Tuesday, May 16, 2023

What is meat? (video)


AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
What is meat? (video) 

IMAGE: BEYOND “BURGERS.” IMPOSSIBLE “MEAT.” A HUGE MEATBALL (SUPPOSEDLY) MADE FROM WOOLY MAMMOTH DNA. CHEMISTRY IS CHANGING HOW WE THINK ABOUT MEAT, AND AS TECHNOLOGY ADVANCES, THINGS ARE ONLY GOING TO GET MORE CONFUSING … HTTPS://YOUTU.BE/0PDLHZVQYQS view more 

CREDIT: THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY

WASHINGTON, May 15, 2023 — Beyond “burgers.” Impossible “meat.” A huge meatball (supposedly) made from wooly mammoth DNA. Chemistry is changing how we think about meat, and as technology advances, things are only going to get more confusing … https://youtu.be/0PdLHZVQYQs

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Most species, including humans, who experience early life adversity suffer as adults. How are gorillas different?


Peer-Reviewed Publication

UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN

Images

There's something most species—from baboons to humans to horses—have in common: When they suffer serious adversity early in life, they're more likely to experience hardship later on in life.

When researchers from the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund and the University of Michigan decided to look at this question in gorillas, they weren't sure what they would find. 

Previous studies by the Fossey Fund revealed that young gorillas are surprisingly resilient to losing their mothers, in contrast to what has been found in many other species. But losing your mother is only one of many potential bad things that can happen to young animals. 

"Assuming that you survive something that we consider early life adversity, it's often still the case that you will be less healthy or you will have fewer kids or your lifespan will be shorter—no matter what species you are," said U-M anthropologist Stacy Rosenbaum, senior author on the study. "There's this whole range of things that happens to you that seems to just make your life worse in adulthood."

But instead, the researchers found that gorillas who survived past age 6 were largely unaffected by difficulties they encountered as infants or juveniles. The study is published in the journal Current Biology.

Like other species, humans also deal with early life adversity, and the effects of this can follow us into adulthood, such as a shorter lifespan or health complications, Rosenbaum said. But in humans, it's difficult to tease out whether we, for example, develop cancer or die early as adults because of an adverse event early in life per se, or whether it's because of a multitude of behavioral, environmental and cultural factors—or a combination of all of the above. 

Studying these early adverse events in nonhuman species could help researchers understand how such events affect humans, and how to mitigate them.

"When you look at animals, you remove a lot of the variation that we have in humans.  For example, they are all eating similar diets, they all get exercise as part of their daily lives, they don't have the opportunity to engage in behaviors with negative health outcomes like smoking," said Robin Morrison, a researcher with the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund and lead author on the study.

But despite this, in most species it is still the case that early adversity can have negative effects in adulthood, which suggests that there is some kind of deeper biological mechanism there that we don't understand very well, Morrison said. That gorillas show a different pattern suggests these early life adversities can be overcome. Understanding why and how this happens can have significant implications for our own species, she said.

Like humans, gorillas live a long time and have a small number of offspring that they heavily invest in. This makes them a good comparative animal model for understanding the ramifications of early life adverse events. The researchers looked at 55 years of long-term data collected in 253 wild mountain gorillas, 135 of which were male and 118 female. These gorillas live in Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda, and have been monitored for more than five decades by the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.

The researchers identified six different kinds of early life adversity: losing a father or mother, experiencing the death of a group member by infanticide, social group instability, having few age-mates in the social group, and having a competing sibling who was born soon after them. The data included information about how many of these early adversities each gorilla experienced and at what age, as well as how long each gorilla lived. 

The researchers looked at what happened when a gorilla experienced none, one, two or three or more adverse events. They found that the more of these adverse events gorillas experienced before age 6, the more likely they were to die as juveniles. But if, despite experiencing early adversity, they survived until age 6—past their juvenile stage—the researchers found no evidence that their lifespans were shorter, no matter how many adverse events the gorillas suffered.

In fact, if a gorilla experienced three or more forms of adversity, it actually lived longer; this group of animals had a 70% reduction in the risk of death across adulthood. But this was driven by greater longevity in males specifically, and the researchers suspect the trend was due to something called viability selection. This means that if a gorilla was strong enough to survive difficult early life events, it might just be a "higher-quality individual," and thus more likely to have a longer life span.

"I was expecting to see that these gorillas would have short lifespans and would not do very well as adults," Rosenbaum said. "We found that these events are definitely associated with a much higher risk of death when you're young. But if you survive to age 6, there's no evidence that those shorten your lifespan at all. This is quite different from what we see in other species."

