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Why this $10 spectrometer chip could bring real-time chemical sensing to wearables

Researchers from the University of Cambridge and GlitterinTech, a startup founded by the same research group, have unveiled a fundamentally new type of optical spectrometer that delivers laboratory-grade precision in a device small enough to be embedded in portable and wearable technologies. By rethinking how spectra are measured and processed, the team has demonstrated a spectrometer costing only around $10, operating at a centimeter scale, and capable of applications ranging from industrial quality control to real-time health care monitoring.

Optical spectrometers underpin countless technologies, from chemical analysis and manufacturing to environmental sensing and medicine. Yet shrinking these instruments has historically involved painful trade-offs: Miniaturized devices typically sacrifice bandwidth, resolution or accuracy, limiting them to rough identification rather than true metrological measurements. The newly reported convolutional spectrometer overcomes these barriers by introducing a conceptually elegant operating principle grounded in the convolution theorem, offering unprecedented performance metrics compared with existing dispersive, Fourier-transform and reconstructive spectrometers.

Satellites reveal cities’ ‘urban pulse,’ tracking neighborhood growth in near real time

For over a century, doctors have used electrocardiograms (EKGs) to render the invisible electrical activity of the human heart visible, using the pulse to diagnose disease before it becomes fatal. Now, scientists have invented a way to do the exact same thing for the places where most of humanity lives: cities.

In a recent study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers introduced the concept of the “Urban Pulse.” By using dense, high-frequency satellite imagery, the team successfully tracked the dynamic, real-time metabolic activity of urban environments, effectively measuring the heartbeat of a city.

Zhe Zhu, director of the Global Environmental Remote Sensing (GERS) Laboratory and associate professor of natural resources and the environment in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources (CAHNR), was the first author. He worked in close collaboration with senior author Karen C. Seto, the Frederick C. Hixon Professor of Geography and Urbanization Science at the Yale School of the Environment, alongside Michail Fragkias of Boise State University and a multi-institutional team of researchers.

Chemists unlock first total synthesis of rare plant alkaloid tied to anticancer activity

Plants are undeniably one of nature’s most promising sources of new medicines, with monoterpenoid indole alkaloids (MIAs) being a great example. Some intricate compounds are built from multiple-linked chemical units that form highly complex three-dimensional structures. Because of their size and shape, scientists believe such oligomeric MIAs may be able to interfere with specific protein–protein interactions inside cells—a biological target that conventional small-molecule drugs often struggle to reach.

This unusual capability could make MIAs uniquely suited to combat various diseases. Such is the case for bisleuconothine A, an MIA isolated from plant bark in 2010 that has shown strong activity against breast cancer and lung cancer.

Despite their therapeutic potential, these compounds are extremely difficult to produce synthetically in the laboratory. Their structures contain multiple interconnected rings and several precisely arranged stereocenters, meaning their atoms must be assembled in the correct three-dimensional orientation to preserve their biological activity. Because of this, drug development research involving oligomeric MIAs remains limited.

The Universe Is About to Wake Up

Ray Kurzweil’s Six Epochs of Intelligence maps the entire history of the universe as a story of accelerating information processing, from subatomic particles to a future merger of human and artificial intelligence.

Each epoch operates on a dramatically compressed timescale compared to the one before, driven by what Kurzweil calls the Law of Accelerating Returns.

We trace the journey from atoms forming after the Big Bang, through the emergence of DNA and the Cambrian Explosion, to the rise of brains, technology, and what Kurzweil predicts comes next.

By 2029, he believes AI will pass the strong Turing test, opening the door to brain-computer interfaces that link our neocortices directly to the cloud.
The final epoch envisions intelligence spreading throughout the cosmos, though critics like Michael Shermer argue this collides with the laws of physics.

Chapters.

00:00 — Intro.

Longevity Scientist: Aging Is A Disease. We Just Don’t Know How to Treat (yet)

Joe Betts-LaCroix and Retro Biosciences recently raised funding at a $1.8 billion valuation. In his first podcast appearance since the announcement, Joe shares his vision for extending healthy human lifespan and the breakthroughs driving the longevity industry forward.

Joe Betts-LaCroix explains why aging is becoming a legitimate scientific target. He shares how new discoveries are turning longevity from speculation into measurable biology.

The conversation explores how AI is accelerating research, while highlighting why biology remains one of the hardest problems to solve. Even with smarter models, real-world testing and clinical trials still take time.

