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  • Pandemics in perspective

    National Archives
    Police officers in Seattle wear face masks during the flu epidemic of 1918.

    How bad can a flu epidemic get? The raw numbers indicate that over the past 90 years, far more people have been killed by relatively run-of-the-mill seasonal flu viruses than by the exotic bugs that have grabbed most of the headlines - such as bird flu or the current strain of swine flu.

    But to get a more useful perspective on a flu epidemic's potential impact, you have to go back to the mother of all pandemics: the "Spanish flu" of 1918.

    Newly published research supports the view that the H1N1 virus behind the current outbreak is a distant cousin of the virus that sparked the infamous 1918 epidemic. But all the signs so far indicate that the 1918 flu was much more lethal. In fact, some researchers report that today's headline-making microbe lacks some of the molecular machinery that made past versions of the virus deadlier.

    Citing such reports, the Los Angeles Times noted today that the current outbreak "may not even do as much damage as the run-of-the-mill flu outbreaks that occur each winter without much fanfare."

    So far, the raw numbers bear that out. Typically, about 36,000 Americans die each year due to flu complications, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The worldwide toll is estimated at 250,000 to 500,000 annually. If you go back to the most recent officially recognized flu pandemic, the 1968-69 Hong Kong flu, the death toll is about the same: 34,000 in the U.S., 500,000 globally. The figures for the 1957-58 Asian flu pandemic are 70,000 U.S. deaths and 2 million deaths worldwide.

    Even those figures pale in comparison with the 1918-19 flu pandemic: At least 550,000 people died in the United States alone. The worldwide death toll was estimated at 20 million to 40 million, or perhaps even as many as 100 million by some accounts. The flu killed more people than World War I (which may have contributed to its spread).

    Compared to past pandemics, the current swine-flu outbreak is hardly a blip on the chart. (Speaking of charts, you can click onto a couple that show you mortality rates since 1900 and since 1950.) Last year, MIT researcher Peter Doshi pointed out that not all pandemics turn out to be as serious as the annual seasonal flu. And in its swine-flu FAQ, the Canadian government makes a similar point.

    So does that mean the current outbreak is just a piddling pandemic? Not necessarily.

    For one thing, it's far too early to assess how this outbreak will end up. For another thing, the pattern of the deaths so far is distressing. Both those caveats draw on the lessons learned from the 1918 flu.

    The age factor
    "The big difference between seasonal flu and pandemic flu is that when you move to pandemic flu, you get a pattern that the older people are not affected," said Lone Simonsen, an epidemiologist at George Washington University who is also the founder and president of SAGE Analytica. The age distribution curve for a typical seasonal flu looks like a "U," while the distribution pattern for the 1918 flu was more of a "W," as seen on this chart.

    Experts worry that the distribution pattern for the current outbreak looks similar. Every death from the flu is a tragedy, but it's particularly tragic when a significant number of the fatalities come in the 20-to-50 age bracket rather than the over-85 bracket.

    "That's a lot of life years lost," Simonsen said. "It has another flavor to it."

    Simonsen and her colleagues are still trying to figure out why the 1918 flu hit people in the prime of their lives so hard. One hypothesis is that the virus could somehow push a healthy immune system into such a violent response that the body suffered irreparable damage. Another idea is that the older people had acquired immunity from a previous flu epidemic, while younger people missed out. Simonsen said a third possibility is that some sort of bacterial co-infection made the flu worse. Or it could have been a combination of factors.

    Wave of the future
    Even if the current outbreak turns out to be relatively mild, that's not necessarily the end of the story. "When you look at the past pandemics, you observe that they often come in waves," Simonsen said.

    She said a review of the records from 1918 show that the year's first flu flare-up actually came in the spring and summer, in the form of a less lethal but highly transmissible infection. That appears to have been the precursor for the deadlier waves of influenza that swept across the world that fall.

    If the current outbreak turns out to follow a similar pattern, that would be "good and bad news," Simonsen said. It's bad news because a worse outbreak could conceivably follow. But it's good news, she said, because we'd have "more time to defend ourselves," using all the defenses that have been developed since 1918.

