Thyroid function changes modestly with age but shows greater variability from age 65 years onward, and distinct patterns of thyroid function change are linked to an increased risk for mortality.
If your mind could be copied perfectly into a machine, would the uploaded version still be you?
Roman Yampolskiy argues that even a flawless digital upload would only create a copy rather than preserve the original self — raising deeper questions about personal identity, continuity, and whether virtual immortality truly preserves the person who entered the machine.
0:08 Why Uploading Creates a Copy Instead of You.
1:11 The Problem of Personal Identity.
2:27 Why Continuity Matters More Than Duplication.
4:12 Internal Observation and the Sense of Self.
5:11 Why Personal Identity Is Always Changing.
Roman V. Yampolskiy is a tenured Associate Professor of Computer Science at the University of Louisville’s Speed School of Engineering, where he founded and directs the Cyber Security Lab. Widely credited with coining the term \.
What counts as death? And who gets to decide?
In the summer of 2013, I traveled to Scottsdale, Arizona to visit the Alcor Life Extension Foundation, the world’s leading cryonics organization, founded in 1972. CEO Dr. Max More gave me a full tour of the facilities and walked me through the entire process: from the moment clinical death is declared, through controlled cooling and vitrification, to the cryo-tanks holding (at the time) 117 patients in long-term storage.
I also asked him, somewhat selfishly, whether my big bald head would fit comfortably in a neuro-patient container.
After the tour, Max sat down with me for a 25-minute conversation that covered:
Affordability and the real cost of membership Why minimizing cooling delays after clinical death is critical, and what long-distance members do about it Preserving pets, because of course people ask Chemical brain preservation as an alternative path The importance of protecting the neuron’s microtubules The case for an X Prize style competition to reduce tissue damage Where cryonics sits inside the broader transhumanist project.
My favorite line from Max, the one I still come back to:
A biotech company just doubled the lifespan of mice without changing their diet and without editing their genes.
Instead, they trained the immune system to hunt down and destroy the cells that make the body age. Then they flooded the body with fresh stem cells to rebuild what was lost.
This isn’t science fiction. It’s longevity science happening right now.
Search the web, and you’ll find any number of biohacking techniques for promoting healthy lifespan, from taking cold baths to breathing pressurized oxygen to sleeping under a red light.
There’s a simpler path to healthy aging, and science from Tufts and elsewhere has shown that it really works: Just eat a little bit less. Cutting down on calorie intake by as little as 10–15% can lower the risk of developing age-related illnesses by improving cardiovascular health, lowering blood pressure, and improving glucose tolerance, among many other benefits. For some people, reaping these benefits can be as easy as giving up one large latte per day.
The work is published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.
During wakefulness, neuromodulators operate largely independently to support behavior and cognition. By contrast, sleep reorganizes their activity into a coordinated brain rhythm. During sleep, the major neuromodulators—norepinephrine, acetylcholine, serotonin, and dopamine—exhibit synchronized fluctuations with a periodicity of ~50 seconds. These oscillations appear as recurrent bursts of fast (10 to 30 hertz) electroencephalography activity and are phase-coupled to cerebrospinal fluid flow. Neuromodulators are vasoactive agents and drive slow vasomotion, which provide the mechanical force that supports glymphatic clearance of metabolic waste. Disruption of neuromodulator signaling, as seen in psychiatric disorders, cardiovascular disease, aging, or with commonly prescribed drugs, impairs clearance of neurotoxic proteins, including amyloid-β and tau.
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Scheidemantel et al. address the complexity of Alzheimer’s disease by integrating comprehensive multi-omics data from over 1,300 aged individuals, revealing coordinated molecular mechanisms across brain systems. The findings provide crucial insights into age-related traits and disease pathways, paving the way for potential therapeutic strategies.
Aubrey de Grey believes aging isn’t inevitable — it’s a solvable engineering problem. In this conversation, we explore why society treats aging as untouchable, how “longevity escape velocity” could allow us to live indefinitely, and why reversing damage—not slowing it—is the future of medicine. He breaks down how our medical system profits from sickness, and how progress is slowed by fear and outdated norms. The end of aging as we know it is coming and it’s happening faster than you think. #preventativehealth #preventativecare #aging #health #medicine.
Connect With Me: / tim.doy1e.
Timestamps:
00:00 How We Understand Aging.
06:01 How Aubrey Found His Work.
10:42 Longevity Escape Velocity.
12:45 Not Being Controlled.
15:11 Investor-Humanitarian Structure.
16:51 Balancing Work With Publicity.
17:26 Aubrey’s Current Work.
27:36 Getting Pushback & The Medical System.
33:11 Shifting To Preventative Care.
36:14 What Has & Hasn’t Changed.
41:52 Consciousness & Aging.
46:00 How To Popularize Ideas.
48:10 The Future Of Aubrey’s Work.
50:58 Connect With Aubrey de Grey.
Zalesky and colleagues discuss the evolution of aging clocks into organ-specific aging readouts that harness omics and imaging data. They review the insights that this additional resolution provides on differential aging across organs within interconnected systems, as well as the methods, priorities and future directions.