposes.
ty well monitored, but elsewhere it’s a dif- receiver antennas in Virginia and Alaska.
Text FFRF to 52886 for
AND IMAGE
ferent story,” Carn adds. “There’s definitely Installing more receivers around the globe
legislative action alerts
SCIENCES AND
a need for satellite monitoring.” would allow scientists to collect and ana-
EARTH SCIENCES
Carn and his colleagues used DSCOVR’s lyze measurements nearly instantaneously,
Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera Carn says, noting that “we’re a day or two
EARTH
Quick is melting
is melting almost four times faster than it was
in 2003, scientists have found. The gigantic
effectively
effectively halt the growth of four types of antibiotic-
resistant “superbugs,” including methicillin-resistant
AUSTRALIA
AUSTRALIA
U.S.
U.S. Overuse of water from
A 14-year-old Hawaiian the Murray-Darling River
snail named George, system sparked a massive die-
believed to be the last off
off of fish
fish in the Down Under
of its
of its species, has died. state of New South Wales.
The archipelago’s An estimated 100,000 to one
population of land million fish
fish suffocated
suffocated because
snails—which was once the river levels were too low to
incredibly diverse—has flflush runoff;; this led
ush out farm runoff
substantially declined. to algal blooms that resulted
in bacterial proliferation,
which caused a drop
a drop in oxygen.
GUYANA
GUYANA LIBERIA
LIBERIA
LIBERIA
The Guyanese government signed an agreement with the Health offiofficials
cials announced that they found the Ebola virus
European Union to curb illegal logging, improve forest in aa bat
bat in West Africa for the fifirst
rst time. Previously it
For more details, visit
www.ScientificAmerican.com/
management and expand the South American nation’s had been found only in bats in Central Africa. The discovery
apr2019/advances legal timber industry, which exports to the E.U.
the E.U. could help reveal how the virus jumps to humans.
© 2019 Scientific American
ScientificAmerican.com 19
April 2019, ScientificAmerican.com 19
THE SCIENCE Claudia Wallis is an award-winning science journalist whose
OF HEALTH work has appeared in the New York Times, Time, Fortune a nd the
New Republic. She was science editor at Time a nd managing editor
of Scientific American Mind.
Psychotherapy ing. Patients leave with homework to reinforce the lessons. Par-
ents may be taught how to support a child’s progress.
in a Flash
How well do these approaches work? A 2017 meta-analysis by
Öst and Ollendick looked at 23 randomized controlled studies
and found that “brief, intensive, or concentrated” therapies for
childhood anxiety disorders were comparable to standard CBT.
Brief, intensive treatments can work With the quicker therapies, 54 percent of patients were better
for phobias, OCD, and more immediately post-treatment, and that rose to 64 percent on fol-
low-up—presumably because they continued to practice and
By Claudia Wallis
apply what they had learned. With standard therapy, 57 percent
Psychotherapy is not what most people think of as a quick fix. were better after the final session and 63 percent on follow-up.
From its early Freudian roots, it has taken the form of 50- to The severity of symptoms and whether the patient was also tak-
60-minute sessions repeated weekly (or more often) over a peri- ing antianxiety medication did not seem to impact outcomes.
od of months or even years. For modern cognitive-behavioral An obvious advantage to quick therapy is that it accelerates
therapy (CBT), 10 to 20 weekly sessions is typical. But must it be relief. Children with panic disorder, for instance, may refuse to
so? “Whoever told us that one 50-minute session a week is the leave home for fear of triggering an episode of shortness of breath,
best way to help people get over their problems?” asks Thomas a racing heart and nausea. “They start to avoid places like the
Ollendick, director of the Child Study Center at Virginia Tech. mall, the movies, the school dance,” says child psychologist Don-
For nearly 20 years Ollendick has been testing briefer, more na Pincus of Boston University. Pincus developed an eight-day
intensive forms of CBT for childhood anxiety disorders and get- treatment for the disorder as an alternative to three months of
ting results that closely match those of slower versions. His cen- CBT, which, she observes, “is a long time if you are not going to
ter often has a waiting list for treatments that include a four-day school or are avoiding doing things that are fun or healthy.”
therapy for obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and a three- Making these briefer therapies more widely available could
hour intervention for specific phobias (such as fear of flying, help address the sad fact that only about a third of patients with
heights or dogs). Around the U.S. and Europe, short-course ther- anxiety disorders get any kind of treatment. A weeklong therapy
apies for anxiety disorders have begun to catch on, creating a could be completed over a school or work vacation. Rural pa
nascent movement in both adult and child psychology. tients who cannot find CBT nearby could be treated during a
The idea originated with Swedish psychologist Lars-Göran Öst, short out-of-town stay. The intensive approach requires special
now professor emeritus at Stockholm University. Some 40 years training and a big shift for therapists—and health insurers—
ago Öst got the impression that not all his phobia patients needed accustomed to the tradition of 50-minute blocks. But is there
multiple weeks of therapy and decided to ask if they would like to really anything sacred about that?
Machines That The company’s first applications were on the whimsical side.
Visitors to the Ontario pavilion at the 2010 Winter Olympics in
INTENTION
MACHINE
A new generation of brain-machine
interface can deduce what a person wants
By Richard Andersen
get goose bumps every time I see it. A paralyzed volunteer sits in a wheelchair while
controlling a computer or robotic limb just with his or her thoughts—a demonstra-
tion of a brain-machine interface (BMI) in action.
That happened in my laboratory in 2013, when Erik Sorto, a victim of a gunshot
wound when he was 21 years old, used his thoughts alone to drink a beer without
help for the first time in more than 10 years. The BMI sent a neural message from a
high-level cortical area. An electromechanical appendage was then able to reach out
and grasp the bottle, raising it to Sorto’s lips before a sip was taken. His drink came a year after
surgery to implant electrodes in his brain to control signals that govern the thoughts that trig-
ger motor movement. My lab colleagues and I watched in wonderment as he completed this
deceptively simple task that is, in reality, intricately complex.
Witnessing such a feat immediately raises the ques- challenges of reading neural signals need to be ad
tion of how mere thoughts can control a mechanical dressed before this next-generation technology reach-
prosthesis. We move our limbs unthinkingly every day— es patients. Coarse read-out techniques already exist.
and completing these motions with ease is the goal of The electroencephalogram (EEG) records the average
any sophisticated BMI. Neuroscientists, though, have activity over centimeters of brain tissue, capturing the
tried for decades to decode neural signals that initiate activity of many millions of neurons rather than that
movements to reach out and grab objects. Limited suc- from individual neurons in a single circuit. Function-
cess in reading these signals has spurred a search for al magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is an indirect
new ways to tap into the cacophony of electrical activi- measurement that records an increase in blood flow
ty resonating as the brain’s 86 billion neurons commu- to an active region. It can image smaller areas than
nicate. A new generation of BMI now holds the promise EEG, but its resolution is still rather low. Changes in
of creating a seamless tie between brain and prosthesis blood flow are slow, so fMRI cannot distinguish rapid
by tapping with great precision into the neural regions changes in brain activity.
IN BRIEF that formulate actions—whether the desired goal is To overcome these limitations, ideally one would
Brain-machine grasping a cup or taking a step. like to record the activity of individual neurons. Observ-
interfaces, o r ing changes in the firing rate of large numbers of single
BMIs, can send FROM BRAIN TO ROBOT neurons can provide the most complete picture of what
and receive messag-
A BMI operates by sending and receiving—“writing” and is happening in a specific brain region. In recent years
es to and from
neural circuits.