The researchers have some theories about why these mountain gorillas were so resilient. Gorillas have very tight-knit social groups and prior studies have shown that when a young gorilla loses its mom, it doesn't actually become more isolated: other gorillas fill the gap in social companionship.  

"The youngster actually increases its time near other gorillas after the loss of its mom and in particular the highest-ranking adult male, even if he isn't their biological father," Morrison said. "These strong networks might provide critical social buffering, as has been shown in humans. The quality of our social relationships is a very important predictor of our health and longevity—in some cases, more important than genetics or lifestyle."

Another reason they may be relatively buffered from the consequences of adversity is that mountain gorillas live in a resource-rich environment compared to many other wild primates. It may be easier for a gorilla to survive difficult circumstances if they are not also constantly dealing with the stress of finding enough food and water, Rosenbaum said. 

"For comparison, savanna baboons—who were the inspiration for this analysis—live in this highly seasonal environment where they go through extreme droughts. They sometimes will have to walk miles to get to a water hole. They're often struggling for every single calorie they take in," she said. "That's not the world that mountain gorillas live in. They're often described as living in a giant salad bowl."

The researchers' findings suggest that species similar to our own can have significant resilience to early life adversity. The results also raise important questions about the biological roots of sensitivity to early experiences, and the protective mechanisms that contribute to resilience in gorillas.

"I don't think we should assume that the long-term negative effects of early life adversity are universal," Rosenbaum said. "We tend to talk about this as if it's a ubiquitous experience, and a given that your adulthood is going to be compromised if you live through early adversity.

"But I don't think it's nearly that cut-and-dry, even in the human literature. I think the data are a lot more complex for humans and this research would suggest that they might be more complex for other animals, too. And I actually think that that's a hopeful story."

Study: Cumulative early life adversity does not predict reduced adult longevity in wild gorillas

About the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund

Founded in 1967, the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund is the world's longest-running and largest organization dedicated entirely to gorilla conservation. The Fossey Fund has over 300 staff in Rwanda and eastern DR Congo, protecting vulnerable gorilla populations and some of the world's richest biodiversity. The organization's integrated approach to conservation involves supporting the livelihoods and food security of local communities and building capacity of African conservationists. 

Postsecondary university education improves intelligence of adult students with intellectual disability


IQ exceeded the cutoff point of the ID definition among five of the adults tested

Peer-Reviewed Publication

BAR-ILAN UNIVERSITY

IQ exceeded the cutoff point of the ID definition among five of the adults tested 

IMAGE: POST-SECONDARY EDUCATION (PSE) HAS A POTENTIAL FOR IMPROVING THE IQ OF ADULTS WITH MILD INTELLECTUAL DISABILITY (ID), ACCORDING TO A NEW BAR-ILAN UNIVERSITY STUDY. THE STUDY EXAMINED THE IMPACT OF PSE ON STUDENTS WITH MILD ID WHO STUDY IN A UNIVERSITY-BASED PROGRAM, KNOWN AS THE EMPOWERMENT PROJECT, AT THE BAR-ILAN UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF EDUCATION. THE STUDY SAMPLE INCLUDED 24 PARTICIPANTS, DIVIDED INTO 12 STUDENTS WITH ID WHO PARTICIPATE IN THE EMPOWERMENT PROJECT AND 12 ADULTS WITH ID WITH THE SAME BACKGROUND, WHO DID NOT PARTICIPATE. THE RESULTS WERE PUBLISHED IN THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SPECIAL NEEDS EDUCATION. THE FINDINGS REVEALED SIGNIFICANT IQ IMPROVEMENT AMONG THE 12 ADULTS AFTER FOUR-AND-A-HALF YEARS OF PARTICIPATION IN PSE COMPARED TO THOSE WITH THE SAME INTELLIGENCE LEVEL AND LIFESTYLE WHO DID NOT PARTICIPATE IN PSE. THEIR IQ REMAINED STABLE. PHOTO: GRAPH ILLUSTRATING INCREASE IN GENERAL IQ AMONG ADULT STUDENTS WITH ID PARTICIPATING IN BAR-ILAN UNIVERSITY'S EMPOWERMENT PROJECT view more 

CREDIT: PROF. HEFZIBA LIFSHITZ, BAR-ILAN UNIVERSITY

Post-secondary education (PSE) has a potential for improving the IQ of adults with mild intellectual disability (ID), according to a new Bar-Ilan University study. 

