Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Backyard insect inspires large-scale invisibility particles production


How the humble leafhopper’s nanoengineering could enable invisibility cloaks and next-gen sensors




Penn State

Leafhopper-inspired synthetic brochomsome 

image: 

Natural brochosomes from a leafhopper, specifically Graphocephala sp., are shown in the left panels and synthetic brochosomes produced using a leafhopper-inspired nanomanufacturing platform are shown in the right panels. The synthetic structures closely replicate the complex geometry and omnidirectional antireflection of their natural counterparts, the researchers reported, enabling scalable bioinspired nanomaterials for optical coatings, pigments, camouflage and biomedical applications. 

view more 

Credit: Credit: Jinsol Choi and Tak-Sing Wong/Penn State





UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — When most people see a leafhopper in their backyard garden, they notice little more than a tiny green or striped insect flicking from leaf to leaf. But these insects are actually master engineers, capable of building some of the most complex natural nanostructures known, which makes them invisible to many of their predators. Their secret lies in brochosomes: tiny, hollow nanostructures that leafhoppers naturally produce and coat themselves with. A team at Penn State has now developed a high-speed platform capable of producing synthetic versions of brochosomes at a rate exceeding 100,000 per second, a technological achievement that could lead to next-generation camouflage, sensors and other advancements for humans.  

They published their work on Dec. 12 in ACS Nano.

“Each brochosome is smaller than a speck of pollen yet has astonishingly intricate architecture, looking like a perfectly patterned soccer ball covered with nanoscale pores,” said Tak-Sing Wong, professor of mechanical engineering and biomedical engineering.

Awarded little attention outside entomology circles, leafhopper brochosomes have fascinated scientists because of their complexity and optical behavior. The unique design of brochosomes serves a dual purpose. One is absorbing ultraviolet (UV) light, which reduces visibility to predators with UV vision, such as birds and reptiles, because the hole size is perfect for absorbing light at the UV frequency. They also scatter visible light, creating an anti-reflective shield against potential threats — it’s so effective that their wings appear nearly non-reflective, offering natural camouflage from predators. 

This insect trickery inspired Wong and his research team, who previously mimicked the intricate nanostructure of brochosomes to manufacture synthetic versions, but at a limited scale. Now, the team’s new platform can produce synthetic brochosomes at an estimated rate of 140,000 particles per second — a productivity leap that could finally make the synthetic version of these particles practical for real-world technologies, Wong said.  

Co-author Jinsol Choi, postdoctoral scholar in Wong’s lab group, explained that because many potential applications — from non-reflective surfaces for invisibility cloaks to high-surface-area catalysts and sensing materials — require massive quantities of precisely engineered nanoparticles, the ability to mass-produce these complex structures at high speed brings them much closer to commercial use. 

“Our group has been working on synthetic brochosomes for almost a decade,” said Wong, who is also part of the Materials Research Institute, co-authored the study outlining the work along with Choi. “The advance marks a significant step forward from our group’s earlier efforts, which first demonstrated the potential of brochosomes to manipulate light. The new study not only recreates their complex architecture but also shows how to manufacture them with unprecedented precision and scale. Until now, humans could not reproduce these structures at comparable scales or complexity. Their fully 3D geometry and nanoscale features pushed beyond what even our most advanced fabrication tools could reliably create.” 

The team began their latest achievement by looking closely at how leafhoppers themselves make brochosomes. Inside the insect’s Malpighian tubules, a type of internal plumbing system, droplet-like condensates develop surface ripples, where proteins and lipids in the system undergo self-assembly to form brochosome structures. 

“Nature is the master of nanomanufacturing,” Wong said. “Leafhoppers build brochosomes not by carving or sculpting them, but through molecular self-assembly and interfacial phenomena.” 

Choi led the effort to develop a synthetic version of this biological assembly line. The team used a tiny chip with microscopic channels that create identical droplets, each containing specially designed polymers made to either repel or attract water. The polymers are distributed both at the surface and within the droplet, so when the droplet evaporates, additional polymers migrate toward the surface. As this happens, these parts arrange themselves on the droplet’s surface, naturally creating the tiny, evenly spaced pores that give brochosomes their unique structure. 

“The chemistry of the polymer determines how the droplet surface bends,” Choi said. “The bending controls how water infiltrates, and the arrangement of those infiltrated droplets sets the size and shape of the pores.” 