“reading”—messages to and from the brain. There are arrays of tiny electrodes implanted in the brain have
Existing BMIs two major classes of the interface technology. A “write- begun to make this type of recording possible. The
tend to provide in” BMI generally uses electrical stimulation to trans- arrays now in use are four-by-four-millimeter flat sur-
imprecise or slug- mit a signal to neural tissue. Successful clinical applica- faces with 100 electrodes. Each electrode, measuring
gish performance. tions of this technology are already in use. The cochlear one to 1.5 millimeters long, sticks out of the flat surface.
New research prosthesis stimulates the auditory nerve to enable deaf The entire array, which resembles a bed of nails, can
puts the interfaces subjects to hear. Deep-brain stimulation of an area that record activity from 100 to 200 neurons.
in brain areas that
controls motor activity, the basal ganglia, treats motor The signals recorded by these electrodes move to
formulate a person’s
intentions to move,
disorders such as Parkinson’s disease and essential “decoders” that use mathematical algorithms to trans-
making the technol- tremor. Devices that stimulate the retina are currently late varied patterns of single-neuron firing into a sig-
ogy more versatile in clinical trials to alleviate certain forms of blindness. nal that initiates a particular movement, such as con-
for those with spinal “Read-out” BMIs, in contrast, record neural activity trol of a robotic limb or a computer. These read-out
cord injuries. and are still at a developmental stage. The unique BMIs will assist patients who have sustained brain in
The PPC provides several possible advantages for Amigos National Rehabilitation Center, and Casa Colina
brain control of robotics or a computer cursor. It con- Hospital and Centers for Healthcare. The team received
trols both arms, whereas the motor cortex in each a go-ahead from the Food and Drug Administration and
hemisphere, the area targeted by other labs, activates institutional review boards charged with judging the
the limb on the opposite side of the body. The PPC also safety and ethics of the procedure in the labs, hospitals
indicates the goal of a movement. When a nonhuman and rehabilitation clinics involved.
primate, for instance, is visually cued to reach for an A volunteer in this type of project is a true pioneer
object, this brain area switches on immediately, flag- because he or she may or may not benefit. Participants
ging the location of a desired object. In contrast, the ultimately join to help users of the technology who will
motor cortex sends a signal for the path the reaching seek it out once it is perfected for everyday use. The
movement should take. Knowing the goal of an intend- implant surgery for Sorto, our first volunteer, took place
ed motor action lets the BMI decode it quickly, within a in April 2013 and was performed by neurosurgeons
28 Scientific American, April 2019 Illustration by AXS Biomedical Animation Studio
1
Primary somatosensory
INPUT cortex (hand area)
Signals from sensory and
memory areas of the
cerebral cortex all converge
on the PPC. 9
Primary Episodic memory ARRAY
visual cortex Electrical stimulation in
the somatosensory cortex
produces the sensations
of touch and position from
the robot hand.
4 NEURAL SIGNAL
PROCESSOR
Electronics decode the CONTROL 5 8 STIMULATOR
intention signals quickly COMPUTER The stimulator generates
and formulate commands The commands can be small electric currents
for the robotic arm. coupled with video or to the electrodes of
eye-movement signals
7 CONTROL the stimulation array.
to increase the precision COMPUTER
of the command. Sensors on the robot
fingers and hand
detect position and
touch data, which are
sent to a stimulator.
6
ACTION
The electronically processed brain
signals prod the prosthesis to pick
up a glass, bring it to the lips and hold
it steady, allowing a sip to be taken.
Inserting a few tiny gain fields, just as was the case in the PPC experiments.
By mixing signals for visual inputs and eye positions
decode much of what tion. For instance, recordings from the prefrontal cor-
tex show a mixing of two types of memory task and
BEYOND
© 2019 Scientific American
SEAWALLS
INFRASTRUCTURE
After the storm, a young ecologist then at the University of to believe that “living shorelines”—natural communities of salt
North Carolina at Chapel Hill named Rachel K. Gittman decided marsh, mangrove, oyster reef, beach and coral reef—can be sur-
to survey the affected areas. Gittman had worked as an environ- prisingly effective in a battle coastal residents have been losing for
mental consultant for the U.S. Navy on a shoreline-stabilization years. U.S. shores are disintegrating as higher seas, stronger
project and had been shocked to discover how little information storms and runaway development trigger an epidemic of erosion
existed on coastal resilience. “The more I researched, the more I and flood damage. Every day waves bite off another 89 hectares of
realized that we just don’t know very much,” she explains. “So the country. Every year another $500 million of property disap-
much policy and management is being made without the under- pears. Overall, some 40 percent of the U.S. coastline is suffering
lying science.” She decided to make shorelines her specialty. ongoing erosion. In some places, the rate of loss is breathtaking.
What Gittman found was eye-opening. Along the hard-hit Go to Google Earth Engine’s Timelapse feature and watch Shack
shorelines, three quarters of the bulkheads were damaged. The leford Banks melt away like ice cream on a summer sidewalk.
walls, typically concrete and about two meters high, are the Historically, almost all money spent on coastal defense has
standard homeowner defense against the sea in many parts of gone toward “gray” infrastructure: seawalls, bulkheads, levees
the country. Yet none of the natural marsh shorelines were and rock revetments. That is beginning to c‑hange as research-
impaired. The marshes, which extended 10 to 40 meters from ers become more sophisticated in measuring the long-term im
the shore, had lost no sediment or elevation from Irene. Al pact of “green” coastal defenses. Insurance companies and gov-
though the storm initially reduced the density of their vegeta- ernments are finally taking notice and might actually turn the
tion by more than a third, a year later the greenery had bounced tide toward living defenses.
back and was as thick as ever in many cases.
Gittman’s study confirmed what many experts had begun to WETLANDS OUTPERFORM WALLS
suspect. “Armored” shorelines such as bulkheads offer less pro- Around the time t hat Hurricane Irene was barreling up the East
tection against big storms than people think. By reflecting wave Coast, Michael W. Beck, a research professor at the University of
energy instead of dispersing it, they tend to wear away at the California, Santa Cruz, and then lead marine scientist for the
base, which causes them to gradually tilt seaward. Although Nature Conservancy, was initiating a collaboration with the
they still function well in typical storms, they often backfire insurance industry that today may begin to change coastal con-
when high storm surges overtop them, causing them to breach servation. “A lot of people were saying that ecosystems worked
or collapse, releasing an entire backyard into the sea. for flood protection, but the evidence was thin,” Beck tells me at
In a later study, Gittman and other researchers surveyed 689 his Santa Cruz office. The physical mechanisms were clear: oys-
waterfront owners and found that the 37 percent of properties ter and coral reefs limited erosion and flood damage by acting
protected by bulkheads had suffered 93 percent of the damage. as natural breakwaters (offshore seawalls), dispersing wave
And bulkhead owners routinely had four times the annual energy with their corrugated surfaces. Salt marshes and man-
maintenance costs of residents who relied on nature instead. groves, with their earthen berms and friction-generating for-
Salt marshes bent but did not break. ests of stalks, could rake more than 50 percent of the energy out
In recent years more scientists and policy makers have come of storm surges in less than 15 meters of territory.
IN BRIEF
Surprising data s how that in many places marshes Scientists are perfecting t echniques for rebuilding Governments and disaster plannersare starting
protect shorelines better than walls and are cheaper tattered wetlands, creating custom configurations to give more consideration to living shorelines, and
to construct. for individual shorelines. money to restore them is rising.
