January • 3 January – Researchers report molecular mechanisms that appear to underlie some of the reported health benefits of periods of
intermittent fasting: changes to
gene expression or rhythmicity of ~80% of young male mouse genes in at least one tissue. study delivers various insights and theories about the growth, practices, and changes of
science overall from citation analysis of a large corpus of scientific papers. • 4 January –
Metascientists introduce the 'CD index' intended to characterize "how papers and patents change networks of
citations in
science and
technology" and report
that it has declined, which they interpret as "
slowing rates of disruption". They propose linking this to changes to three "use of previous knowledge"-indicators ("the diversity of work cited, mean number of self-citations and mean age of work cited") which they interpret as "contemporary
discovery and
invention" being informed by "a narrower scope of existing
knowledge". The overall number of papers has risen while the total of "highly disruptive" papers hasn't. The
1998 discovery of the
accelerating expansion of the universe has a CD index of 0. Their results also suggest scientists and inventors "may be struggling to keep up with the pace of knowledge expansion". • 5 January • Scientists report the discovery of an unknown thin
membrane meningeal layer in
brain anatomy, the
SLYM, that likely plays a role in
CSF functions and is both a protective barrier and host of immune cells. It appears to be substantially involved in major brain diseases and brain aging that monitor the brain for infection and
neuroinflammation. • Archaeologists report that notational signs
from ~37,000 years ago in caves, apparently conveying
calendaric meaning about the behaviour of animal species drawn next to them, are
the first known (proto-)
writing in history. • Progress in
climate change mitigation implementation research: • A
meta-analysis reports "required
technology-level
investment shifts for
climate-relevant infrastructure until 2035" within the
EU, which it finds to be "most drastic for
power plants,
electricity grids and
rail infrastructure", ~€87 billion above the planned
budgets and in need of
sustainable finance policies. • A study (12 Jan) suggests that applying the principle of
extended producer responsibility to
fossil fuels could deconflict
energy security and
climate policy at an affordable
cost, in particular authors suggest the responsibility could be used to establish the financing of
storage and
nature-based solutions. • A study (30 Jan) outlines challenges of
aviation decarbonization by 2050 whose identified factors mainly are future demand, continuous
efficiency improvements, new short-haul engines, higher
SAF (biofuel) production,
removal to compensate for non- forcing, and related policy-options. With constant air transport demand and aircraft efficiency, decarbonizing aviation would require nearly five times the 2019 worldwide
biofuel production, competing with other hard-to-decarbonize sectors and land-use (or
food security). in caves, apparently conveying
calendaric meaning about the behaviour of animal species drawn next to them, are
the first known (proto-)
writing in history. • 6 January • An international collaboration shows that hidden marine
heatwaves, associated with ocean
eddies that modulate undersea
internal waves, threaten coastal ecosystems by driving unexpected sub-surface heating and severe
coral bleaching and mortality across depths. • News outlets report on a brief
meta-analysis (21 Dec 2022) that confirms
gas stoves are a major risk factor for
asthma and updates effect-size estimates, finding around one in eight cases in the U.S. could be attributed to these. • 9 January • A study suggests
logged and structurally degraded (South Asian) tropical forests are
carbon sources for at least a decade – even when recovering – due to larger carbon losses
from soil organic matter and deadwood, indicating the tropical forest
carbon sink "may be much smaller than previously estimated". • Researchers demonstrate an open-brain surgery-free
brain implant,
Stentrode, that can record brain activity from a nearby blood vessel, showing it can be
used to operate a computer. • 10 January • A second potentially
Earth-like planet in the
TOI 700 system is reported using data from
NASA's
Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS). • The long-term impact of
biodiversity loss in
Madagascar is modelled, suggesting that recovery from extinctions could take as long as 23 million years. •
Cyclic sighing is found to be effective in
reducing anxiety, negative
mood and
stress, and more so than
mindfulness meditation. • 11 January • NASA scientists report the discovery of
LHS 475 b, an
Earth-like exoplanet – and the first
exoplanet observed by the
James Webb Space Telescope. • NASA publishes images of a
debris disk surrounding the red dwarf
AU Mic, taken by the James Webb Space Telescope, capturing details as close to the star as 5 astronomical units (~750 million km) – the equivalent of Jupiter's orbit in the Solar System. •
Teleportation of
energy is demonstrated for the first time by researchers using an
IBM quantum computer. • Cellular
bioengineers report the development of nonreplicating
bacterial 'cyborg cells' (similar to
artificial cells) using a novel approach, assembling a synthetic
hydrogel polymer network as an artificial
cytoskeleton inside the bacteria. The cells can resist stressors that would kill natural cells and e.g.
