Virologist Ralph Baric says future pandemics will be stopped by vaccines
engineered to mount a broad defense against pathogens, drawing on genetic
information from large phylogenetic pools. He believes the controversy
stirred by recent experiments on the H5N1 influenza virus will not be an
isolated one. “Basically almost every microbial life form is going to be more…
Interest in a candidate is booming on Twitter, but the tweets are
overwhelmingly negative. An early lead in opinion polls is closing. What's
going on? David Rothschild is out to answer that question. Social-media
activity generates data that analysts tag for interest and sentiment. The
resulting numbers, Rothschild says, are meaningless without full context,
just more…
The damaging effects of airborne lead on children's brain development were
documented some four decades ago. But lead, banned in vehicle fuels since the
1970s, may not be the only component of traffic-related pollution that
threatens the healthy development of young brains. Investigators in an
environmental health center in New York City found that high prenatal more…
After leading the collaboration that searched for the Higgs boson at
Fermilab, Mark Kruse gave the Large Hadron Collider about a 50-50 chance of
finding the particle that’s believed to imbue the universe with mass. With
the July announcement of strong evidence of a new particle, Kruse is embarked
with colleagues on the work of determining more…
A prolific chemist and inventor, Joe DeSimone wondered whether the
manufacturing techniques that have given us cheap and ubiquitous electronics
might have a use in medicine. The answer is yes. DeSimone has invented a
roll-to-roll method for customized manufacturing of micro- and nanoparticles
for pharmaceutical use. DeSimone’s lab has used the method, called PRINT
(for more…
Photosynthesis is a complex chemical process refined over 2.4 billion years
of evolution. Tom Meyer thinks chemists now have the tools to harness the
sun’s energy with far simpler chemistry. “I don’t have 2.4 billion
years,” Meyer, says “but I’ve got wires and semiconductors.” Meyer
and colleagues at the UNC-based Energy Research Frontier Center in Solar more…
Evolution provides a powerful set of weapons for fighting scourges:
controlling the insects and rodents that carry disease and eat crops and
trees, for example, or pushing back invasive species. Biologists have tried
using “genetic drive”—the introduction of disruptive genes into pest
populations—with mixed success. Fred Gould works with farmers,
conservationists, public-health workers and others more…
The longest outstanding problem of all of physics is dark matter,
hypothesized by Fritz Zwicky in 1933 to be the missing mass accounting for
the orbital velocities of galaxies in clusters. A large body of evidence now
indicates that matter as we know it represents only 4% of what the universe
is made of, leaving 96% more…
With the arrival of the Curiosity rover, a new phase begins in the study of
Mars—one that includes a variety of geologists and climate scientists more
accustomed to working on our own blue planet. Linda Kah has spent her career
studying the earth’s deep past in locations as far-flung as the Canadian
Arctic and the deserts more…
Does the brain stay plastic into old age? Can “cognitive training” really
help healthy seniors remain independent, even into their 90s? Anne McLaughlin
and Maribeth Gandy are using gaming technology to explore these questions.
They aim to refine a body of work showing that sustained, challenging
cognitive training can help older people reverse mental declines. They more…
In the U.S., 5% of the electricity we produce is consumed by our water and
wastewater infrastructure. The high cost of the energy needed to treat
wastewater is one reason that 2 billion people in the world lack adequate
sanitation. What if you could use the bacteria in farm, industrial or
domestic effluents to create energy? more…
In the 1990s industrial-scale hog farming exploded across Eastern North
Carolina, a high-poverty and environmentally sensitive region, making the
state the second-largest pork producer in the country. The growth of large
hog operations has now been slowed, but the environmental effects persist.
For Steve Wing, the region provides a case study in the public-health
challenges more…
Today, soldiers routinely survive massive wounds that once would have been
fatal. But they’re often left with body parts that cannot function.
Elizabeth Loboa is determined to use tissue engineering to restore function
to limbs disabled by complex, gaping wounds. Her lab has been able to coax
adult fat-derived stem cells to create bone and cartilage; more…
After cosmologists account for ordinary matter and dark matter, what’s left
is... dark energy, which appears to make up 72% of the universe. Astronomer
Andy Howell, who collaborated with one of the winners of the 2011 Nobel Prize
in physics, studies thermonuclear supernovae as a source of measurements of
dark energy. Some of these are caused more…
Imagine being able to mix up a bit of soy milk and swallow it for protection
against a diarrheal disease, a food allergy or an autoimmune disease such as
multiple sclerosis. This is the goal of an unusual project headed by two
unlikely collaborators: a plant biologist named Ken Piller and an
immunologist named Ken Bost. more…
Miguel Nicolelis is a neuroscientist best known for his work in
neuroprosthetics, tapping signals from “neural ensembles” to control
robotic limbs that may be half a planet away. In experiments with monkeys, he
has shown that the brain can learn to think of an electronic appendage as its
own; his subjects watch a virtual robotic limb more…
For young women, uterine fibroids can be a source of disabling pain, anemia
and infertility. They affect an estimated 70 percent of U.S. women, and are
both more widespread and more severe among African-American women.
Hysterectomy with early menopause is often the only option doctors can offer.
Darlene Taylor and Phyllis Leppert are exploring a nanotechnology more…
By now, biologists know that you need to do much more than map genes to
proteins to decipher the evidence of evolution written in the genome. When
species adapt and diverge, much of the action actually take place in
non-coding, regulatory regions of chromosomes. Regulatory genes and coding
genes together form networks with complex feedbacks; mutations more…
Research projects such as the Framingham Heart Study and Nurses’ Health
Study, by tracking subjects over decades, have provided a wealth of
surprising insight into human health. Now, by following more than 1,000
babies born in a New Zealand town in 1972-73 through their lives, Terrie
Moffitt and her collaborators have begun to elucidate the links more…
The 2012 New Horizons in Science briefing was hosted by the Triangle Universities Center for Advanced Studies, Inc. Sessions were held at the new Raleigh Convention Center on Sunday and Monday, Oct. 28-29, in conjunction with the annual meeting and workshops of the National Association of Science Writers and two days of tours that together made up ScienceWriters2012. The local coordinating group was SCONC, the Science Communicators of North Carolina.