But although scientists understood the physics, no one had returning just $1 in savings for every $4 of expense. Smaller
put it into a form that could be used easily by policy makers. levees built on land in front of many low-lying coastal communi-
Beck set out to rectify that. “If I want to change practices, I can’t ties prevented much more damage for almost the same cost.
bring my ecosystem model to fema or the U.S. Army Corps of In terms of bang for the buck, sandbags were the best invest-
Engineers,” he explains. “I have to look at their risk model and ment, saving $8.4 billion of damages for a mere $0.84 billion in
put ecosystems into that.” expense. Natural defenses ranked high as well. Wetlands restora-
Beck and his colleagues began collaborating with Lloyd’s of tion, which could prevent $18.2 billion of losses, would cost just
London, Swiss Re and others in the insurance industry, which $2 billion. Oyster-reef restoration could prevent $9.7 billion in
have some of the best data and models in the world on assets and losses for $1.3 billion. Barrier island restoration offered $5.9 bil-
risk. When he plugged data on coastal ecosystems into their risk lion of prevention for $1.2 billion. And “beach nourishment” (re
models, it became clear that living shorelines were excellent de plenishing depleted beaches with sand dredged from the sea-
fenses. And, he notes, “when I tell the Corps, fema and the devel- floor) in the eastern Gulf could save $9.3 billion for $5.5 billion.
opment banks that these are the numbers from the insurance That last one surprised many people because replacing
industry, I automatically have a different level of credibility.” beach sand year after year is often seen as a fool’s errand. “If the
The first study focused on damages from Superstorm Sandy, only choices you gave me were beach nourishment versus fully
which clobbered New York and New Jersey in 2012. Working with gray infrastructure,” Beck says, “I’d choose the former as the
Risk Management Solutions, a leading risk-modeling firm, the lesser of two evils.”
scientists showed that wetlands prevented $625 million of flood Overall, the research found that $57.4 of the $134 billion
damage from the storm, which was surprising given that the could be prevented cost-effectively, almost all of it through
coasts in the region had already lost 60 to 90 percent of their green infrastructure.
protective wetlands over time. In areas that flooded, the few re One type of restoration that was not part of the study is large-
maining wetlands lowered flood damage by 11 percent on aver- scale diversion of the Mississippi River. Diverting sediment-lad-
age. As important was the ability to buffer garden-variety floods: en water through a gap in the river’s levees and letting that sedi-
in one local study, properties behind marshes suffered 16 per- ment filter into struggling marshes can restore their health and
cent less annual flood damage than properties that had lost elevation, but the region is subsiding so quickly that not even the
their marshes. “That’s well within the range for which you could famously muddy Mississippi can save it from the encroaching
expect [insurance] premium reductions,” Beck points out. sea. “It is going to be expensive to re-create an entire ecosystem,”
He and his partners then turned their economic and risk- Beck says, “and it is better and cheaper to start earlier.”
management models on the Gulf Coast from Texas to Florida, Cost-effective restoration may be tricky on long, sandy coasts,
which is regularly battered by big storms. They did an exhaustive too. Beaches and barrier islands are by nature transient. Plant-
analysis of the annual expected benefits and costs of all types of ing grasses to rebuild dunes can help keep beaches in place but
infrastructure. The team estimated that the coast would suffer only temporarily in many cases. At some point, residents will
$134 billion of losses over 20 years if no preventive measures have to move back from the receding shoreline.
were taken. Elevating homes could prevent $39.4 billion of those Beck is quick to point out that built infrastructure is still in-
losses, but it is incredibly expensive. At an average of $83,300 per credibly important and that cost-effectiveness is not the only con-
house, it would cost $54 billion to prevent that $39 billion in sideration. “Anywhere you’ve got significant people and property,”
damages. The six-meter-high dikes being built in Louisiana were he says, natural solutions will “be used together with some form
a worse option; at $33,000 per meter, they were an absurdly of built infrastructure.” Metropolitan areas, ports and other plac-
expensive way to protect a relatively limited amount of property, es where the risk tolerance for a major flood would be extremely
high, narrow mound that lines the shore, horizontal levees are Marshes with and without Sills Protect Estuarine Shorelines from Erosion Better
broad mudflats, marshes and grasslands that gradually rise from Than Bulkheads during a Category 1 Hurricane. Rachel K. Gittman et al. in Ocean
& Coastal Management, V
ol. 102, Part A, pages 94–102; December 2014.
the water’s edge, sometimes for hundreds of meters back onto Managing Coasts with Natural Solutions: Guidelines for Measuring and Valuing the
the land. They are graded with vast amounts of earth (often re Coastal Protection Services of Mangroves and Coral Reefs. Edited by M. W. Beck
purposed from building projects) and planted with starter plugs. and G.-M. Lange. World Bank, January 2016.
They can be lower and 40 percent less costly than a traditional Living Shorelines Academy: w ww.livingshorelinesacademy.org
levee because the breadth absorbs floodwater. The configuration FROM OUR ARCHIVES
also gives marsh communities space to retreat as seas rise. Architects of the Swamp. John Carey; December 2013.
Another encouraging sign is the Living Shorelines Act, intro-
s c i e n t if i c a m e r i c a n . c o m /m a g a zi n e /s a
duced in the U.S. House of Representatives by Frank Pallone,
DENGUE
DEBACLE
Is a runaway immune reaction making
a dengue vaccine dangerous?
By Seema Yasmin and Madhusree Mukerjee
DECEMBER
also teaches science journalism and global health storytelling.
She is an Emmy Award–winning reporter and author, medical
doctor and frequent contributor to Scientific American.
2015
Madhusree Mukerjee is Scientific American’s
senior editor for science and society.
The virus comes in four varieties. All are spread by female Dengue is scary enough that health practitioners in develop-
Aedes m
osquitoes, primarily A edes aegypti, w
ith a penchant for ing countries have been eagerly awaiting a vaccine for decades.
sucking blood during the day, when individuals are unprotect- Yet when internist Antonio Dans and pediatrician Leonila Dans,
ed by bed nets. In the past five decades these viruses, which are both clinical epidemiologists at the University of the Philippines
related to those that cause West Nile fever, yellow fever and Manila College of Medicine, read about Aquino’s vaccination
Zika, have spread in waves across the tropical and subtropical campaign in the Philippine Star, t he first thing that struck them
world, increasing dengue incidence 30-fold and affecting up- was the price tag. At three billion pisos ($57.5 million) for pro-
ward of 390 million people each year. curement alone, the Dengvaxia campaign would cost more than
Not everyone infected with a dengue virus gets sick: three the entire national vaccination program for 2015, which covered
out of four who get bitten will have no symptoms. The rest may pneumonia, tuberculosis, polio, diphtheria, tetanus, pertussis,
suffer one of three sets of symptoms: a fever that mimics many measles, mumps and rubella. It would reach less than 1 percent
other viral illnesses; “dengue fever,” which is accompanied by of the country’s approximately 105 million residents. And al-
headache, pain behind the eyes, aching joints and bones, and, though dengue was reported to kill an average of 750 people an-
in rare cases, internal bleeding; and severe disease encompass- nually in the Philippines, it was not even among the top 10 causes
ing dengue hemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome. In of mortality. Among infectious diseases, pneumonia and tuber-
severe cases, plasma seeps out of capillaries, liquid pools culosis took a far heavier toll.
around organs, massive internal bleeding ensues, and the brain, Perusing an interim report from researchers at Sanofi Pas-
kidneys and liver begin to fail. Although swift hospitalization teur—the vaccine division of Sanofi—on Dengvaxia’s clinical tri-
and careful case management can and do save lives, more than als, Dans and Dans found further cause for concern. Among
20,000 people die of dengue every year. Many are children. Asian children two to five years old, those who had received the
PRECEDING PAGES: GETTY IMAGES
IN BRIEF
A mosquito-borne disease, d engue affects almost A controversial old theory, called antibody-enhanced The first ever vaccine licensed for dengue appears
400 million people worldwide every year. Whereas development (ADE), explains why a second dengue to mimic an initial dengue infection, possibly exac-
most of those affected barely notice a first dengue infection can be much deadlier than the first. New erbating a second one. The role of ADE in driving this
infection, a second one can kill. studies strongly support this theory. phenomenon remains contested.