invade cancer cells or potentially act as
biosensors. • The White House and federal agencies in the U.S. (a major source region of scientific work globally) declare the Year of Open Science, listing several actions towards
open science. The
science policy "Framework for Federal Scientific Integrity Policy and Practice" issued by the
White House Office of Science and Technology Policy a day later is criticized as a "gag order" on scientists by
PEER in an
open letter (30 Jan). es in the
human genomes can become awakened from dormant states and contribute to
aging which can be blocked by
neutralizing antibodies. • 12 January • Progress in
life extension research: • A team led by
David Sinclair shows how
DNA breaks are a major driver of
epigenetic change, and how the loss of epigenetic information is a cause of
aging in mammals. Using a treatment based on
Yamanaka factors, they demonstrate an ability to drive aging in both the forward and reverse directions in mice. • In a
review, the authors of a heavily cited paper on the
hallmarks of aging update the set of proposed hallmarks after a decade (3 Jan). On the same day, a review with overlapping authors merge or link various hallmarks of cancer with those of aging. • A study reports the development of
deep learning software using anatomic magnetic resonance images to
estimate brain age with the highest accuracy for AI so far, including detecting early signs of Alzheimer's disease and varying
neuroanatomical patterns of neurological aging (3 Jan). • In a
preprint, another team of researchers reports the use of
reprogramming to modestly extend the lifespan in elderly mice. However, if it was also applicable to humans, risks reportedly may include the formation of cancer (5 Jan). • A study concludes that
retroviruses in the
human genomes (
endogenous) can become awakened from dormant states and contribute to aging which can be blocked by
neutralizing antibodies (6 Jan). • A study reports large
reductions of snow cover in the
Alps, emphasizing
climate change adaptation needs due to their impacts on the climate and socio-economic activities. • 13 January – A study of
ancient DNA supports or confirms that
recent human evolution to resist infection of
pathogens also increased
inflammatory disease risk in post-Neolithic Europeans
over the last 10,000 years, estimating nature, strength, and time of onset of selections. • 16 January • NASA announces preliminary considerations of several future
space telescope programs, including the
Great Observatory Technology Maturation Program (GOMAP),
Habitable Worlds Observatory and
New Great Observatories. • Researchers for the first time demonstrate
redirection of lightning with lasers. • 17 January • Promising results of therapeutic
candidates are reported:a third
phase 3-trialed RSV vaccine candidate, a
prebiotic fibre formula against
type 2 diabetes (3 Jan), a bifunctional therapeutic and vaccine against
brain cancer (4 Jan), a phase 2-trialed
probiotic against
S. aureus infection (13 Jan), the mice gene therapy-tested
LAV-BPIFB4 protein (or this gene in gene therapy) against
heart aging (13 Jan), mice-tested
in-use anakinra (or blockade of its target
IL-1β) against
haematopoietic blood aging (17 Jan), mice-tested phase 2-scheduled IkT-148009 against
Parkinson's disease (18 Jan),
C. elegans-tested in-use
rilmenidine as a
CRM against aging (20 Jan). • 18 January • News outlets report on an
investigation and a set of recent studies that indicate that carbon emission reductions from projects launched to earn
carbon-offset credits have been vastly overstated to the extent that ~90% of
rainforest offset credits of the
Verified Carbon Standard are called likely to be "phantom credits". • A
metagenomic analysis provides data and insights into microbial sharing between individuals, finding substantial strain sharing among cohabiting individuals, with median strain-sharing rates for the gut and oral
microbiomes being 12% (34% for mothers and their 0–3-years-old offspring) and 32% (38% for partners) in the used data. Time since cohabitation was the largest factor and bacterial strain sharing "recapitulated host population structures better than species-level profiles did". • 19 January • A study using
electronic health records shows 45 (with 22 of these being replicated with the UK Biobank)
viral exposures can significantly elevate risks of
neurodegenerative disease, including up to 15 years after infection. • Progress in healthy/
sustainable food system research: a
review outlines benefits (such as high protein production per acre), recent advancements and challenges of developing
algae as a large-scale food source, a study identifies "11 key measures" that can reduce
nitrogen chemicals pollution of air (NH3, NOx and N2O) and water from
croplands (4 Jan), a first review indicates vegan diets,
which are more sustainable, would not have adverse impacts on the health of both
pet dogs and cats (12 Jan), researchers outline large environmental benefits of using
insects for
animal feed (12 Jan), Chinese scientists report the
cloning of multiple "
supercows" with a substantial milk productivity increase (31 Jan). • Researchers from
Scripps Institution of Oceanography discovered the
Pyrolycus jaco. It was first detailed in a paper published in the journal
Zootaxa on January 19, 2023. • ~20 January • Progress in
AI software and applications: • News outlets report on a
preprint (26 Dec 2022) that describes the development of a
large language model software that can
answer medical
questions with a 67.6% accuracy on US Medical License Exam questions and nearly matched human clinician performance when answering open-ended medical questions, Med-PaLM. The AI makes use of comprehension-, recall of knowledge-, and medical
reasoning-algorithms but remains inferior to clinicians. As of 2023, humans often – if not most often –
conduct query-based web searches, read websites and/or conduct physical
doctor's visits to inquire health information, despite various difficulties, partly as they typically did not undergo any formal training in
media literacy,
digital literacy or
health literacy, as such is
not part of schools curricula in most education systems as of 2023. • A first successful autonomous long-duration operation (Dec 21 and/or Dec 22), including simulated
combat, of a modified
F-16 fighter jet,
X-62A, by two AI software is reported (4 Jan). • A
text-to-speech synthesizer,
VALL-E, that can be trained to mimic anybody's
voice with just three seconds of voice data and may produce the most natural-sounding results to date is reported in a preprint (5 Jan). • A use of world models for a wide range of domains that makes decisions using e.g. different 3D worlds and reward frequencies and outperforms previous approaches, DreamerV3, is reported as a step towards
general artificial intelligence in a preprint (10 Jan). • A
large language model, ProGen, that can
generate functional protein sequences with a predictable function, with the input including tags specifying protein properties, is reported (26 Jan). • A
deep-learning model, ZFDesign, for
zinc finger design for any genomic target for gene- and
epigenetic-editing is reported (26 Jan). • Software for
generating 3D dynamic scenes (
text-to-4D), Make-A-Video3D, is reported (26 Jan). • A study reports the development of
deep learning algorithms to identify
technosignature candidates, finding 8 potential alien signals not detected earlier (30 Jan). •
Chatbot and text-generating AI,
ChatGPT (released on 30 Nov 2022), a
large language model, becomes highly popular, with some considering the large public's attention as unwarranted hype as potential applications are limited, similar software such as
Cleverbot existed for many years, and the software is, on the fundamental level, not structured toward accuracy – e.g. providing seemingly credible but incorrect answers to queries and operating "without a contextual
understanding of the language" – but only toward essentially the authenticity of mimicked human language (~Jan). It was estimated that only two months after its launch, it had 100 million active users. Applications may include solving or supporting school writing assignments, malicious
social bots (e.g. for
misinformation, propaganda, and scams), and providing inspiration (e.g.