By adjusting polymer composition, molecular length and droplet size, the researchers were able to tune the geometry of the final particles and recreate brochosomes similar to those produced by different leafhopper species. 

The synthetic particles also display the same optical behavior as natural brochosomes. When the team coated surfaces with their particles, they observed a strong reduction in reflected light across different wavelengths and angles. The performance is difficult to achieve with conventional antireflective coatings, which typically work only at specific angles or within narrow bands of light, according to Wong. 

“Many technologies rely on careful control of light,” Wong said. “Cameras and sensors that struggle with glare, solar panels that lose efficiency when light bounces away, or defense optics that need reliable antireflection to make themselves ‘invisible,’ these all could benefit from materials that reduce reflections so strongly.” 

Beyond optics, the particles’ hollow structure and high internal surface area suggest potential opportunities in energy and chemical research, the researchers said. Their porous shells may inspire future exploration in areas such as catalysis or energy-storage materials. In other fields, the particles’ unique shape and light-scattering behavior could open up new possibilities for pigments, camouflage coatings, or chemical and biological sensing technologies. 

“Synthetic brochosomes combine several unusual features; they’re hollow, packed with tiny pores, have a large surface area and function the same from any viewing angle,” Wong said. “Their potential goes well beyond reducing glare.” 

Medical applications may also be possible, Wong noted, explaining that, as the hollow, porous structure of the particles could inspire future research into drug delivery or imaging-related materials.  

“Overall, synthetic brochosomes are not just optical materials,” Choi said. “They’re a versatile new platform that could impact fields from clean energy and pigments to protective coatings and medical technologies.” 

What truly distinguishes the new platform is its speed, Choi said. Traditional methods of nanofabrication may produce only a few particles per second, often requiring multiple complex steps. This system, by contrast, leverages self-assembly to generate more than 100,000 fully formed particles every second. 

“Because the structure essentially builds itself from the bottom up, we achieve both nanoscale precision and extremely high production speed, mimicking how biology constructs nanoscale architectures,” Wong said. “This level of detail and throughput simply isn’t achievable using conventional approaches.” 

Next, the researchers plan to further scale up the microfluidic platform, increasing the production rate by 10 to 1,000 times, and investigate optical applications as pigments as well as potential military applications. 

A patent application for the technology has been filed. The U.S. Office of Naval Research supported this research. 

Cleveland researchers launch first major study to address ‘hidden performance killer’ in athletes


Case Western Reserve University
Mahmoud Ghannoum 

image: 

Mahmoud Ghannoum

view more 

Credit: Case Western Reserve University




CLEVELAND—Athletes are 2.5 times more likely than the general public to develop nail fungus, according to a study in the Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.  A condition that can disrupt training, change performance and end careers. However, until now, no thorough study has examined how nail fungus affects various sports.

Today, Case Western Reserve University and University Hospitals announced the launch of the first large-scale collaborative study focused on onychomycosis, a chronic fungal infection of the nails, among athletes.

While fans focus on visible injuries, nail fungus quietly undermines athletic performance in ways most people never consider.

“When athletes are dealing with pain, nail damage or recurring infections, it can alter gait, reduce training consistency and ultimately affect competitive outcomes,” said James Voos, chairman of Orthopedic Surgery and the Jack and Mary Herrick Distinguished Chair at University Hospitals. “This condition isn’t just about appearance; it’s about protecting athletes’ ability to perform at their best.”

The warm, moist environments created by intense training, restrictive footwear and shared facilities create perfect breeding grounds for fungal infections.

“There is very little data showing how common nail fungal infections are across different sports, despite the high risk among athletes,” said the study’s lead researcher Mahmoud Ghannoum, director of the Center for Medical Mycology at Case Western Reserve. “Our goal with this research is to better understand the epidemiology and general insights that will inform improved prevention, diagnosis and treatment strategies.”

The six-month study also includes UH Drusinsky Sports Medicine Institute—the healthcare partner of the Cleveland BalletCleveland Browns and Cleveland Monsters—and Ortho Dermatologics, a division of Bausch Health.

These partners will help identify and recruit 100 to 200 collegiate and professional athletes, allowing researchers to gather data across multiple sports. They will also raise awareness, facilitate survey distribution and assist with athlete screening and optional nail sampling for follow-up studies.

“This research represents a critical step toward keeping athletes healthy, competitive and at the top of their game,” Ghannoum said. “Every athlete deserves to compete without preventable conditions holding them back.”