vaccine were seven times m ore l ikely CHILD IN MANAGUA, Nicaragua, yields where 70 percent or more of a popu-
than unvaccinated children to have a blood sample (1) for an extensive study lation had already had dengue,
been hospitalized for serious dengue of dengue disease. Another child (2) looks where immunization of early adoles-
in the third year after vaccination. down his neighborhood street. cents could reduce hospitalizations
Close examination of the data re- by up to 30 percent over a period of
vealed that although the vaccine was 30 years. A subsequent position pa-
on average safer for older children, it was statistically impossi- per from the same group stated that the vaccine was safe for
ble to rule out the possibility that for some kids, Dengvaxia children age nine and older, for whom it was recommended.
made things worse. In retrospect, it did not surprise Dans and Dans that the au-
In March 2016 Dans and Dans and other medical profession- thorities chose to ignore their concerns. “It was either believe us or
als wrote to then secretary of health Janette Garin, warning that believe the WHO,” says Antonio Dans. “If I were them, I’d believe
the vaccine could be risky for some children and that the Philip- the WHO. I mean, who were we? We were just teachers in a small
pines may not possess enough trained health care workers to medical school.” Filipino authorities were apparently so confident
monitor so many of them for possible adverse effects. A poten- about Dengvaxia’s safety that they did not oblige Sanofi Pasteur to
tially safer vaccine was in the pipeline and probably worth wait- submit results from so-called pharmacovigilance trials that would
ing for, they reasoned. usually test the safety of a new drug or vaccine in local conditions.
The same month, however, the highly respected advisory The induction of a new pharmaceutical product into the national
group on vaccines at the World Health Organization—which program typically took three to five years, says Anthony Leachon,
provides guidance to countries on immunization policy—stated a former president of the Philippine College of Physicians, but the
in a briefing paper on Dengvaxia that the hospitalizations of dengue vaccination program began right away, in April 2016.
young vaccinated children, when observed over several years, Days later came the first report of a postvaccination fatality, of
were not statistically significant. “No other safety signals have a boy with congenital heart disease. Garin explained in a press
been identified in any age group” older than five, it stated. A briefing that the boy’s death was unrelated to Dengvaxia. Dans
PAOLO HARRIS PAZ (1 and 2)
“theoretical possibility” existed that the vaccine could be risky and Dans persisted for months, however, speaking to the press
for some children, and further research was necessary lest the and posting a brief video on Facebook that warned—on the basis
issue “compromise public confidence” in the vaccine. It none- of a decades-old, highly contested theory called antibody-depen-
theless “should be introduced as part of a routine immunization dent enhancement (ADE)—that if a child had never had dengue
program in appropriate settings.” These included regions before, the vaccine might actually make a dengue infection dead-
Aedes aegypti
mosquito
B cell
Antibody
BY SARANYA SRIDHAR ET AL., IN NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, VOL. 379, NO. 4; JULY 26, 2018
happens shortly after an initial in-
0 1 2 3 4 5
fection), they somehow manage to
and effective. Gubler says that any vaccine will likely protect well the ethical rationale for this recommendation, Hombach stated
against a couple of dengue viruses but not so well against the oth- that the WHO had carefully weighed the pros and cons; it had also
ers. “And that being the case, there’s always a risk of ADE,” he noted that such a campaign should be accompanied by “full disclo-
continues. “So do we use those vaccines, or do we shelve them sure of the risks of vaccination of persons with unknown serosta-
and wait another 50 years for a perfect vaccine?” Halstead is far tus.” Effectively explaining such complex issues in ethnically di-
QUANTUM
GRAVITY IN
THE LAB Physicists attempting
to unify the theories of
gravity and quantum
mechanics have long thought practical experiments
were out of reach, but new proposals offer a chance
to test the quantum nature of gravity on a tabletop
By Tim Folger
IN BRIEF
To unify t he famously uncooperative theories of thought impossible, but several new proposals laboratory—they can detect effects from the inter-
quantum mechanics and general relativity, scien- stand to change that. section of gravity and quantum theory.
tists will likely have to reach down to the unimagin- Physicists are hoping t hat by making extremely The experiments aim t o show whether gravity
ably small realm of the “Planck scale.” Practical precise measurements of gravity in small-scale set- becomes quantized—that is, divisible into discrete
experiments probing this scale have long been ups—experiments that will fit onto a tabletop in a bits—on extremely tiny scales.
On an August day more than a century later Cav- impossible experiment, one that might transform our
endish proved Newton wrong. The device he had built understanding of gravity: he wants to use a small-scale
in a shed on his estate in southwest London consisted setup—literally on a tabletop in his lab—to find evi-
of two 1.6-pound lead balls attached to opposite ends dence that gravity might be a quantum phenomenon.
of a six-foot-long wood rod, which hung from a wire Of the four fundamental forces in the universe,
fastened to an overhead beam. Two much heavier lead gravity is the only one that cannot be described by the
spheres, each weighing nearly 350 pounds, were sus- laws of quantum mechanics, the theory that applies to
pended separately about nine inches away from the all other forces and particles known to physics. Elec-
lighter balls. Cavendish expected that the gravitation- tromagnetism; the “strong” nuclear force that binds
al pull of the heavy spheres on the smaller ones would atomic nuclei; and the “weak” nuclear force that
make the wood rod rotate ever so slightly, and he was causes radioactive decay—they are all quantum to the
right—it moved just over a tenth of an inch. core, leaving gravity as a sole, mysterious outlier.
This allowed him to directly measure the gravita- This exception has vexed physicists since Albert
tional force exerted by each of the larger spheres on Einstein’s heyday. Einstein never managed to unify
the smaller ones. Because he already knew that Earth his own theory of gravity—the general theory of rela-
exerted a gravitational force of 1.6 pounds on each of tivity—with quantum mechanics. Most physicists
the small spheres (in the English system of units, a who now work on the problem believe that the unifi-
pound is by definition a measure of force), Cavendish cation occurs when we zoom in on the cosmos to
could set up a simple ratio: the gravitational force be what is called the Planck scale, after Max Planck, one
tween the small sphere and the large sphere com- of the founders of quantum theory. Distances on the
pared with the gravitational force between the small Planck scale are so tiny—100 trillion trillion times as
sphere and Earth. Because the gravitational force is small as a hydrogen atom—that spacetime itself is
directly proportional to the masses being measured, thought to assume quantum characteristics. A quan-
he could use that ratio to solve for Earth’s unknown tum spacetime would no longer be the smooth con-
mass. Over the course of nine months he repeated the tinuum described by general relativity; it would be
experiment 17 times and found that Earth weighed coarse-grained, like a digital photograph that be
13 million billion billion pounds, a result essentially comes pixelated when magnified. That graininess is
Tim Folger is a freelance
identical to the best modern estimates. a hallmark of quantum theory, which confines the
journalist who writes
for National Geographic, “It’s an incredible story,” says Markus Aspelmeyer, energy, momentum and other properties of particles
Discover and other who has been recounting the Cavendish experiment to discrete bits, or quanta. But what exactly is a
national publications. during a Skype call. “It was the first precision tabletop quantum of spacetime? How could time or distance
He is also the series editor experiment [with gravity].” Cavendish’s 220-year-old be measured if space and time themselves are frac-
for The Best American
tour de force, though not actually conducted on a tured like broken rulers?