    Patrolling the pigs
    In recent years, the biggest concern on the minds of epidemiologists has been avian flu, not swine flu - but the current outbreak is a sign that experts will have to pay attention to the pigs as well, said Juergen Richt, a veterinary researcher at Kansas State University.

    He and his colleagues infected pigs with the 1918 "Spanish flu" virus, as well as a virus from 1930 that is thought to be a descendant of the 1918 strain, under Biosafety Level 4 lab conditions. The experiment, described in the May issue of the Journal of Virology, showed that the swine suffered mild respiratory disease but recovered from the infection.

    "A virus which is lethal to monkeys, ferrets and mice, and was lethal to people [in 1918], is not lethal to pigs," Richt told me. That suggests that swine could have played a role in maintaining and spreading the 1918 flu, he said.

    It also suggests that swine populations might have to be monitored more closely for evidence of potentially dangerous disease strains, perhaps through diagnostic screening. It's not enough to wait until pigs drop dead, he said.

    Richt said swine-flu strains appear to be undergoing mutations more rapidly today than they did a decade ago. "Something happened 10 years ago, where the whole evolution of swine flu changed and became very dynamic," he said. Why? Richt said the reason is unknown, although it may have something to do with a genetic change enhancing the virus' ability to jump between pigs, birds and people. (You're free to offer your own speculation in the comment section below).

    Richt is a big advocate for research that bridges the gap between human medicine and veterinary medicine, and he told me the current flap over flu viruses just underscores the point.

    "It's not only bird flu and swine flu," he said. "There are lots of zoonotic diseases - tuberculosis, Rift Valley fever, Lyme disease. ... We have to realize that only together can we solve these problems."

    Earlier postings on the swine flu epidemic:

    Show more
  • Visualizing the virus

    NIAMS
    Surface proteins stick out in this
    3-D image of a flu virus.


    How can one bug combine genetic material from pigs, birds and humans to become so dangerous? Think of flu viruses as promiscuous, species-jumping, disguise-wearing contestants in a reality-TV show titled "Evolution Gone Wild." Virus-fighters are scrambling to keep pace, using analytical techniques that work more quickly than ever.

    This show is no comedy, as illustrated by today's news about the first U.S. death in the swine-flu epidemic and the escalation of the World Health Organization's pandemic alert status. But knowing how the virus game is played could help you understand issues ranging from the difference between vaccines and antivirals to the reasons why you can't get the flu from a pork chop.

    Viruses are outfitted to pry their way into your cells, hijack the protein-making machinery inside, then break their way out and proliferate. The key package is the set of RNA molecules lurking inside the virus' shell. Those single-helix RNA molecules contain the instructions for assembling a cell's proteins into more viruses.

    Flu viruses are so hard to get a handle on because they can swap bits of RNA inside the cell, creating a fresh genetic patchwork that emerges as a new virus strain. The fact that the flu virus depends on RNA rather than DNA increases the likelihood of mutation, because the RNA doesn't even try to correct the errors that crop up during replication. It just lets the evolutionary chips fall where they may.

    Your immune system can create antibodies that lock onto a virus and keep it from breaking into your cells. But the antibodies won't immediately come to the rescue if the virus has disguised itself through genetic recombination.

    That's where vaccines enter the picture: They can sensitize your immune system to recognize the virus in a new disguise. The first step in making a vaccine is to see through that disguise. And fortunately, the quickening pace of genetic analysis is streamlining that part of the process, making it possible to track down a flu virus' identity in hours rather than days or weeks.

    The rapid response paid off when it came to identifying the virus behind this month's flu outbreak. "The first specimens took roughly six hours from when the box was opened," David Daigle, a spokesman for the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told me via e-mail today.

    The CDC's lab had its sequencers primed and ready to go in advance - first to identify the virus as a swine-flu strain, then to get a complete genetic sequence. "Looking at that genetic sequencing data, you can draw conclusions about the origins of this virus," said John Treanor, a virus expert at the University of Rochester.