Joe also discusses Alzheimer’s, partial cellular reprogramming, and the future of longevity medicine. He shares why exercise remains the best longevity tool available today and what the next decade could look like for human health.

Joe is the CEO of Retro Biosciences and a longtime entrepreneur focused on science and technology. His mission is to extend healthy human lifespan and accelerate breakthroughs in aging research.

This episode is brought to you by NADclinic, the go-to destination for longevity and human performance. Check them out at https://nadclinic.com.

Newly discovered view of brain blood flow during surgery could prevent debilitation, save lives

Tracking the brain’s blood flow during neurosurgery represents one of the most critical and challenging parts of the operation. A brief interruption can mean the difference between permanent damage and full recovery, but it’s difficult to track blood flow across the surgical field.

Now, researchers at The University of Texas at Austin have developed a new way to monitor blood flow with standard camera hardware. The method, called sinusoidal intensity modulation speckle imaging (SIMSI), uses the physics of dynamic light scattering to image blood flow noninvasively, across a wide field of view and without high-speed cameras. The paper is published in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Major surgery may accelerate memory loss in 1 in 7 older adults

Going through surgery can take a significant toll on a patient’s physical health and capabilities, especially if they are elderly. A recent study found that the effects extend far beyond mobility and pain management, as the operation may also lead to a significant loss of overall cognitive sharpness.

Researchers tracked 560 adults over 70 with no signs of dementia for six years after major surgeries such as hip replacements and abdominal procedures, watching how their memory and thinking skills changed over time. They found that nearly 15% of participants experienced a sharp decline in memory and thinking abilities shortly after surgery, with their condition continuing to deteriorate over time.

The three biggest warning signs that made a person more likely to fall into a severe decline were: being older, having lower mental test scores before the surgery, and developing postoperative delirium, which is a mental state where a person has episodes of confusion and disordered thinking that can develop over hours or days after the surgery.

Scientists reverse Alzheimer’s in mice with breakthrough nanotechnology

A new nanotechnology treatment reversed Alzheimer’s symptoms in mice by restoring the brain’s natural cleanup system. The specially engineered nanoparticles helped clear toxic amyloid proteins from the brain and repair the blood-brain barrier, which normally protects and regulates the brain’s environment. In one striking experiment, elderly mice treated with the therapy later behaved like healthy younger mice.

Nanostructures: a platform for brain repair and augmentation

One of the major challenges for nanotechnology deals with the diagnosis and treatment of BBB-related dysfunctions involving stroke, brain tumors and cancer. Tight junction (TJ) barriers protect the CNS. These barriers are located in three main locations inside CNS: the brain endothelium, the arachnoid epithelium, and the choroid plexus epithelium (Figure 3, Abbott et al., ). BBB consists of endothelial cells connected by close fitting junctions that separate the flowing blood from the brain extracellular fluid. Therefore, BBB controls the entrance of biomolecules into the brain and protects the brain from many common bacterial infections. However, the BBB presents a few limitations for nanomedicine approaches. For instance, due to the presence of BBB, the drug delivery to the brain area for tumor therapy or other neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s is a crucial challenge. The majority of diagnosed brain tumors are currently treated with surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy; nanoscience and technology could be a promising solution to this challenge. There are several comprehensive reviews on the interaction of BBB with nanomaterials that focus on various methods to transfer nanomaterials across BBB (Chen and Liu, ; Khawli and Prabhu, ; Krol et al., ).

Figure 4 (Chen and Liu, ) presents the main, well-recognized, transport pathways across BBB, which are commonly used for carrying solute molecules. Among all the pathways shown in Figure 4, the “g” route is the most suitable for drug delivery via liposomes or nanoparticles. A summary of the conventional methods used for BBB permeability assessment is given in Stam’s work (Stam, ).

Different approaches and routes possible for transport of drugs across the BBB as summarized in Table 1. Biocompatible nanomaterials such as nanoparticles, liposomes, and supramolecular aggregates are promising drug carriers since their size can be tuned to fit the BBB transport. In addition, their surfaces can be functionalized to facilitate their transport through the BBB. It should be mentioned that the cytotoxicity of NPs must be precisely monitored, using various well-recognized methodologies (Mahmoudi et al., , ; Mao et al., ), to ensure their biocompatibility. The surface functional groups enhance the BBB permeability by various mechanisms such as adsorptive-mediated transcytosis and receptor-mediated transcytosis. As an example, Lactoferrin is a receptor located on cerebral endothelial cells that facilitates the transport of NPs across BBB by receptor-mediated transcytosis (Qiao et al., ).

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