Science and Nature Writ-
ing, an annual anthology tabletop, is a source of inspiration for Aspelmeyer, a “All our theories of physics either explicitly or
published by Houghton physicist at the University of Vienna in Austria. Like implicitly require the existence of rods and clocks:
Mifflin Harcourt. Cavendish, he has plans for an ambitious, seemingly something occurred [here] at this time and then did
this [there] at a later time,” says Miles Blencowe, a the debris. The basic approach is not much different SUPERCONDUCTING
theoretical physicist at Dartmouth College. “Where from blowing up a safe to find out what is inside. The CIRCUITS ( 1) aid the
do you start if you don’t even have a time parameter practitioners of tabletop physics aim to replace brute levitation experiment.
or a distance parameter?” Lajos Diósi, a theoretical force with finesse, like safecrackers listening to the Researchers are also
physicist at the Wigner Research Center for Physics tumblers of a lock clicking into place. “You’re trading trying to measure the
in Budapest, sums up the conundrum this way: “We high energy for high precision is the way I look at it,” gravitational fields of
don’t know what will be there, but we know for sure says Eric Adelberger, a physicist at the University of millimeter-wide gold
that there will be a total scrambling of the spacetime Washington. “There’s the energy frontier, and there’s spheres (2) to observe
continuity if you go down to the Planck scale.” the precision frontier. If you can measure something gravity closer to the
Unfortunately for physicists, there is no way to really, r eally w
ell, you can test physics that’s going on quantum realm.
observe phenomena on the Planck scale and thus no at some really high-energy scale.” Now at least three
way to check the predictions of various theories of groups, including Aspelmeyer’s, are designing exper-
quantum gravity to see which of them might be right. iments to do just that. The scientists are optimistic
“The situation is not that we do not have theories of that these projects will finally reach the levels of pre-
quantum gravity,” says Carlo Rovelli, a theoretical cision needed to probe into the realm where gravity
physicist at Aix-Marseille University in France. “We goes quantum.
do. The problem is that we have more than one.”
In physics, the higher the energy scale of your ex A THOUGHT EXPERIMENT
periment, the smaller the distance you can probe. To understand why precision a llows physicists to
And probing the Planck scale directly would require indirectly access higher energies, and thus smaller
a machine more than 15 orders of magnitude more scales, consider a historical analogue: Brownian
powerful than CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC) motion. In a paper published in 1905, Einstein
near Geneva, the largest particle accelerator ever built, showed that the puzzling random movements of pol-
with a circumference of 27 kilometers. As one physi- len grains in a jar of water could be explained by col-
cist says, such an accelerator would need to be rough- lisions with water molecules, even though the mole-
ly the size of our galaxy. Machines such as the LHC cules themselves were many orders of magnitude
bash particles together at nearly the speed of light, too small to be observed directly. Aspelmeyer and
and physicists hope something new will emerge from other physicists are betting that the unobservably
Gravitational Electromagnet
field
Gold spheres Spring
Cantilever
1 mm
ULTIMATE EXPERIMENT #1
Eventually the team will aim to put one of these spheres into a state
PRELIMINARY EXPERIMENT #1 of superposition. If this ball’s gravitational field goes into superposition,
One experiment, proposed by physicist Markus Aspelmeyer, will ultimately too, and exists in two places, then the other mass should feel the pull
attempt to put a mass into a superposition state of being in two locations of both fields and become entangled, entering superposition as well.
simultaneously and then try to see if the gravitational field of the mass
splits into two as well. A preliminary version of this trial will develop the
technology to detect gravitational fields of smaller objects than ever
before—in this case, two tiny gold spheres. An electromagnet attached
to a spring will cause one ball to vibrate, and the other, at the end of a
cantilever, should oscillate in response to the changing gravitational pull.
small things happening in the Planckian realm though, Aspelmeyer will not be weighing Earth, and
might similarly influence phenomena accessible to his milligram masses are orders of magnitude small-
tabletop experiments. And although particle acceler- er than Cavendish’s lead balls. He wants to test
ators cannot be upgraded by orders of magnitude— whether gravity interacts at all with the quantum
we are unlikely to see accelerators with 1,000-kilo- properties of small masses. Specifically, he intends to
meter circumferences—the precision of tabletop look at what kind of gravitational effects might be
experiments may well improve by a few orders of generated by an object placed in a “Schrödinger’s
magnitude in the decades ahead. cat”-like state of being both here and there at once.
Such gains might allow Aspelmeyer to test a key In the quantum world, particles have the uncanny
assumption shared by all theories of quantum gravity: ability to be in two places simultaneously—a super-
that gravity itself should display some profoundly position, as physicists call it. Scientists have observed
strange quantum properties. “If that is really true, quantum superpositions many times in laboratories,
there should be some consequences for phenomena but they are delicate states. Interactions with any
at an energy scale that is much much smaller [than nearby particles quickly cause objects in superposi-
the high energies that correspond with the Planck tion to “collapse” into a single position. But while the
scale]”—that is, at roughly the scale we inhabit, Aspel- superpositions last, Aspelmeyer wonders what prop-
meyer says. “The question is: Can we come up with erties these particles have. Do they create their own
experiments that possibly test those consequence?” minuscule gravitational fields, for instance? “Imag-
What Aspelmeyer has in mind is an experiment ine you place an object in a superposition,” he says,
that would measure the gravitational attraction “and now you ask a question: How does it gravitate?
between two spherical masses. Unlike Cavendish, That is the question we want to answer.”
A quantum spacetime
says the experiment presents a host of
challenges: the small, spherical masses
Re
at
gener
atıon
A once abandoned drug compound shows an ability
to rebuild organs damaged by illness and injury
By Kevin Strange and Viravuth Yin
Illustration by Sam Falconer
A tale of shark bites at a Scottish pub has led us to some new ideas
about rebuilding broken bodies. In the early 2000s American geneticist
Michael Zasloff of Georgetown University had traveled to the University
of St. Andrews to give a talk about several natural antibiotics found in
animal skin. After the lecture, he and some of the university scientists
went for a drink, and one of them, a marine biologist, began to talk
about how dolphins were frequently savaged by sharks, sustaining some
bite wounds 45 centimeters long and 12 centimeters deep. But remarkably the dolphins healed
up in weeks, with no signs of infection.
IN BRIEF
Stem cell t reatments grab many headlines A compound called MSI-1436 m ay be more prom- The molecule, o riginally intended as a diabetes and
about healing and regrowing body parts but ising, animal experiments show. It takes the brakes obesity medicine, was successfully tested for safety
have had minimal success. off the body’s natural ability to regenerate cells. in people—a big head start in drug development.
The ability of cells and organs t o regenerate after injury is limited under normal
circumstances. After a heart attack, for instance, molecules called growth factors
and cytokines go to the heart to stimulate new growth, but their signals are blocked by
an enzyme. Dead heart cells are not replaced. In tests on mice with damaged hearts,
however, an injected compound called MSI-1436 inhibits the trouble-making enzyme.
Dead tissue (after heart attack)
The result is new heart muscle, pumping away.
Phosphate
MSI-1436
RTK
PTP1B
natives, such as pills, that were easier to take. Pharmaceutical which has a proved safety record, could become valuable regen-
companies did not pursue it. erative medicine for repairing the destruction from heart at-
But for regenerating damaged cells, there are currently not a tacks and potentially from other devastating diseases as well.
lot of medical options. There have been many headlines about
stem cells, unspecialized cells that can, with the right cues, give RESTORATION PROJECT
rise to the myriad highly differentiated cell types that make up Many animalshave startling regenerative capabilities. Sala-
the human body. In theory, they could repair damaged parts. manders regrow entire limbs after amputation. The lamprey,
Unfortunately, despite many years of clinical trials and other an eel-like fish, can repair a severed spinal cord. Zebra fish, a
tests, stem cell transplants remain challenged by a lack of effica- popular aquarium fish species that is also broadly used in bio-
cy and other serious concerns. The only wide use now is in bone medical research, can regenerate damaged hearts, kidneys,
marrow transplants to treat blood cell diseases. But MSI-1436, pancreases and appendages. Pick almost any tissue or organ,
citement in Strange’s office that are not appropriate to repeat here. treatments, including stem cell transplants, to help the heart
How did MSI-1436 stimulate regeneration in such a dramatic repair itself has failed.
fashion? Some scientists had studied its effects on cells, and after So when we saw that MSI-1436 helped fish, we moved on to
we did more experiments, the answer seemed pretty clear: MSI- test it in mice, an animal model widely used in heart disease
1436 hobbled an enzyme named protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B research. We induced heart attacks in the rodents and then
(PTP1B), which has several jobs in the body, one of which is to injected them with MSI-1436 every three days over a span of four
regulate the growth of new cells. That is an important occupation weeks. The blood-pumping ability of the organ improved by
because widespread uncontrolled growth can make an organ more than twofold, the amount of scar tissue was reduced by
malfunction or become cancerous. PTP1B is essentially a brake 50 percent, and heart muscle cells at the injury site proliferated
on cell regeneration. Our compound released that brake but only by nearly 600 percent. MSI-1436 is the only small molecule
at injury sites, in a very local, focused and controlled way. known to have this effect.