for artistic writing or in design or
ideation in general). • 23 January • The most affordable
carbon capture and conversion system to date, bringing the cost down to just $39 per metric ton, is revealed. The process takes
flue gas from power plants, uses a solvent to strip out the , then converts it to industrially-useful
methanol. • In two studies (20 & 23 Jan), researchers report that substitution of PET adhesive tapes could prevent nearly all
self-discharge in the widely used
lithium-ion batteries, extending
battery life. • A
geophysical study reports that the spin of the
Earth's inner core has stopped
spinning faster than the
planet's surface and likely is now rotating slower than it. This is not thought to have major effects and one cycle of the oscillation is about seven decades, coinciding with several other geophysical periodicities ("especially the length of day and magnetic field"). • 25 January • Engineers report the design of millimetre-sized robots able to rapidly shift between liquid and solid states. The devices could be used to fix electronics or remove objects from the body. • Researchers report the development of a viable
wearable continuous
heart ultrasound imager. • Progress in disease
screening or
diagnosis: researchers demonstrate the
use of ants as
biosensors to detect cancer via urine, in two separate studies (11 & 27 Jan) Alzheimer's disease is detected early via blood
biomarkers, a non-invasive alternative to difficult rarely-used catheter testing for
a common cause of high blood pressure is reported (16 Jan). • The US
NIH begins "requiring most of the 300,000 researchers and 2,500 institutions it funds annually to include a data-management plan in their grant applications — and to eventually make their data publicly available".
Advantages of such requirements may include making science more accessible, increasing public trust in science and increasing efficiency and
reproducibility. • 27 January • A study finds that the world has
enough rare earths and other raw materials to
switch from fossil fuels to
renewable energy. •
ESA reports the successful demonstration of a braking sail-based satellite deorbiter, Drag Augmentation Deorbiting System, which could be used by
space debris mitigation measures. • 30 January • Climate scientists predict, using
artificial intelligence, that
global warming will exceed 1.5 °C in the next decade (scenario
SSP2-4.5), and a nearly 70% chance of 2 °C between 2044 and 2065 (~2054) – a substantial probability of exceeding the 2 °C threshold – even if emissions rapidly decline (scenario
SSP1-2.6). • In two studies (4 & 30 Jan) separate teams of researchers report substantial improvements to
green hydrogen production methods, enabling higher efficiencies and durable use of untreated seawater. • 31 January – A news outlet reports on a study (9 Nov 2022) that concludes that a "visual flicker paradigm to
entrain individuals at their own brain rhythm (i.e. peak
alpha frequency)" results in faster ("at least three times faster than control groups") perceptual visual
learning, maintained the day following training.