    The virus was classified as an H1N1 type - the same general type that was seen during the 1976 swine-flu outbreak, but with some novel twists. CDC official Nancy Cox said the virus' RNA mixed together bits from North American avian flu and swine flu, at least one bit from human flu, and at least two bits from Asian and European swine flu.

    How did all those bits get mixed together? Pigs are regarded as particularly good "mixing vessels" for RNA swaps, because they can contract flu viruses from humans and birds as well as other swine. All those bits of RNA can recombine within the pigs' cells, resulting in lots of possible disguises for the resulting viruses. One of those genetic disguises was so successful that the virus made another species-crossing jump from pigs to humans.

    Now that the virus' genetic sequence has been decoded, it can be used as a fingerprint to track its spread. "For the first time in history, we can track the evolution of a pandemic in real time," WHO Director-General Margaret Chan said at a news conference today.

    Just as a refresher, here are some other scientific flu facts:

    • Flu infections are a fact of life for pigs, but swine flu is rarely passed along directly to humans: It takes just the right genetic twist for the virus to make the jump between species. Swine-flu virus is not passed through food. "Eating properly handled and cooked pork and pork products is safe. Cooking pork to an internal temperature of 160 degrees F kills the swine flu virus as it does other bacteria and viruses," the CDC says in its swine-flu briefing. The concern about swine-to-human transmission has more to do with being in contact with live pigs.
    • Vaccines train your immune system to block the molecular machinery that viruses use to break their way into your cells (a.k.a. hemagglutinin, the "H" in H1N1). Those vaccines are not designed to stop an infection once it's started. In contrast, antiviral drugs target the machinery that viruses use to break out of your cells (a.k.a. neuraminidase, the "N" in H1N1). Those drugs stop the virus' life cycle in its tracks. The current manifestation of swine flu can be stopped by the antivirals Tamiflu and Relenza (but not by amantadine or rimantadine).
    • As a flu virus spreads, the chances of further mutation become greater, experts say. And that means there's a chance that a deadlier virus could emerge. That's why it's particularly important to limit the spread of this latest swine-flu virus. But viruses aren't all bad: In fact, evolutionary biologists have seen signs that viruses can give some species new genetic capabilities - and viruses have been used intentionally to help humans.

    Finally, here's a list of resources that delve into the science of flu viruses - including some great visualizations showing how the viruses do their thing:

    Update for 8:15 p.m. ET: The Loom's Carl Zimmer links to a quick and easy survey on attitudes toward the current swine-flu outbreak. Be a part of the scientific process and take the survey.

  • Flu forecasts come true

    KING-TV
    Click for video: A global map at Veratect's headquarters highlights infectious-
    disease events. Click on the image to watch a video report from Seattle's KING-TV.

    This week's alarms over swine flu may have come as a shock to most people, but not to experts in threat prediction: One company said it began warning public-health agencies about the potential for a pandemic weeks ago. Today, the spread of swine flu is being tracked in real time on interactive maps - and prediction experts have set up a market to forecast the flu outbreak's future.

    Keeping track of the outbreak is all in a day's work for Veratect, a company based in Kirkland, Wash., that monitors health threats as well as terrorist attacks and natural disasters. "Unfortunately for all of us, there's a lot of that going on every day," Bob Hart, the company's president and chief executive officer, told me today.

    "The world map is completely swamped with yellow and red alerts," he said.

    Veratect started watching the reports from Mexico on March 30, and by mid-April the upswing in flu cases was serious enough to trigger two waves of e-mail alerts, sent out from Veratect to the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and other public-health agencies. Nevada's state epidemiologist, Ihsan Azzam, said in a Veratect statement that those were "the very first alerts I received regarding this swine-flu epidemic."

    On April 20, Veratect took the extra step of calling up the CDC's Emergency Operations Center, Hart said. By that time, CDC officials had picked up on reports of unusual swine-flu cases in California and Texas, but Veratect's data pinpointed Mexico as the emerging epidemic's epicenter. (This Veratect timeline from the Biosurveillance blog provides a blow-by-blow account.)