When PTP1B brakes, it does so by interfering with a crucial Recently we began testing the compound in mice with a
class of cell proteins called receptor tyrosine kinases, or RTKs. completely different kind of disease: a rodent version of Du
tens of thousands of synthetic Perhaps animals respond well to the com-
pound because it evolved in animals in the
t’s no secret that electric eels stun their prey—accounts of such occurrences date
back centuries. But unless you work security on the starship Enterprise, “stun” is a
vague term. What really happens when these creatures attack? Until recently, biolo-
gists knew surprisingly little about the electric eel’s superpower. I was not planning to
study this phenomenon, and I certainly never imagined I would offer an eel my arm in
the name of science, as I eventually did. But as a professor of biological sciences at
Vanderbilt University, I teach about electric fish, and when I brought some eels to my
laboratory so I could obtain new photographs and slow-motion movies to liven up my lecture,
I saw something so strange that I had to drop everything else to investigate.
When an eel attacked a prey fish with high voltage, all the S HOCK VALUE
nearby fish in the tank became completely immobile in only You might be surprised t o learn the electric eel is not a true eel
three milliseconds. It was as if they had been turned into little but rather belongs to a family of fish known as the Gymnotidae
statues; they just floated stock-still in the water. At first, I won- that live in South America. The other members of this group
dered if they had simply been killed. But if the eel missed its tar- give off very weak electric discharges that they use to sense their
get and turned off the high voltage, the fish “unfroze” and took surroundings and to communicate. The electric eel has amped
off at full speed. The eel’s effect was temporary. I was hooked; I up its power over the course of evolution. It can generate a
had to know how the eel’s electric attack worked. charge of up to 600 volts, thanks to the electric organ that spans
The most obvious analogy that came to mind was a law-en- nearly the length of their body (the animals can reach eight feet
forcement Taser, which causes neuromuscular incapacitation by in length and weigh more than 40 pounds). The organ is com-
interfering with the nervous system’s ability to control muscles. posed of thousands of special disk-shaped cells called electro-
Tasers deliver electricity along wires in short, high-voltage puls- cytes that work like batteries to discharge electricity.
es at a rate of 19 pulses a second. Electric eels do not need wires, To investigate the possibility that the electric eel operates like
because the water allows current to flow, as happens when a a Taser to incapacitate its prey, I needed to observe the animal in
hair dryer falls into a bathtub. But otherwise, the eel’s output is hunting mode. So I devised an experiment that took advantage
reminiscent of a Taser’s: it comes in brief pulses, each lasting of the eel’s insatiable appetite for earthworms. First, I placed a
only about two milliseconds. Eels can give off more than 400 dead fish that still had working nerves and muscles in the water
pulses per second during an attack volley, however—a much with the eel (but separated by an electrically permeable barrier)
higher rate than the law-enforcement devices. Could electric and attached it with a string to a device for measuring muscle
eels be souped-up, swimming Tasers? contractions. Then I fed the eel earthworms, which it happily
With this question in mind, I set out on what would become shocked and ate. This setup allowed me to conduct a series of
a three-year mission to unravel the mechanism of the eel’s attack tests on the fish muscle responses to the high-voltage pulses em-
and the effects of its shocks on both prey and would-be preda- anating from the hunting eel.
tors. I was surprised at every turn by the eel’s sophisticated use The volleys of high-voltage pulses from the eel caused mas-
of electricity and reminded that humankind’s inventions don’t sive muscle contractions in the fish that started three millisec-
hold a candle to nature’s. onds after the electric attack began—exactly the same amount of
IN BRIEF
The electric eel h as long been known to stun its A series of laboratory experiments has revealed The eel also uses its electrical powers when threat-
prey. But the mechanism of the eel’s attack and how how the creature uses electric fields to detect, track ened, leaping from the water to intensify the cur-
the shocks affect prey were a mystery. and immobilize prey. rent it delivers to potential predators.
Plastic
insert
TRACKING SYSTEM: T he eel can track prey and other conductors using high-voltage electroreception. In experiments with a spinning disk
bearing one conductive insert and multiple nonconductive inserts, the eel singled out the conductive insert with remarkable accuracy.
time that passed before the fish were seen to stop moving in the A little research into muscle physiology revealed that dou-
slow-motion movies. Apparently eels invented the Taser long be- blets—which can also be described as pairs of action poten-
fore humans. But the experiments showed much more. Eels do tials—sent from motor neurons to muscles are the best way to
not activate fish muscles directly. Instead their zaps activate the generate maximal muscle tension. Accordingly, my experiments
nerves that lead to the fish muscles. Each high-voltage pulse showed that eel doublets cause a brief, massive, whole-body
from an eel generates an action potential, or nerve impulse, in twitch in nearby prey, in contrast to the volleys, which cause
the fish’s motor nerves. sustained paralysis. The twitch, in turn, produces a strong wa-
This finding is remarkable when you consider that the eel’s ter displacement—essentially an underwater sound. Given the
electric organ is a modified muscle activated by the animal’s eel’s exquisite sensitivity to the slightest water movement, an
own motor nerves. The motor nerves are, in turn, activated by interesting possibility comes to mind. Could doublets be the
neurons in its brain. For each high-voltage pulse, the flow of eel’s way of asking, “Are you alive?” After all, wild eels hunt at
command signals starts in the eel’s brain and travels to its motor night in the Amazon, surrounded by a vast diversity of hidden
neurons, which then activate the electric organ. From there the prey—things that are far harder to find than worms and gold-
signal passes through the water to trigger the motor neurons, fish dropped into a tank.
and then muscles, in nearby fish. In other words, the eel immo- Supporting this idea: when eels in my lab hunted novel prey,
bilizes its prey using a form of high-fidelity remote control. such as crayfish, or prey hidden among plants in the tank, they
Intriguingly, this insight suggests the eel’s electric output may often gave off doublets while searching and attacked after the
have been shaped in part by what happens to the muscles of its prey twitched, as if the prey’s movement had tipped them off.
prey. With this finding in mind, I began considering the eel’s high- These were telling observations, but to provide more direct evi-
voltage volley with a new perspective. I was especially intrigued dence, I attached the dead fish to an electric stimulator that
by reports from a previous investigator, Richard Bauer, who in could be triggered by either me or the eel’s doublets. I then
KENNETH C. CATANIA
1979 showed that hunting electric eels often pause to give off pairs placed the wired fish in a ziplock bag so the eel’s own doublets
of high-voltage pulses, each separated by two milliseconds. These would have no effect on it. This setup allowed me to control
paired pulses are called doublets, and all the eels in my lab exhib- when the fish’s muscles twitched. Sure enough, the eels never
ited the same behavior. What, I wondered, are doublets for? followed a doublet with an attack unless the fish twitched. The
Focused Intensity
Eel’s electric field is what physicists term
a dipole: lines representing forces on a positive
charge originate from the positive head of the
eel and end on the negative tail. The density
of lines indicates the strength of the electric
field at any given point. Bringing the positive
pole closer to the negative pole increases the
field strength between them. The eel does
this by curling its tail around the prey
gripped in its mouth before zapping it.