The study examined the impact of PSE on students with mild ID who study in a university-based program, known as the Empowerment Project, at the Bar-Ilan University Faculty of Education. 

The study sample included 24 participants, divided into 12 students with ID who participate in the Empowerment Project and 12 adults with ID with the same background, who did not participate. The results were published in the European Journal of Special Needs Education.

The findings revealed significant IQ improvement among the 12 adults after four-and-a-half years of participation in PSE compared to those with the same intelligence level and lifestyle who did not participate in PSE. Their IQ remained stable.

The Empowerment Project, a first-of its-kind program established by Prof. Hefziba Lifshitz, is based on her Compensation Age Theory, which postulates that chronological age, as opposed to mental age, plays an important role in determining the cognitive ability of adults with intellectual disability. Lifshitz and colleagues at Bar-Ilan University have determined that intelligence in ID individuals reaches its peak at around 40-45 years old, providing a window of opportunity for additional, meaningful education and enabling ID adults to develop and maximize their potential later in life.

The Empowerment Project serves 120 adults with all levels of intellectual disability: mild-moderate as well as severe-profound, providing college-level courses adapted to their needs. The most academically capable students in the program can earn a bachelor’s degree. All 12 students participating in this study began their studies in the 2014-2015 academic year.

The Weschler Adult Intelligence Test was administered during the third year of study. A second test was administered four-and-a-half years later. "We know that our project contributes to the improvement of cognitive ability, but I was curious to examine whether it would influence their intelligence," says Prof. Lifshitz. "Among those students studying for a BA, IQ recorded the second time exceeded the cutoff point of the ID definition, which is between 70-75. They reached 80, and some higher. This is an amazing development." Though some more and some less, IQ increased in all of the PSE participants, according to Lifshitz, who conducted the study with Dr. Shoshana Nissim, Dr. Chaya Aminadav, and Prof. Eli Vakil from Bar-Ilan University.

The Empowerment Project is the first in the world to open adapted enrichment college for students with severe-profound ID who require extensive support. Due to physical handicap they cannot attend university in person, so the Project offers courses on-site in their day care centers.

Next month, six of the 120 will become the first group of adults with ID in Israel to fulfill all the academic requirements for a bachelor's degree. It is believed that only three additional ID individuals in the world have received the same degree to date.

Prof. Lifshitz says that in addition to their IQ improvement, their self-esteem is also much higher. This can be seen in how they carry themselves and in their body language.  And on the university campus they feel like insiders rather than outsiders.  

 

High inflation creates stress in lower socioeconomic groups exacerbating health inequities

Peer-Reviewed Publication

YORK UNIVERSITY

Cary Wu 

IMAGE: YORK UNIVERSITY ASSISTANT PROFESSOR CARY WU view more 

CREDIT: YORK UNIVERSITY

TORONTO, May 15, 2023 – High inflation rates are stressing certain sociodemographic groups more than others, exacerbating inequalities in health in the United States, found a new study led by a York University researcher.

Stress is known to have detrimental effects on health and high inflation has become a significant source of stress. Of the 93 per cent of respondents who reported an increase in prices for goods and services in their area, 47 per cent of them said the rise in prices was very stressful, 28 per cent felt moderately stressed, while 19 per cent reported feeling a little stress. Less than six per cent said increased prices were not stressful to them.

Inflation stress, however, affects various segments of the population differently.

“Inflation does not affect everyone equally and can have a greater impact on people depending on their gender, race, age, marital status, education and income,” says lead author York University Assistant Professor Cary Wu of the Faculty of Liberal Arts and Professional Studies.

Although the study looked at the effects of high inflation in the U.S., research on Canadians by Wu has found similar patterns.

To measure high inflation stress, the researchers analyzed data from the U.S. Household Pulse Survey. Of the 369,328 respondents, 62 per cent were white, 11 per cent were Black, five per cent were Asian and 17 per cent were Hispanic, while 51 per cent were women and 31 per cent had post-secondary education.

The study found inflation is a significant source of stress for women, much more so than men, as well as those who are socioeconomically more vulnerable. Black and Hispanic people reporter higher inflation stress than white people, while Asians reporter lower inflation stress.

Education and income also play a role with higher levels of both being associated with lower inflation stress. Some 66 per cent of those who reported less than $25,000 in household income felt stressed, while only 17 per cent of those with a household income more than $200,000 reported feeling stress about high inflation.

After adjusting socioeconomic status, the difference in stress disappeared between Blacks and whites, but Asians showed slightly higher inflation stress.