February is found to have a ring system. • 1 February •
C/2022 E3 (ZTF), a green-coloured
comet from the
Oort cloud, is observed in the night sky making its closest approach to Earth. • An article examines
Leonardo da Vinci's experiments on
gravity in the
Codex Arundel and presents a solution using
Newtonian mechanics to confirm Leonardo's "
equivalence principle". • 3 February – Researchers
show how
pre-installed apps on Android smartphones in China are used for
mass surveillance in China. They show the apps have been granted dangerous privileges, transmit to many third-party domains privacy-sensitive information such as geolocation, user profile and social relationships, etc all "without consent or even notification". • 6 February • Astronomers announce the discovery of an additional 12
moons of Jupiter. • A previously unknown cell mechanism involved in
aging is discovered, which explains how cells 'remember' their identity when they divide – the cells' so-called
epigenetic memory. • A study integrates
policy as an aspect into an
integrated assessment model, showing that
Powering Past Coal Alliance-based (from
COP23)
coal phase-out is
highly unlikely (Λ as measured by Planck. Their explanation depends on black holes containing dark energy and, if validated with more observations and studies of Einstein's theory of relativity, would solve one of
the top key known questions of cosmology and would also avoid black hole
singularities. A
preprint (7 Feb) outlines, via draft theoretical modelling using an
EoS partly motivated by
loop quantum cosmology and
FLRW, how dark energy could also enable a
Big Bounce in the
ultimate future –
cyclical Big Bangs – by being nonlinear as in
evolving between a high energy effective
cosmological constant (ECC) and a low energy ECC "close to the observed dark energy density today", "sometimes growing the
cosmos, sometimes shrinking it down until
the conditions are right for a new Big Bang to occur". • A study strengthens the invalidation of the common
argument for high
medication costs that research and development (R&D) investments are reflected in and necessitate the treatment costs, finding that during recent decades, the largest
biopharmaceutical companies spent more on selling, general and administrative activities (
SG&A such as
marketing and
advertising) than on R&D, with the same largely also applying to
share buybacks. It also mentions past
public investments, suggests valuable
innovation could
get accelerated and concludes that high prices in specific as well as higher new medication price medians – both burdens to
consumers and
healthcare systems – are not justified. • 16 February • An effective new method for
carbon dioxide removal from the ocean is described. It could be implemented by ships that would process seawater as they travel, at offshore drilling platforms or aquaculture fish farms. • An
international norms and
arms control proposal for
artificial intelligence in the military (such as
LAWs and weapons decision-making), the
Political Declaration on Responsible Military Use of Artificial Intelligence and Autonomy, is published by the U.S. government. The
first international summit on military AI led to a joint unbinding statement by the U.S., China and other
nations, with some external calls for starting negotiations on an
internationally binding law or an
enforcement-mechanisms-driven law. • A study models the burden of the
global energy price crisis on
household spending caused by the
Russo-Ukrainian War, projecting economic mechanisms and fossil fuel dependency will potentially push an additional 78–141 million people into extreme
poverty, "offering a basis for targeted support measures". • A study shows how many
psychedelics promote
neural plasticity as
psychoplastogens: by getting inside
nerve cells and activating
5-HT2A receptors inside, rather than (only)
on the surface, of cells, which can e.g. lead to antidepressant-like effects. • 18 February – Researchers report the development of a
biocomposite 3D printing ink, BactoInk, containing
calcium carbonate-producing microorganisms which could be used for restoration,
artificial reefs and potentially bone-repair. • 19 February – A study reports that
rationing has been neglected as a policy option for
mitigating climate change, and, partly based on historical data and economic analysis, concludes that such
personal carbon allowances (PCAs) for few or many products could help states reduce emissions rapidly and
fairly. It suggests built-in
fair shares mechanisms would be a key part of two-currency PCA
economics and that
carbon taxes-only economics would not have effects that are as quick and equitable, with their fairness issues potentially including
disproportionate impacts on low-income populations (or intensified
economic inequality in general). There could be 'carbon cards' for all-encompassing CAs (e.g. using
life-cycle assessment for
supermarket items ) or per-capita rationing of (scientifically) selected goods such as
meat,
flights, and/or
fossil fuels to adapt to the
scarce (physically limited)
carbon budget available to
meet goals. PCAs could also help address other issues such as the
energy crisis and viably accelerate
sustainability transitions of domains ranging from
lifestyles to
investments but may require smaller initial steps than an entire-population-national rationing implementation. • 20 February – Progress in
sex-,
reproduction-, and
gender studies: a researcher reports "sexual loneliness" is increasing, is a neglected substantial
public health problem (of
men's health), and that the distribution of the
number of lifetime sex partners is as unequal as
the distribution of wealth among the most unequal countries and concentrating further – with the number of lifetime sex partners of the top 5% of American men rising substantially within a decade, accounting for more sex acts than the bottom 50% by 2012 – and that while "women can get attention from thousands of men online [with
dating apps]
in just a few hours, men are lucky if anyone is interested in them", which may be one aspect of
gender equality and other issues or topics. News reports on a study (23 Jan) that investigates a subset of the
well-being effects of dating app use. A study reviews data on
polygyny as a potential way for increasing fertility
in developed countries (6 Feb). A review shows that investigated
gender differences in basic skills are larger in more
gender-equal countries, the
gender-equality paradox (16 Feb). News reports on a study (19 Jan) that shows that "women are [now] 3 to 15 times more likely to be selected as members of the