The study begins this month, with initial results expected by June. Athletes will be surveyed through an electronic questionnaire that asks about nail appearance, discomfort during training or competition, impact on performance and previous treatments. The anonymous survey captures how toenail fungal infections affect daily activities, confidence and athletic function.

Future study phases will focus on advanced diagnostic tools and enhanced treatment protocols with applications extending beyond professional athletics. The research could particularly benefit military personnel and other groups facing similar risks from repetitive foot trauma, shared equipment and challenging physical environments

Case Western Reserve and the City of Cleveland are uniquely positioned for this research because it brings together a high-volume sports medicine environment, a leading medical mycology center and direct access to professional, collegiate and youth athletic organizations. This combination allows researchers to study onychomycosis in athletes at a scale and level of clinical detail that is rarely available elsewhere.

###

About Case Western Reserve University

As one of the fastest-growing research universities in the United States, Case Western Reserve University is a force in career-defining education and life-changing research. Across our campus, more than 12,000 students from around the world converge to seek knowledge, find solutions and accelerate their impact. They learn from and collaborate with faculty members renowned for expertise in medicine, engineering, science, law, management, dental medicine, nursing, social work, and the arts. And with our location in Cleveland, Ohio—a hub of cultural, business and healthcare activity—our students gain unparalleled access to academic, research, clinical and entrepreneurial opportunities that prepare them to join our network of more than 125,000 alumni worldwide. Visit case.edu to see why Case Western Reserve University is built for those driven to be a force in the world.

About University Hospitals / Cleveland, Ohio
Founded in 1866, University Hospitals serves the needs of patients through an integrated network of more than 20 hospitals (including five joint ventures), more than 50 health centers and outpatient facilities, and over 200 physician offices in 16 counties throughout northern Ohio. The system’s flagship quaternary care, academic medical center, University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center, is affiliated with Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, Northeast Ohio Medical University, Oxford University, Taiwan National University College of Medicine and the Technion Israel Institute of Technology. The main campus also includes the UH Rainbow Babies & Children's Hospital, ranked among the top children’s hospitals in the nation; UH MacDonald Women's Hospital, Ohio's only hospital for women; and UH Seidman Cancer Center, part of the NCI-designated Case Comprehensive Cancer Center. UH is home to some of the most prestigious clinical and research programs in the nation, with more than 3,000 active clinical trials and research studies underway. UH Cleveland Medical Center is perennially among the highest performers in national ranking surveys, including “America’s Best Hospitals” from U.S. News & World Report. UH is also home to 19 Clinical Care Delivery and Research Institutes. UH is one of the largest employers in Northeast Ohio with more than 30,000 employees. Follow UH on LinkedIn, Facebook and Twitter. For more information, visit UHhospitals.org.

 

New white paper analyzes U.S. vaccine safety monitoring system


Analysis shows ways to improve VAERS and other components



Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania

Post-approval vaccine safety monitoring timeline 

image: 

Multicomponent system for monitoring vaccine safety. Source: “The Complementary Components of the U.S. Vaccine Safety Monitoring System.” The Annenberg Public Policy Center. 2025.

view more 

Credit: Annenberg Public Policy Center





PHILADELPHIA – How the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) determine whether a vaccine has resulted in the death of a vaccine recipient became the focus of renewed scrutiny by the press and public last month. In November 2025, one of the FDA’s chief vaccine regulators, Vinay Prasad, reported in a memo that although the FDA “never publicly admitted it,” children in the United States died as a result of COVID-19 vaccination.

The public health community, press, and public will know more about how FDA researchers arrived at this conclusion when the sources and methods they used to tie COVID-19 vaccination to the deaths are revealed. What is known at this point is that the part of the vaccine safety system mentioned in the memo – the Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System or VAERS – is a repository for unconfirmed reports that relies on voluntary submissions from individuals, families, healthcare professionals and others, and serves as a potential early-warning system. Other resources within the vaccination monitoring system increase researchers' ability to determine whether the signal of a possible concern registered in VAERS or in one of the other sentinel entities reflects an actual concern.