Previously married individuals who are now widowed, divorced or separated had higher levels of inflation stress than married couples. It was also found to be higher for middle-aged groups compared to those older and younger.

"There is a need for more research and better policies to help protect against the health disparities caused by high inflation stress that affects certain segments of the population more than others," says Wu.

The study, Assessment of sociodemographics and inflation-related stress in the US, was published today in the American Medical Association’s open access journal JAMA Network Open.

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York University is a modern, multi-campus, urban university located in Toronto, Ontario. Backed by a diverse group of students, faculty, staff, alumni and partners, we bring a uniquely global perspective to help solve societal challenges, drive positive change and prepare our students for success. York's fully bilingual Glendon Campus is home to Southern Ontario's Centre of Excellence for French Language and Bilingual Postsecondary Education. York’s campuses in Costa Rica and India offer students exceptional transnational learning opportunities and innovative programs. Together, we can make things right for our communities, our planet, and our future.

Media Contact:

Sandra McLean, York University Media Relations, 416-272-6317, sandramc@yorku.ca

New study reveals widespread presence of environmental DNA in the sky, including allergens and pathogens


Peer-Reviewed Publication

PEERJ

Kimberly L. Metris 

IMAGE: AUTHOR KIMBERLY L. METRIS view more 

CREDIT: CREDIT: KIMBERLY L. METRIS

Recently published in PeerJ Life and Environment, researchers successfully use aircraft surveys with novel instrumentation to capture airborne nucleic acids and probe biodiversity in the atmosphere, uncovering surprising findings.

[Clemson, May 2023] - A groundbreaking research article titled "Aircraft Surveys for Air eDNA: Probing Biodiversity in the Sky" unveils a revolutionary approach to studying genetic material in the atmosphere. Scientists have developed a durable and sterilizable probe and supporting system to capture air environmental nucleic acids (eDNA) with full-flow filtration and a high-integrity chamber.

Using this innovative probe, the research team aerially mapped environmental DNA by employing a standardized and scalable flight pattern using light aircraft. The aim of the study was to collect bioaerosols, which are aerosolized biological matter, from a range of organisms at various altitudes above major emissions sources, and sequence them for identification.

This work began with an idea to explore, recounts Dr. Kimberly Metris, a faculty member at Clemson University and lead investigator. “I’m a molecular ecologist who works on diverse wild species, from bacteria to bluehead chub to African buffalo. I also fly airplanes, and one summer while I was flying skydivers I had a lot of time to think while climbing to jump run altitude. Meteorologically speaking, the conditions were great—10 statute miles visibility, rather calm winds, a rather nice day at the office—but this was during a Saharan dust storm and there was particulate matter visible outside, everywhere. An odd feeling, but it gets the wheels spinning.” What precisely is in the air that we can’t see, biologically speaking? This is what she and her coauthor set out to explore. “And now we are pushing the boundaries of what we thought we knew about the sky. The sky is not a limit, it is a treasure trove!”

The findings of the study are extraordinary. Through the use of their sampling probe and high throughput metagenomic sequencing, the researchers discovered the widespread presence of prokaryotic and eukaryotic eDNA in the atmosphere, reaching thousands of meters into the planetary boundary layer in the southeastern US. Notably, the study detected chicken, cow, and human eDNA at all altitudes flown, including an astonishing 8,500 feet above the ground. 

The researchers identified various common plant-based allergens from grasses, weeds, and trees, as well as from species not typically reported in the air, such as garlic, revealing a diverse array of airborne genetic material.

They also discovered pathogenic bacteria and bacteria previously unknown to be present in the atmosphere but found in other extreme environments such as deep-sea sediment.

The sterilizable and reusable sampling probe employed in the study proved to be reliable, limiting sample loss and contamination while filtering genetic material directly from the air. This groundbreaking work enables the mapping of genetic material from potentially all species using aircraft or other flight or stationary methods and connects aerobiome profiles to ground level processes, providing valuable insight into the presence and diversity of genetic material found in the air we breathe.

The implications of this research are far-reaching, with applications in biodiversity, wildlife ecology, biodefense, and pathogen and allergen monitoring. The study's high-throughput amplicon sequencing of DNA from bacteria, vertebrates, and plants demonstrates that bioaerosols can originate from natural processes, such as wind-induced pollination in fields and forests, and human-mediated activities, namely production agriculture, wastewater treatment, and industry practices including hospital waste decontamination.