AAAS and
NAS than men with
similar publication and citation records". ' (OI). • 21 February • Scientists report the findings of a "
dark microbiome" of
microorganisms in the
Atacama Desert in
Chile, a
Mars-like region on
Earth. •
Neuroethicists propose a framework that differentiates
consciousness into multiple (ten) dimensions, relevant to
consciousness studies and questions about
non-human consciousness, with nuanced cognitive capacity levels in each that via indicators could form comparable consciousness profiles. On 23 February, a study reports first brain recordings of freely moving
octopuses, which are among the
most intelligent animals of Earth, also enabling novel intelligence studies and finding both human-like and never-before-seen
brain waves. • A study shows
DNA methylation aging clocks could be useful indicators of health while social factors – such as health behaviors and poverty – are at least as good predictors and e.g. can better predict
cognitive functioning. Around February,
Bryan Johnson's Project Blueprint for one of the first comprehensive, possibly largely public,
(self-)experimentations of a comprehensive
combination therapy informed by the large scientific corpus on the topic
and organ measurements to
maximally reverse biological age and (epigenetic) aging markers achieves substantial
media attention, with such activities previously largely reserved to
biohackers without resources and means to evaluate effects. • 22 February •
Soft,
3D-printed heart replicas that can be personalised for individual patients are demonstrated by engineers for applications in device development, procedural planning, and
outcome prediction. • Concerns about and research of
avian influenza (bird flu)
H5N1 rise as increasing
spillovers to
and between mammals are reported, with the incoming
WHO chief scientist warning governments should invest in
H5N1 vaccines for all flu strains, and prepare for a potential outbreak
among humans (
pandemic preparedness), which, if there is a significant risk, could possibly also be
prevented. • Archaeologists report the
earliest evidence of
bow and arrow use
outside Africa –
~54,000 years ago in France, showing the earliest known
H. sapiens to migrate into
Neandertal territories used these technologies. • 23 February • The world's first
COVID-19 drug designed by
generative AI is approved for human use, with clinical trials expected to begin in China. The new drug, ISM3312, is developed by
Insilico Medicine. • The growing of
electrodes in the
living tissue of zebrafish (including
in the brain) and medicinal leeches is demonstrated, using an injectable gel and the animals' own
endogenous molecules to trigger the formation. The researchers claim their breakthrough enables "a new paradigm in
bioelectronics." • After
the EU's
ECHA published
a restriction policy proposal for all
PFAS on 7 February which would largely ban the use of these harmful 'forever chemicals',
scientific journalists of "The Forever Pollution Project" release the first comprehensive map of PFAS contamination for Europe. While the map only shows contamination of surface- and groundwater but not
bottled and
tap water, consumers could
protect their health using specific types of faucet
water filters. A map released on 22 February by
EWG integrates scientific data about prevalent PFAS contamination of wildlife. • 27 February • The channelling of
ions into defined pathways in
perovskite materials is shown to improve the stability and operational performance of
perovskite solar cells. A research team claims this could boost their efficiency from 25 to 40%. • A study links the common
artificial sweetener erythritol to substantially increased
major cardiovascular event risk, also elucidating causal mechanics via
in vivo data. One author explains that if "your blood level of erythritol was in the top 25% compared to the bottom 25%, there was about a two-fold higher risk for heart attack and stroke. It's on par with the strongest of cardiac risk factors, like diabetes". • 28 February • Scientists coalesce recent developments using human
brain organoids into a new field they term
organoid intelligence (OI), seeking to harness OI for computing – as a
novel type of AI – in an
ethically responsible way. Networks of such
miniature tissues could become functional using stimulus-response training or organoid-computer
interfaces – to potentially become "more powerful than silicon-based computing" for a range of tasks – and could also be used for research of various
pathophysiologies,
brain development,
human learning, memory and intelligence, and new therapeutic approaches against brain diseases. • Promising results of therapeutic
candidates are reported: a phase 3 trialed
pegylated interferon lambda against
COVID-19 (and other viruses) (9 Feb), a monkey-tested potential first
Marburg virus vaccine (10 Feb),
in human neurons and in mice tested in-use
lamotrigine for recovering
MYT1L-caused
autism (14 Feb),
phase 3 trial results (~94% efficacy against severe disease) for one of the three late-stage and near-FDA-approval
RSV vaccines in elderly (16 Feb), one of two phase 2 trialed RSV vaccines (16 Feb), a trialed
electrical stimulation of cervical spinal circuits against post-stroke
hemiparesis (20 Feb), a phase 3 trialed
MPC stem cell therapy against cardiac events in people with
HFrEF heart failure (27 Feb). • Progress in
screening or diagnosis: a news-reported possibly inexpensive high-throughput
static droplet microfluidic device
against cancer that isolates and
metabolomically analyzes
circulating tumor cells in blood (16 Dec 2022), retinal eye screening and monitoring biomarkers against
Alzheimer's disease (AD) (9 Feb),
autoantibody biomarkers in blood for inexpensively detecting AD (21 Feb).
March , an
artificial intelligence software able to generate human-like text. is presented. • • Biological
organoid intelligence , 'Brainoware', is demonstrated to solve computational tasks (
non-linear equations) in a
preprint, with implications
for bioethics and potential bottlenecks and limits of nonbio-AI. • A new record for the closest and oldest
ultracool dwarf binary pair is reported. The newly discovered stars, in a system named
LP 413-53AB, orbit each other in just 17 hours and are believed to be billions of years old. • An
ICIJ-led investigation 'Deforestation Inc.' shows or reaffirms how an unregulated
greenwashing industry overlooks
deforestation and
human rights (HR) violations when granting
environmental certifications that are used to claim compliance to
environmental standards, labor laws and HR. • A U.S.