To facilitate understanding how the U.S. monitors vaccine safety, biostatistician Professor Jeffrey S. Morris, Ph.D., the George S. Pepper Professor of Public Health and Preventative Medicine at the Perelman School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania and a distinguished research fellow of the Annenberg Public Policy Center (APPC), authored the new APPC white paper, The Complementary Components of the U.S. Vaccine Safety Monitoring System. In the white paper, Morris analyzes the multicomponent U.S. system, including the passive surveillance system VAERS, the active surveillance Vaccine Safety Datalink (VSD) system, the FDA’s Sentinel Initiative and PRISM monitoring program, and V-Safe, a system developed by the CDC during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Morris offers a series of suggested improvements from pre-licensure clinical trials to the active and passive surveillance systems to communication about the system. “Although the COVID-19 pandemic drew greater public attention to vaccine safety, and to parts of the monitoring system, there is still limited understanding of the system’s full architecture, how each component operates, and how they are intended to interact to form an integrated safety net,” Morris writes. With this white paper, “The aim is to improve public explanations of the system, spur discussion on how to enhance it, and help sustain a robust safety monitoring infrastructure that earns public confidence.”

The Complementary Components of the U.S. Vaccine Safety Monitoring System is the third in the APPC vaccination communication toolkit. The earlier papers are:

The Annenberg Public Policy Center was established in 1993 to educate the public and policy makers about communication’s role in advancing public understanding of political, science, and health issues at the local, state, and federal levels.

Source: The Complementary Components of the U.S. Vaccine Safety Monitoring System. The Annenberg Public Policy Center. 2025

Credit

Annenberg Public Policy Center

To connect across politics, try saying what you oppose



Changing even a few words can increase how open people feel toward opposing political arguments, study says




American Psychological Association





When engaging in a political discussion, talking about what you oppose instead of what you support may make others more open to your views, according to research published by the American Psychological Association.

“In an era of deepening political polarization, our research offers a counterintuitive insight into how we can better communicate across ideological lines: Talk about what you oppose, not what you support,” said lead author Rhia Catapano, PhD, of the University of Toronto.

In a series of experiments involving more than 10,000 participants, the researchers examined how the way people talk about their opinions—specifically, whether they say what they support or what they oppose—can influence how others respond. The research was published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

In one experiment, participants were randomly assigned either to communicate their views or receive someone else’s opinion on hot-button issues like abortion and gun control. All participants, regardless of their status as a sender or receiver of information, were told they were matched with another participant who did not share their views on the topic assigned (when in reality they weren’t matched with anyone).

Messages were then carefully framed for the senders to express either support or opposition to a particular stance. For example, in the case of abortion, a support-framed message might say, “I support allowing abortions” while an opposition-framed message might be, “I oppose abortion bans.” 

Senders were asked to rate how effective they thought the message would be at swaying their imaginary receiver. Receivers were asked to respond to messages from imaginary senders, indicating how closely the message aligned with their own values and whether they were willing to reconsider their own views.

Senders thought others would be more open to messages framed in terms of support. But surprisingly, those on the receiving end were more open to messages framed in terms of opposition. 

In another experiment, researchers recruited Reddit users and created a simulated Reddit experience in which participants could choose which post to read and engage in a productive conversation. Once again, participants were more likely to select opposition-framed messages than support-framed messages.  

What Catapano found most interesting was how small the change was between supportive and oppositional framing.

“All of the actual arguments were the same for both framings. In one case, people read a full three-paragraph essay of arguments. Just changing the wording of the first sentence from, ‘I support X’ to ‘I oppose Y’ – where Y represented the other side of the issue – was enough to impact receptiveness,” she said. “How receptive people are to messages is affected not only by the actual arguments being advanced by the opposition, but something as small as one word in how they preface their arguments.”

“This research shows that even subtle shifts in how we talk about our beliefs—support versus oppose—can make a meaningful difference in how others respond,” she said. “It’s a small change with potentially big implications for bridging divides.”

Article: “Talking About What We Support Versus Oppose Affects Others' Openness to Our Views,” by Rhia Catapano, PhD, University of Toronto, and Zakary Tormala, PhD, Stanford University. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, published online Dec. 15, 2025.

Contact: Rhia Catapano, PhD, can be reached via email at rhia.catapano@gmail.com.
 

The American Psychological Association, in Washington, D.C., is the largest scientific and professional organization representing psychology in the United States. APA’s membership includes 173,000 researchers, educators, clinicians, consultants and students. Through its divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian provincial associations, APA works to advance the creation, communication and application of psychological knowledge to benefit society and improve lives.