+
The closer the positive
and the negative, the
stronger the field
3
Insulated wire 2
+
+
1
+
Plastic
– container –
–
Handle Conductive aluminum tape
the eels. Bringing an arm close to an eel resulted in a compelling between the eel’s jaw, a living target and the surrounding water.
demonstration of the leaping defense. The lights flashed bright- It was hard to stop working on the circuit without the final
er as the eel rose farther out of the water while shocking the arm. answers. In addition, just as my first paper documenting the
But exactly how and why did this happen? eel’s leaping attack was published in 2016, a video was posted to
Getting the answers to these questions required working out the Internet showing a very large eel leaping onto a surprised
the so-called equivalent circuit and then determining the volt- fisherman in South America (he was temporarily immobilized
age, or electromotive force, of the eel’s electric organ. I would and then recovered, similar to the aftermath of being Tased).
also need to calculate how much the materials in the circuit re- Suddenly the circuit I had been studying out of curiosity had
duce the flow of electric current through it—a property known real-world consequences.
as resistance. So I designed experiments to measure each vari- There was nothing for it but to use my own arm to determine
able in succession, starting with the eel’s electric organ. At the last variable and test the predictions from all the previous
slightly more than three feet long, the largest eel in my lab had measurements. I used a very small eel with an electromotive
an electric potential of 382 volts and an internal resistance of force of 198 volts and an internal resistance of 960 ohms. I built
only 450 ohms, allowing for currents of nearly one ampere if a device that measured the current through my arm during the
there were no other resistances. That is quite an electric punch— eel’s attack, allowing me to finally solve the circuit. I can also re-
far greater than a Taser’s. port with conviction that eels are very efficient at turning up the
When an eel emerges from the water, pressing its lower jaw volume of their attack.
against a target, the usual current path for electricity from the I may have started this project thinking I would teach about
eel’s head to its tail is progressively shut down—because air is a electric eels, but in the end, it was the eels that taught me. It is
poor conductor—and is replaced by a path through the target. the same lesson I relearn every time I investigate a new species:
Remarkably it is similar to a volume-control knob—the eel pro- the animals are always far more interesting than I could possi-
SOURCE: “POWER TRANSFER TO A HUMAN DURING AN ELECTRIC EEL’S SHOCKING LEAP,”
BY KENNETH C. CATANIA, IN C URRENT BIOLOGY, VOL. 27, NO. 18; SEPTEMBER 25, 2017
gressively turns up the volume in the target as it rises from the bly imagine, in ways I could never have predicted at the outset.
water. This observation explains how the behavior could have It keeps me up at night—in a good way—to contemplate all we
gradually evolved because each increment in height provides an have yet to discover.
advantage. But how efficient is the eel at turning up the volume?
When working out the details, I ran into the most basic of
circuit problems: calculating the electric current in a circuit M O R E T O E X P L O R E
containing two resistors arranged side by side. It is a favorite The Shocking Predatory Strike of the Electric Eel. K enneth Catania in Science, Vol. 346,
pages 1231–1234; December 5, 2014.
challenge in circuit puzzles (that is, physics exams) because you Electric Eels Use High-Voltage to Track Fast-Moving Prey. K enneth C. Catania in Nature
cannot calculate the electric current in the circuit without Communications, V ol. 6, Article No. 8638; October 20, 2015.
knowing the value of both resistors. I was able to solve for one Power Transfer to a Human during an Electric Eel’s Shocking Leap. K enneth C. Catania
resistance—the path from the eel’s head to the water—by taking in Current Biology, V
ol. 27, No. 18, pages 2887–2891; September 25, 2017.
measurements from eels attacking metal plates connected to a F R O M O U R A R C H I V E S
voltmeter. The other resistance was the arm—the eel’s target. Natural-Born Killer. K enneth C. Catania; April 2011.
After collecting data for all the other variables, I could only
s c i e n t if i c a m e r i c a n . c o m /m a g a zi n e /s a
guess at this last value: the complex resistance that developed
M AT H E M AT I C S
OUTSMARTING A
VIRUS WITH MATH
W
orking behind the scenes, calculus is an unsung hero of modern life.
By harnessing the forecasting powers of differential equations—the sooth
sayers of calculus—humans have used an arcane branch of mathematics
to change the world. Consider, for instance, the supporting role that calculus
played in the fight against HIV, the human immunodeficiency virus.
In the 1980s a mysterious disease began killing tens of thousands of people a year in the U.S. and hundreds of thousands world
wide. No one knew what it was, where it came from or what was causing it, but its effects were clear—it weakened patients’ immune
systems so severely that they became vulnerable to rare kinds of cancer, pneumonia and opportunistic infections. Death from the
disease was slow, painful and disfiguring. Doctors named it acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS). No cure was in sight.
Basic research demonstrated that a retrovirus was the culprit. Its mechanism was insidious: The virus attacked and infected
white blood cells called helper T cells, a key component of the immune system. Once inside, the virus hijacked the cell’s genetic
machinery and co-opted it into making more viruses. Those new virus particles then escaped from the cell, hitched a ride in the
bloodstream and other bodily fluids, and looked for more T cells to infect. The body’s immune system responded to this invasion
by trying to flush out the virus particles from the blood and kill as many infected T cells as it could find. In so doing, the immune
system was killing an important part of itself.
The first antiretroviral drug approved to treat HIV appeared in 1987. It slowed the virus down by interfering with the hijacking
process, but it was not as effective as hoped, and HIV often became resistant to it. A different class of drugs called protease inhibi
tors appeared in 1994. They thwarted HIV by interfering with the newly produced virus particles,
keeping them from maturing and rendering them noninfectious. Though also not a cure, prote
Excerpted from I nfinite Powers: ase inhibitors were a godsend.
How Calculus Reveals the Secrets Soon after protease inhibitors became available, a team of researchers led by David Ho (a for
of the Universe, by Steven Strogatz, mer physics major at the California Institute of Technology and so, presumably, someone comfort
to be published by Houghton Mifflin able with calculus) and a mathematical immunologist named Alan Perelson collaborated on a
Harcourt on April 2, 2019. Copyright study that changed how doctors thought about HIV and revolutionized how they treated it. Before
© 2019 by Steven Strogatz. Used the work of Ho and Perelson, it was known that untreated HIV infection typically progressed
by permission. All rights reserved. through three stages: an acute primary stage of a few weeks, a chronic and paradoxically asymp
Our Planet
by Alastair Fothergill
and Keith Scholey,
with Fred Pearce.
Ten Speed Press,
2019 ($35)
This month t he new nature documentary series Our Planet w ill be released on Netflix, from the same team that created P lanet Earth a nd The Blue Planet.
T he companion book by co-producers Fothergill and Scholey can certainly stand on its own, with many images leaving the viewer wondering, “How’d
they get that shot?”: A lone polar bear treks along the ridge of a jagged, blue and glistening ice cap in the Russian High Arctic (above). An iridescent
turquoise European kingfisher seems frozen in time as it dives for minnows off its mossy perch. A brown bear peeks around the tree in a Slovenian forest—
its expression so humanlike, you could dare call it shy. This collection goes beyond photography, though, with a thorough discussion of the conservation
challenges facing many ecosystems on Earth. It’s not enough to merely look at the planet around us—we must understand how humans impact it.