DNI report concludes that the '
anomalous health incidents' (AHIs) termed '
Havana syndrome' are "very unlikely" to get induced by a foreign adversary. A previous report declassified on 28 March considered directed energy as in
directed energy weapons as a plausible cause. • Bioengineers show bodily system changes can induce
anxiety, in specific altered
heart rate by itself in risky contexts, after earlier studies also implicated
immune system elements. • An "adversarial
collaboration" study shows larger financial
incomes increase mental
wellbeing beyond a previously believed flattening threshold, except for a ceiled "
unhappy" minority. • A study about global spatiotemporal
PM2.5 fine particle
air pollution suggests that
in 2019, only "0.001% of the global population had an annual exposure to PM2.5 at concentrations lower than 5 μg/m3
WHO annual limit]". On 14 March, the annual
IQAir World Air Quality Report that uses a
sensor network suggests of the countries assessed, six countries (Australia, Estonia, Finland, Grenada, Iceland and New Zealand)
may have met the WHO guideline specific to this type of air pollution. Air pollution is one of the
largest causes (in terms of number of cases, not potential years of life lost
DALYs) of early deaths. • The largest study of
ancient Europeans' DNA (356
UP–
Neolithic hunter-gatherers) is published, with implications for the history of ancestry changes during the
last Ice Age. On 23 March, geneticists report on
immune function (
MHC) and pigmentation (
SLC24A5) as targets of
adaptation in Neolithic admixture, with farmers inheriting many immunity genes. • Science results of the first test of
asteroidal planetary defense,
DART , are published. • • A study reports
boreal fires, "typically accounting for 10% of global
fire carbon dioxide emissions, contributed 23% [...] in 2021". • After a study (27 Feb) indicated pathological changes to subcortical motor and cognitive hubs in (fatigued)
long COVID cases, a small comparative study shows
differences in volumes of
brainstem regions are similar for
ME/CFS and long COVID patients, being larger than in 10 healthy subjects. • – The highest-granularity study
on food GHGs reports that
global food consumption alone would lead to ("add nearly 1 °C to warming by 2100")
failed climate goals with constant patterns, with ~75% of the projected warming
due to ruminant meat, dairy and
rice, albeit consumption currently shifts towards higher emissions overall as economic development is expected to facilitate acquisitions of undifferentiated goods like beef. concerns. • • A new way of
capturing carbon, which transforms the gas into
bicarbonate of soda and stores it safely in seawater, is shown to be three times more efficient than existing methods. • A
bacterial hydrogenase enzyme, Huc, for
biohydrogen energy from the air is reported. • The first global precise global time series of ocean surface
plastic pollution is released. The study finds that "Today's global abundance is estimated at approximately 82–358 trillion plastic particles weighing 1.1–4.9 million tonnes." There was "no clear detectable trend until 1990, a fluctuating but stagnant trend from then until 2005, and a rapid increase until the present." It concludes "urgent international policy interventions" are needed. • – Researchers report the development of a fuel cell
implant powered by
blood glucose. It can also release
insulin at certain levels and have enough energy to allow smartphone implant control. • • The entire brain of a fruit fly larva is
mapped in complete detail for the first time, showing all 3,016 neurons and 548,000 synapses. • News outlets report on a study (27 Feb), alongside related reports, that concludes "Russia's role as a major player in the global
nuclear power sector has remained largely
below International sanctions during the Russian invasion of Ukraine|the [Russian invasion of Ukraine related] sanctions radar". On 7 March, news reports of a study (28 Feb) that uses
ICIJ data to investigate offshore networks of oligarchs, suggesting sanctioning of professional intermediary
wealth managers. of
the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report is published. • • A study affirms total intensity of
extreme weather events is strongly correlated
with global mean temperature during 2002–2021, not using mainly models but historical data. • An analysis concludes there is large potential (~9,400 TWh/yr) for
floating solar photovoltaics on reservoirs, at the upper range of
the prior 2020 study. • The first comprehensive assessment of '
bottom marine heat waves' is published. • An analysis concludes there is large potential for
mycoforestry incorporation for
carbon sequestration, ecosystem support, and
food production. • • Progress in
healthy sustainable food research: • Medical researchers report a 24% reduction of
heart disease risk in women on a
Mediterranean-type diet. • A study (1 Mar) reports average carbon footprints of average diets in a US
cohort.
Pescatarian diets were the healthiest, followed by the two other
plant-based diets. There may also be substantial variation within diets. • Vegan: ~0.69
-eq/1000 kcal (less than total of meat, poultry, seafood, eggs; less than equivalent of dairy) • Vegetarian: ~1.16 — less than of meat, poultry, and seafood • Pescatarian: ~1.66 — less than of meat and poultry, consumed seafood • Omnivore: ~2.23 — anything else • Paleo: ~2.62 — less than total grains and legumes, less than of dairy • Keto: ~2.91 — ≤50 g of net carbohydrates (total carbohydrates minus total fiber) • A study (7 Mar) using data
of 0.5 M participants strengthens the association between
ultra-processed foods and
cancer risks. • A
post-mortem study (8 Mar) finds
green leafy vegetable intake inversely correlates with
Alzheimer's disease pathology. • Scientists report (22 Mar)
fMRI results showing daily consumption of a high-fat/high-sugar
snack alters, similar to drug addiction and likely directly,
brain reward circuits, altering food preferences. • Progress relating to
AI research: • The
LLM GPT-4 is launched by
OpenAI. It and ChatGPT based on it continue to receive major global media attention. • Researchers suggest that growing influence of industry in AI research means that "public interest alternatives for important AI tools may become increasingly scarce" (2 Mar). • Google reveals
PaLM-E, an embodied
multimodal language model with 562 billion parameters (7 Mar). • Google releases
chatbot Bard due to effects of the ChatGPT release, with potential for
integration into its Web search and, like ChatGPT software, also as a
software development helper tool (21 Mar).
