We have 20 papers published as a result of our work on the Jamaican Symmetry Project. We began in 1996 with 285 rural Jamaican boys and girls with an average age of 8. 1 reason we chose rural Jamaica is that it is economically disadvantaged, and since we paid all families we recruited for the study, we got an extraordinarily high participation rate. We measured their symmetry from head to toe, including everything from ear length to foot length to their teeth, we X-rayed their hands. We measured them again for symmetry in 2006.
In 2010, we measured their sprinting speeds and – bingo! – knees stood out. There it was, it was incredible, knee symmetry alone strongly predicted sprinting speed. Not ankles, not feet, nor any other part of the body. If your knees were symmetrical when you were 8 years old, then you ran faster when you were 22 years old. That was true for males and females, and for 90m and 180m sprints alike.
This was such a striking finding that we raised the money to study elite sprinters in Jamaica. They are the best in the world. The same variable we isolated in rural Jamaicans held true for elite athletes. Knee symmetry predicted the best of the best runners. We looked at Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, the current top female sprinter in the world, and her knees are so symmetrical we can’t tell them apart.
Tag: science
Essentially significant p=0.10
100s of ways to say your paper wasn’t significant, but i’ll publish it anyway:
not significant in the narrow sense of the word (P=0.29)
Exoplanets visualization
a lot of creative license (i very much doubt we have that high res pictures from any exoplanets) but the sizes and temperatures should be correct.
Micropigs
“We had a bigger crowd than anyone. People were attached to them. Everyone wanted to hold them.” In the United States, people wanted a porcine lap pet, but were disappointed when animals touted as ‘teacup’ pigs weighing only 5 kilograms grew into 50-kilogram animals. Genetically-edited micropigs stay reliably small.
Gene Therapy
This is the first time human cells, engineered in this particular way, have been given back to a patient. The technology has got enormous potential to correct other conditions
2019-06-30: Germline Gene Therapy
means of correcting disease-causing nuclear and mitochondrial DNA mutations in gametes or preimplantation embryos have now been developed and are commonly referred to as germline gene therapy (GGT). We will discuss these novel strategies and provide a path forward for safe, high-efficiency GGT that may provide a promising new paradigm for preventing the passage of deleterious genes from parent to child.
2020-12-07: Cures
Both the Vertex/CRISPR and Bluebird techniques seem to work – and in fact, to work very well. There are now people walking around, many months after these treatments, who were severely ill but now appear to be cured. That’s not a word we get to use very often.
Neurons Have 1000s of Synapses
neurons need 1000s of synapses to learn the many temporal patterns in sensory stimuli and motor sequences
SETI lower bound
we show that we can set a firm lower bound on the probability that 1 or more additional technological species have evolved anywhere and at any time in the history of the observable Universe. We find that as long as the probability that a habitable zone planet develops a technological species is larger than ~$10^{-24}$, then humanity is not the only time technological intelligence has evolved.
Touchable holograms
Ultrahaptics had recently announced a working tractor beam that uses high-amplitude soundwaves to generate an acoustic hologram that can pick up and move small objects. The team is now designing different variations of this system. A bigger version with a different working principle that aims at levitating a soccer ball from 10 meters away; and a smaller version, targeted at manipulating particles inside the human body.
Coywolf evolution
The coywolf has evolved in the last ~100 years.
It is rare for a new animal species to emerge in front of scientists’ eyes. But this seems to be happening in eastern North America
2022-06-02: Evolution seems to be faster, perhaps in general, than expected.
The study is the first time the speed of evolution has been systematically evaluated on a large scale, rather than on an ad hoc basis. The team used studies of 19 populations of wild animals from around the world. These included superb fairy-wrens in Australia, spotted hyenas in Tanzania, song sparrows in Canada and red deer in Scotland.
“The method gives us a way to measure the potential speed of current evolution in response to natural selection across all traits in a population. This is something we have not been able to do with previous methods, so being able to see so much potential change came as a surprise to the team. Whether species are adapting faster than before, we don’t know, because we don’t have a baseline. We just know that the recent potential, the amount of ‘fuel’, has been higher than expected, but not necessarily higher than before. Evolution cannot be discounted as a process which allows species to persist in response to environmental change.”
Eukaryogenesis
Genetic analysis places Loki squarely within the single-celled archaea. But it possesses an intriguing collection of genes that look as though they would be more at home in eukaryotes, rather like modern words dotting a medieval manuscript. In fact, Loki’s genetic machinery suggests that the organism might be able to engulf other cells, the first step in the creation of mitochondria. Even if Loki doesn’t solve the mystery of our ancient origins, its discovery shows just how much biological diversity remains to be unearthed. Perhaps the next discovery will be a eukaryote with no history of possessing mitochondria. Or perhaps it will be an archaeon with signs of a symbiotic bacterium living within.
2020-11-25: Viral nucleus origin?
A trove of giant viruses was recently sequenced from the very same deep-sea sediments where Lokiarchaeota were discovered. He hopes someone will test whether any of these viruses can infect archaea and, if so, whether they build viral factories similar to those made by the NCLDVs that infect eukaryotes. Demonstrating that would be “game over.”
2022-11-12: Syntropic eukaryogenesis
Today, at the microbial mats in the Atacama Desert and other sites throughout the world, scientists are investigating what the earliest eukaryotic cells may have looked like, the partnerships they may have struck up with other organisms, and how their molecular machinery might have functioned and evolved. Already, the discovery of the Asgards has solidified certain aspects of eukaryogenesis while raising new questions about others. “I think this is the most exciting development in biology right now. So much is being discovered and so many predictions are being met. Eukaryogenesis is arguably one of the most important events in the history of life, after the origin of life itself.” Many scientists have rallied behind the idea that the first eukaryotes evolved out of a syntrophy between an archaeal host and bacteria that somehow found their way inside to become the organelles, such as nuclei and mitochondria, that distinguish eukaryotes. The details of these relationships remain murky, but mitochondria provide the most tantalizing clues to their origin story. “There’s DNA in mitochondria that we can somewhat clearly connect or trace back to alphaproteobacteria”. There are contrasting hypotheses as to how the alphaproteobacterium would have gotten inside an archaeal host, however. In the eukaryogenesis version of the chicken-and-egg conundrum, scientists go back and forth on whether mitochondria would have been necessary to power the energetically expensive process of phagocytosis, or whether phagocytosis would have had to arise first as the means of ingesting the symbiotic partner. When it comes to the nucleus, the picture is much less clear. Hypotheses of its origin run the gamut from a bacterial endosymbiont within an amoeboid host to the remnants of a giant virus.

2023-06-19: Lokiarchaeota aren’t the the origin of eukaryotes, but are closely related.
Eukaryotes are placed as a well-nested clade within Asgard archaea and as a sister lineage to Hodarchaeales, a newly proposed order within Heimdallarchaeia, consistent with the 2 domain tree of life scenario. Using sophisticated gene tree and species tree reconciliation approaches, we show that analogous to the evolution of eukaryotic genomes, genome evolution in Asgard archaea involved significantly more gene duplication and fewer gene loss events compared with other archaea. Finally, we infer that the last common ancestor of Asgard archaea was probably a thermophilic chemolithotroph and that the lineage from which eukaryotes evolved adapted to mesophilic conditions and acquired the genetic potential to support a heterotrophic lifestyle.