REPRINTED WITH PERMISSION FROM O UR PLANET, B Y ALASTAIR FOTHERGILL AND KEITH SCHOLEY. COPYRIGHT © 2019.
on a Vast Universe T he Search for What Lies Prevented a Pharmaceutical Disaster
PUBLISHED BY TEN SPEED PRESS, A DIVISION OF PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE, LLC. IMAGE CREDIT: SERGEY GORSHKOV
by Ella Frances Sanders. Penguin Books, 2019 ($17) beyond the Quantum by James Essinger and Sandra Koutzenko.
by Lee Smolin. Penguin Press, 2019 ($28) Wellspring, 2019 ($24.95)
From the atoms t hat make up
our bodies to the galactic super Quantum mechanics—the On March 8, 1962, p harma
cluster that houses the Milky basis for our understanding cologist Frances (“Frankie”) O.
Way, writer and illustrator of particles and forces—is argu Kelsey, a medical reviewer at
Sanders elucidates many of the ably the most successful theory the FDA , received a most un
wonders of our world through drawings and con in all of science. But its success expected letter. The drug firm
versational explanations. While describing lunar the has come at a price: unresolved mysteries at the that had pressured her to approve the distribution
ory, for example, she compares the moon and Earth’s theory’s heart, such as the paradoxical wave-par of a sleeping pill was withdrawing its request. For
locked synchronous rotation to the movement ticle duality of quantum objects, can make modern nearly two years she had refused to accede—there
of dance partners: “How glad we can be, that we physics seem decidedly metaphysical. Simply put, was not enough evidence to prove the medication
have someone to figure out this universe business if mainstream interpretations of quantum mechan was safe. As it turned out, the drug, thalidomide,
alongside, to dance with, to gradually lengthen our ics are true, then the central, most cherished tenet which was also used to treat morning sickness in
days and keep us slow.” A star’s death, trees helping of physics—that an objective reality exists indepen pregnancy, had been linked to birth defects in
one another survive and the ways our brain rewrites dently of our mind but is still comprehensible—must Europe and elsewhere. In the end, it never pervad
memories are also among the concepts Sanders be false. Smolin, a member of the Perimeter Institute ed the U.S. market. Writers Essinger and Koutzenko
demystifies. Each inspiring snapshot feeds the cu for Theoretical Physics in Ontario, argues against unearth the story of Kelsey, who helped prevent a
riosity of anyone interested in exploring the universe this vexing status quo: “It is possible to be a realist public health tragedy by standing her ground in the
that we exist in and that exists in us. —S unya Bhutta while living in the quantum universe.” —L ee Billings name of scientific proof. —Emiliano Rodríguez Mega
YouTube Has which owns YouTube, highlights videos in its search results.
“How do I” assemble that table, improve my stroke, decide if I’m
APRIL
1969 Trans
uranium
Elements
“Up to 1963 the rate of discovery
knapper can turn out 500 pounds
of blades a day from locally quar
ried nodules of flint.”
the dirigible [see illustration]
is destined to be the carrier of
passengers and goods over long
of transuranium elements had New agricultural machinery made routes, in competition with the
been high. Each step forward has this craft obsolete in the 1980s. intercontinental steamers.”
required more and more complex
apparatus and methods to increase
the number of protons in the nucle
us, while at the same time the sta
1919 Airships
for Travel
“The substitution of helium for
1969
1869 Meat on Ice “A new invention,
in the shape of machinery for
bility of the nuclei produced has hydrogen, which is one of Ameri making ice and performing the
decreased, making them difficult ca’s contributions to military avia refrigerating process, was tested
to observe and identify. Nonethe tion, removes one of the greatest on board the ship W illiam Taber,
less, heavy synthetic elements are prejudices against the lighter- lying at the foot of Nineteenth
a subject of livelier interest than than-air craft. For now that heli Street, East River, New York City,
ever because of advances in the um gas, which is non-inflammable, in the presence of a number of sci
theory of nuclear stability, which is used in place of explosive hydro entific and mechanical gentlemen,
have given rise to the possibility gen, there is no further need to 1919 to whom invitations had been
of synthetic elements beyond the think of conflagration during extended. The ship has been thor
dreams of early workers in the flight or on the ground. Engines oughly fitted with this new appa
field. Concurrently great progress can be placed anywhere, and so ratus for the preservation, during
has been made in manufacturing can the galley and stoves and transportation, of fresh beef and
in quantity the unstable elements heating plant, since the dirigible other perishable food for a long
through element 98, in enlarging is no longer a huge explosive period, and she will sail for Texas
knowledge of their properties and charge held in a silk bag, ready to some day next week. The two
in finding worthwhile applications burst into flames at the slightest great principles in the mechanism
for them.—Glenn T. Seaborg and spark. Frankly, the airplane as a 1869 of the affair seem to be, first, the
Justin L. Bloom” commercial proposition is today application of pumps to the lique
Seaborg shared the 1951 Nobel Prize but a poor second to the dirigible. faction of carbonic acid [carbon
in Chemistry for his work in this field. The airplane is to be the competi dioxide] gas; and second, the
tor of the fast railroad train, while remaking of it into gas over and
Knappers at Work over again ad infinitum.”
“The only living men who make The ship failed to make its delivery.
tools by flaking flint are usually The date of the first successful refriger-
believed to be a few primitive ated ship voyage is usually given as 1877.
tribesmen who still follow the
customs of their forebears and High Fashion in Toys
a handful of specialized craftsmen “Not the least interesting of the
who fashion the flints needed for English reports on the French
surviving flintlock firearms. Dur Exhibition is on toys. The chief
ing recent archaeological work French toy is a doll, not a repre
in Turkey, Jacques Bordaz of the sentation of an infant for a child
University of Montreal found this to fondle, but a model of a lady
belief to be in error: flint-knap attired in the height of fashion,
pers in the Turkish village of a leading manufacturer changing
Çakmak produce 500 tons of flint the costume every month to en
blades every year, enough to pro sure accuracy. As an excuse for
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN,VOL. CXX, NO. 16; APRIL 19, 1919
vide fresh cutting edges for all the this apparently early inoculation
threshing sledges in rural Turkey. of childhood with a love for finery,
Turkish wheat-growers like to sep it is explained that these dolls
arate the grain from the stalk by serve as models to colonial and
dragging a sledge over sheaves other extra-Parisian milliners
spread on a threshing floor. Each before they are handed over to
sledge has 600 to 800 blades of 1919: Elegant dirigibles are the hope for air travel to come. their children. French dolls, un
flint, a little less than two inches Passengers relax in the stern observation salon of an airship like our wax-faced natives, have
long, set on edge in a slot. Each crossing the Atlantic Ocean. china heads.”
Year
American h as popped up as one of the dictionary’s most quot 1000 P
ed sources for new words, new meanings of existing words and
EO
PLE
exemplary uses of novel words (large graphic). Since the maga Word
zine debuted in 1845, it has provided the first record of 1,056 Source
PUB
terms (smaller graphic). We tip our hat to T he Times (Lon IC
ATI
L
ONS
don) and William Shakespeare as the top sources.
Certainly the advancement of science and tech
Jo u
s e
nc
l
Science Encyclopædia
Nature Britannica
Top 100 Cursor Mundi
Sources of Words historical poem
Key Philosophical
*Some publications include Wycliffe Bible
Transactions
Number of Times Cited for New Words, earlier incarnations (early version) group
of the Royal Blackwood’s
New Meanings and Exemplary with different names. of bible translations
Society
Uses of Novel Words Life Span of Source Harper’s Daily Telegraph Acts of Parliament, Britain
3,000 Year born or founded
8,000 Listener New York Times
18,000
30,000 Year died or ended New Yorker The Times (London)
43,000 Pharm
1,000
Crash (computer)
Space tourist (pay to go to space)