DuckDuckGo releases the DuckAssist feature integrated into its search engine that
summarizes information from Wikipedia to answer search queries that are questions (8 Mar). The experimental feature is shut down without explanation on 12 April. A broader alternative approach to the software's Q&A applications and use of text generation for assignments may be the improvement of
media literacy and
Web search skills in
education systems. • A method for editing
NeRF scenes, a novel media technique from 2020, with natural language
commands is demonstrated by Nvidia (22 Mar). • An
open letter "Pause Giant AI Experiments" by the
Future of Life Institute calls for "AI labs to immediately pause for at least 6 months the training of AI systems more powerful than GPT-4" due to "profound risks to society and humanity". It received substantial media attention and also contributed to speculations about perceived large LLM potential (22 Mar). At the time there is extensive media coverage of views that regard ChatGPT as a potential step towards
AGI or sentient machines, also extending to some academic works (e.g. a popular 22 Mar
preprint by a company). The coverage focused on such views may not represent the majority expert views and, for example, some researchers note that e.g. the ability to generate coherent text and imitations are not the same as understanding language. A set of techniques under development include self-refining code or text. • The first clear evidence of
active volcanism on Venus is presented, based on a reanalysis of old images from the
Magellan spacecraft. On 24 March, a second study finds that
Venus hosts far more volcanoes than previously mapped, creating a new catalog. • A news outlet reports on a two/multi-robot and beacons
mesh communication paradigm (11 Feb) for exploration by
robotic probes, drones, spacecraft,
disaster recovery rovers or
underwater robots. • • The structure of
olfactory receptor protein OR51E2 is found, the first elucidation of the structure of any human olfactory receptor to date. • A technique for
offspring from two male mice via skin cells (differentiated to
oocytes) and many (7 out of 630 successful)
embryo transfers is demonstrated. • – The first
Global Biolabs Report documents a rapid rise of high-risk pathogen labs around the world, many of which in urban areas or with particularly weak
biorisk management, with
BSL-4 labs doubling within a decade. Its results raise concerns about contemporary
pandemic prevention measures for which the report makes broad key recommendations to prevent reckless, accidental – for which there are track-records – or malicious releases. • – A study suggests in developed countries (Sweden) wealth (lottery winning)
increases marriage formation and
fertility (likely via
desirability)
for males, with the only discernible effect on female winners being increased short-run (but not long-run) divorce risk. • – A news outlet reports on a
systematic study of major issues in
popular currently available commercial
VPNs for
Internet privacy and security. On 3 March, researchers report on their paper about 'digital resignation', calling for regulations and
education reform. • • The final
synthesis of
the IPCC Sixth Assessment Report is published. It summarises the state of knowledge relating to
climate change with assessed levels of
confidence. Conclusions in the summary for contemporary policy-makers include that the extent to which both current and future
generations will be
impacted depends on choices now and in the near-term, with "high confidence" that
policies implemented by the end of 2020 are "projected to result in higher global
GHG emissions
in 2030 than emissions implied by
NDCs" and would
fail to meet
global climate goals. • The
CDC reports of rising concerns over the accelerating (95% increase in 2021) spread of
antimicrobial-resistant C. auris fungus in U.S. healthcare facilities. On 13 March, a study reports the first case of
C. purpureum causing disease in a human – a
mycologist, highlighting cross-
kingdom human pathogen potential. • A
consciousness- and psychedelics science study shows the most comprehensive view of the
acute brain action of
psychedelics during
trips with the first
EEG-
fMRI neuroimaging results about
DMT effects on the brain. • • Analysis of samples from the near-Earth asteroid
Ryugu reveals the presence of
uracil, one of the four nucleobases in
RNA needed for life. • A university reports on a study (23 Feb) that concludes that "the public has more-positive
attitudes towards [fossil fuel] subsidy
removal if
optimal use of the saved fiscal revenues is specified". • – Astronomers report that
ʻOumuamua, an
interstellar object discovered in 2017 passing through the
Solar System, was a
comet after all, "originating as a
planetesimal relic"; the observed acceleration was "
due to the release of entrapped molecular hydrogen that formed through energetic processing of an H2O-rich icy body". • • Progress in
health literacy and
communication: • A
review about
mitochondria and health is published, suggesting that "a
normalization of a lack of
physical activity in our
modern society has led to the perception that exercise is an 'intervention'" instead of part of a
modus vivendi engrained in human bodies and that lessons learned from
elite athlete research (healthy subjects) could be translated to the betterment of
populations' health. • On 2 March, a report projects more than half of the global population will be
obese within 12 years, assessing the situations
in 187 countries, including their
obesity prevention policies commitment. • On 21 March, a psychologist reports on a study (10 Feb) that hypothesizes
mental health awareness efforts (in current forms) or glamorised and romanticised mental disorders
on social media (e.g. quotes about depression on aesthetically appealing backgrounds shared widely on certain social media) may contribute to the recent rise in reported mental health problems – by intensifying and over-diagnosing of such – beyond e.g. increased reporting of previously under-recognised symptoms or mental health-related issues. • A study, as part of a series and alongside a
WHO fact sheet (21 Mar), robustifies the recent concept of "
commercial determinants of health" suggesting "
transnational corporations", facilitated by economic and
governance systems and a "shift towards market
fundamentalism", are responsible for escalating rates of
avoidable ill health,
planetary damage, and social and health inequity", with just four
industry sectors ("tobacco, ultra-processed food, fossil fuel, and alcohol") "already account[ing] for [or being involved in] at least
a third of global deaths". It concludes that while policy-related capacities "have been impoverished and disempowered or captured by commercial interests", "many
policy solutions [to some degree of adoptability] are available [but are] not being implemented". On 22 March, a news outlet reports on a paper (25 Jan) that contributes to an understanding of already-existing
law that suggests that
fossil fuel companies may be
chargeable with homicide due to
climate change effects and e.g. partly their deception of the public and proactive prevention of regulations. The paper is focused on corporate actors and does not address e.g.
