Category Archives: Biotechnology

Enhancement: enhancing senses

Scientists have successfully given mice full color vision by inserting a human gene into mouse embryos, the WP reports.

Mice normally see in yellows, blues, and grays, and it was not known if the modified mice would be able to use the new gene, or if their brains would have to gradually adjust to the change over generations. Tests revealed that the gene was effective in the first generation.

This is important in the question of making this kind of macro change in creatures. If an animal — or person — is given a new feature or ability, such as tail, or infrared vision, will it be useless because their brains are designed to handle it? This study suggests more plasticity in the brain’s ability to adapt.

The article notes more immediate implications:

The work also points to the possibility of curing some of the millions of colorblind Americans — and even enhancing the vision of healthy people, allowing them to experience a richer palette than is possible with standard-issue eyes.

A scientist suggests that people might be given fourth color receptor — human have three — and thus be able to see a whole new world of color. One can iimagine ready adoption of vision enhancements by soldiers, including the ability to see colors invisible to normal people, and also to see in the dark without mechanical enhancements.

Review: “Children of Men”

FORECAST SUMMARY

Movie set in: 2027

Event / Likelihood
Universal sterility — low
Global flu pandemic — high


RATINGS
Overall rating: 6.8 (9th of 124 movies)

Futurism rating: 6
The movie is thoughtful but devotes most of its energy to the issues of today rather than the ramifications of its central premise.

Entertainment rating: 8
Tense and uncompromising, and serious about everything it depicts, Children of Men is a well-made movie.

Plausibility rating: 7
There are ways something like this could occur, and the effects might be much like those shown.


Approach to the future
Backdrop for storytelling that takes it cues from our own time.


TOPICS DEPICTED

Universal sterility
No children have been born since 2009, and an 18-year-old Argentine holds the title of “world’s youngest person.”


The cause is unknown–biotechnology is mentioned as a possibility–but the effects have been dire: without new generations to give life meaning, most societies have collapsed, and only Britain seems to have remained intact.


Such an event is unlikely but possible, and the possibility is rising as the reach of technologies grows. The three most likely routes are chemicals, biotechology, and nanotechnology.


We use thousands of chemicals, and introduce more every day, and the precise effects of each one of them are unknown. Some are suspected of being dangerous to health, including reproductive health, and have spread to every corner of the planet. In the developed world, the remains of pharmaceuticals are now extremely widespread in drinking water.


Biotechnology is spreading, with only partial regulation, and most humans now consume genetically engineered food products. While it seems unlikely that they would have drastic effects, the potential for accidents will grow if pharming–using agriculture to produce drugs–becomes widespread.


A newly emerging threat is nanotechnology. Nanotechnological materials are being produced on a mass scale and used in many consumer products, with very little understanding of their interaction with human health or the environment.


Some suggest that we should heed the fate of frogs: the are in decline around the planet, and we don’t know why. If we’ve done something to them, we might be doing it to ourselves as well.


Flu pandemic
A flu pandemic strikes in 2008, though its scale is not clear.


This is nearly inevitable.


A pandemic flu, such as avian flu, could strike at any time. Effects could be relatively mild, but some forecast death tolls of 80 million or even higher.


Such a calamity would shake the global system and could destabilize some fragilie societies.

Pleistocene Park: Neanderthals

A research project will attempt to reconstruct the genome of Neanderthal humans.

This is more plausible than the dinosaur creation of Jurassic Park, as Neanderthals lived more or less in the present, only 30,000 years ago.

The project will shed light on human evolution.

If successful, it will also create the possibility of recreating Neanderthals, if the problem of artificial or surrogate wombs for the beings could be solved.  (Science fiction suggested this outcome decades ago.)

Though ethically dubious, such an experiment could reveal much about what Neanderthals were like.

Enhanced humans: new senses

Wired reports on adding senses to the human repertoire.

In primitive experiments, implanted magnets gave people the ability to sense magnetic fields.  Significantly, the project was led by “body-modification artists.”  Body-mod enthusiasts are likely to lead — or at least volunteer for — more sophisticated efforts.

One can imagine attempts to acquire infrared vision or wireless signal perception.

This kind of enhancement is more likely to create “advanced” humans soon than deliberate or accidental genetic routes that have been depicted in movies.

[Via Social Technologies]