Airborne DNA profiles detected in the atmosphere reflect surface emissions, allergens, and potential ice and cloud condensation nuclei. The effectiveness of aerosolization is believed to influence the air DNA profiles detected at altitude, suggesting the incorporation of indices of lift and air mass characteristics for standardizing air eDNA surveys. Additionally, the researchers recommend standardized reporting of real-time, empirical flow rates, total air volumes, and sampler type(s) used, as they have crucially different operating airflow requirements.

Biological material in the form of eDNA/RNA can be lifted, carried, and deposited elsewhere by atmospheric mixing, lifting, and buoyancy, potentially leading to biological consequences such as gene flow and hybridization processes. The atmosphere is powerful and essential to life--The discovery of airborne vertebrate-derived eDNA floating thousands of meters from its origin at Earth’s surface suggests that the atmosphere contains biodiverse material, and has implications for biomonitoring and disease surveillance. Scientists can gain insight into the presence, abundance, and distribution of species in an area, providing valuable evidence for identifying individuals or tracing their movements, or monitoring production agriculture from the atmosphere. 

This groundbreaking study paves the way for a deeper understanding of airborne genetic material and its implications for various fields of study. By unlocking the secrets of the sky, scientists are gaining new insights into our environment, the air we breathe, and intricate connections among biodiversity on Earth.

For more information or to access the full research article: 

Métris KL, Métris J. Aircraft surveys for air eDNA: probing biodiversity in the sky. PeerJ. 2023 Apr 14;11:e15171. doi: 10.7717/peerj.15171. PMID: 37077310; PMCID: PMC10108859.  https://peerj.com/articles/15171/ 

See the Video Abstract:   https://youtu.be/9lNVLedumsA

Summer Flight Metris

Kimberly L. Metris & Husband/Co-Author Jérémy Métris

Kimberly L. Metris

CREDIT

Credit: Kimberly L. Metris

Tetris reveals how people respond to unfair AI

Peer-Reviewed Publication

CORNELL UNIVERSITY

ITHACA, N.Y. – A Cornell University-led experiment in which two people play a modified version of Tetris revealed that players who get fewer turns perceived the other player as less likable, regardless of whether a person or an algorithm allocated the turns.

Most studies on algorithmic fairness focus on the algorithm or the decision itself, but researchers sought to explore the relationships among the people affected by the decisions.

“We are starting to see a lot of situations in which AI makes decisions on how resources should be distributed among people,” said Malte Jung, associate professor of information science, whose group conducted the study. “We want to understand how that influences the way people perceive one another and behave towards each other. We see more and more evidence that machines mess with the way we interact with each other.”

In an earlier study, a robot chose which person to give a block to and studied the reactions of each individual to the machine’s allocation decisions.

“We noticed that every time the robot seemed to prefer one person, the other one got upset,” said Jung. “We wanted to study this further, because we thought that, as machines making decisions becomes more a part of the world – whether it be a robot or an algorithm – how does that make a person feel?”

Using open-source software, Houston Claure – the study’s first author and postdoctoral researcher at Yale University – developed a two-player version of Tetris, in which players manipulate falling geometric blocks in order to stack them without leaving gaps before the blocks pile to the top of the screen. Claure’s version, Co-Tetris, allows two people (one at a time) to work together to complete each round.

An “allocator” – either human or AI, which was conveyed to the players – determines which player takes each turn. Jung and Claure devised their experiment so that players would have either 90% of the turns (the “more” condition), 10% (“less”) or 50% (“equal”).

The researchers found, predictably, that those who received fewer turns were acutely aware that their partner got significantly more. But they were surprised to find that feelings about it were largely the same regardless of whether a human or an AI was doing the allocating.

The effect of these decisions is what the researchers have termed “machine allocation behavior” – similar to the established phenomenon of “resource allocation behavior,” the observable behavior people exhibit based on allocation decisions. Jung said machine allocation behavior is “the concept that there is this unique behavior that results from a machine making a decision about how something gets allocated.”

The researchers also found that fairness didn’t automatically lead to better game play and performance. In fact, equal allocation of turns led, on average, to a worse score than unequal allocation.

“If a strong player receives most of the blocks,” Claure said, “the team is going to do better. And if one person gets 90%, eventually they’ll get better at it than if two average players split the blocks.”

The Social Consequences of Machine Allocation Behavior: Fairness, Interpersonal Perceptions and Performance,” published in Computers in Human Behavior.

For additional information, see this Cornell Chronicle story

Cornell University has dedicated television and audio studios available for media interviews.

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