politicians' and
policymakers'
responsibilities,
media people or issues,
economic pressures or incentives, and responsibilities for facilitations of solutions to these underlying economic conditions. • The first (9) multi-organ-based
human virome, of (31)
post-mortem healthy individuals, is published, including a dark virome from body sites previously considered to be
sterile. Positive and negative long-term consequences of such resident
DNA viruses, including
reactivation factors and issues, are largely unknown. • – A new viable
lithium-ion battery recycling method is reported. On 21 March, a university and one news outlet report on a study (21 Feb) suggesting incentives and regulations
are needed for producers to
design solar panels
that can be more easily recycled. • • A study of ~90,000 adults finds that increased
physical activity levels can reduce the mortality risks associated with short or long
sleep duration. • Astronomers identify an "ultramassive" black hole, one of the
largest ever discovered, and the first to be confirmed through
gravitational lensing, at the centre of the galaxy
Abell 1201 BCG. • News outlets report on a study (19 Feb) that indicates the
language connectome is
shaped by factors that include
native language characteristics. • A study reports a bacterial new
PVC injection system-based way of protein delivery, one of the biggest
unsolved problems of
gene editing. • • A study of the
deep ocean currents around Antarctica finds they could slow by 40% by 2050, with significant implications for the global climate. On 27 March, a study attempts to provide estimations of
the tipping point(s) of the Greenland ice sheet. It found that "critical ice volumes are crossed for cumulative emissions of 1,000 and 2,500 GtC, which would cause long-term sea level rise by 1.8 and 6.9 m respectively", suggesting a "tipping of the GIS within the range of the temperature limits of the Paris agreement". •
Botanists report
plants emit ultrasonic sounds under stress which can be interpreted, relevant to agriculture. • A news outlet reports on a
DVGW report that suggests gas
pipeline infrastructures (in
Germany) are suitable to be repurposed to transport
hydrogen, showing limited corrosion. • • Parts of
Twitter's
recommender algorithms become
open source, welcomed and requested by many albeit with several issues related to code exclusion and verifiability. Around that time, the free version of its
API, which was also used for research, is shut down – followed shortly thereafter by
Reddit's – proprietary verification checkmarks cause controversy, parts of its source code are
leaked, and applications of a "state-affiliated media" label – which purportedly uses "
publicly funded broadcasters" data which, like the label, does not
differentiate and list the shares of funding sources – cause controversy. • A university reports on a study (14 Jan) demonstrating functional
integration of a magnetically steered
microbot containing neurons, 'Mag-Neurobot', in a mouse "organotypic hippocampal slice" (
OHS) as
physical (semi-)artificial neurons. • : a low-cost
open source air pollution sensor (Flatburn) (1 Mar), a second biotech company commercializes sustainable
MS mycelium protein after
Quorn in 1983 (Meati Foods) (6 Mar), another
agrivoltaic greenhouse which outperforms a conventional glass-roof greenhouse (6 Mar), first kWh by a
TLP floating airborne wind turbine system (X30) possibly as part of a "new wave of startups" in this area (7 Mar),
WHO recommendations on two new types of
insecticide-treated nets for
Malaria prevention (14 Mar), a
biodegradable and
biorecyclable glass (17 Mar), a
COTS demining drone (~21 Mar),
nonalcoholic first powdered
beer (
Dryest Beer) (23 Mar), a
reforestation drone (AirSeed) (24 Mar), a phase-change materials embedded in wood-based
energy-saving building material (27 Mar),
cultivated meat from extinct
mammoths as demonstration of potential (28 Mar), media reports on a study (17 Jul 2022) demonstrating a
CNC radiative cooling film (29 Mar). • Promising results of
therapeutic candidates are reported: mice-tested C
MD (cysteine and methionine deprivation)
diet with
RSL3 against cancer (2 Mar), a phase 1 trialed
tuberculosis vaccine (6 Mar), trialed pulsed field ablation (
PFA) against
atrial fibrillation (6 Mar), mice-tested
FGF21 (also activated by
β-klotho) for alcohol intoxication recovery (7 Mar), a mice-tested
mRNA vaccine against potential antibiotic-resistant
plague which may also be useful for other antibacterial vaccines (8 Mar), a study (28 Feb) indicates
Naloxone access does not promote high-risk opioid use behaviors (9 Mar), rat-tested mitochondrial transplantation (
MTx) for cardiac arrest recovery (16 Mar), an
EEG BCI headgear (16 Mar), mice-tested
menin target against aging (16 Mar), a mice-tested novel-type
CRISPR gene editing system PESpRY against
RP vision loss (17 Mar), a mice-tested
wearable patch for accelerated cutaneous
chronic wound healing (24 Mar), phase 3 trialed
pembrolizumab addition against recurrent
endometrial cancer (27 Mar), a phase 3 trialed
percutaneous approach against
chronic limb threatening ischemia without
amputation (30 Mar), a mice-tested self-charging battery
ROS-emitting
implant against cancer (31 Mar). ==Deaths==