    "We're sort of like that fire watchtower," Hart explained in an interview with Seattle's KING-TV. "You're looking for a few wisps of smoke so you can send people in when it's just a smoldering fire as opposed to waiting until it's got half the Cascades."

    Now the swine-flu outbreak ranks as one of the biggest flare-ups of infectious disease in recent years, and it's being tracked using Google Maps and Twitter. Meanwhile, Veratect is continuing to monitor the yellow and red dots on its computerized world map. "This is like a weather system for infectious-disease events throughout the world," the company's chief technical officer, James Wilson, told KING-TV.

    Wilson said the swine-flu virus' rapid spread shows that "we need a global early-warning system - this could be unpredictable in its effects."

    Unpredictable? Just try telling that to Forrest Nelson, an economics professor at the University of Iowa and one of the principal investigators for the Iowa Electronic Health Markets. The IEHM, which was spun off from the successful political prediction markets operated by the University of Iowa, started up a swine-flu prediction market just today.

    "There's so much uncertainty and confusion out there, we decided if we could contribute something, this is the time to do it," Nelson told me.

    The IEHM has been experimenting with flu prediction markets for five years: Public-health officials, hospital workers and others in the health-care profession can become "traders" in a market aimed at rewarding those who accurately forecast how flu outbreaks spread.

    Nelson said the markets have been "pretty good at predicting flu activity about three or four weeks out." To be more precise, the consensus four-week prediction matched the actual activity level (measured on a five-level scale) 80 percent of the time, he said.

    Unlike the IEM's political markets, the IEHM's swine-flu market will not be open to the general public (although we can watch), and it won't use real money.

    Here's how the system works: Health-care experts are given 100 "swine dollars" to invest on a series of propositions. If they correctly predict the outcome, they win $1 per share. If they're wrong, they lose their investment. Shares can be traded at different prices as the market rolls along, until the trading deadline comes due and the accounts are settled. The price of the day should reflect the perceived probability for the investment outcome.

    Five propositions are currently listed on the swine-flu stock exchange:

    • How long will the flu outbreak last in the U.S.? As of 9 p.m. ET today, the priciest investment (and hence the highest probability) is that it will last beyond July 31 (73 cents, or 73 percent).
    • How many U.S. states will have at least one confirmed swine-flu case by May 31? The favored choice, at 39 cents a share, is 31 to 40 states.
    • What will be the level of the swine-flu mortality rate in the U.S. by July 31? The favored choice, at 48 cents a share, is 1 to 2.5 percent.
    • How many countries will have swine-flu cases by July 31, as confirmed by the World Health Organization? The favored choice, at 68 cents a share, is 26 to 50 countries.
    • How many U.S. swine-flu cases will be confirmed by the end of May 31? The favored choice, at 53 cents a share, is more than 1,100 cases.

    That all sounds pretty serious, but the important thing is what happens during the weeks of trading ahead.

    Because the market just opened today, trading has been rather sparse so far. Nelson expects the activity will heat up as more health-care professionals join in. Earlier experiments with flu prediction markets have attracted a peak of 200 traders, with about 60 of those currently active, Nelson said. That may not sound like a lot, but even a handful of traders can produce a good prediction if they are "strategically located" in the health-care hierarchy, he said.

    "With the swine-flu markets, so much more is uncertain, so we expect it's going to take more traders to come up with reasonable and reliable predictions," Nelson said.

    When the contracts expire, the payoff will come only in the form of funny money - and perhaps professional pride as well. Nelson said a "leaderboard" will show the nicknames of the traders. It may well turn out that someone nicknamed "Hawkeye," for instance, will want to show that Iowans know their stuff when it comes to infectious-disease dynamics.

    "We hope that people will do it just for the greater social good ... [but] we think that there may be a little spirit of competition in addition to the greater good," Nelson said.

    The swine-flu market should run at least through the summer - and perhaps even longer.

    "We fully expect to do something about swine flu in the fall," Nelson said, "because we fully expect that it will come back."

    Update for 9:15 p.m. ET: Hubdub.com is also offering swine-flu prediction market propositions for play-money investments (link via MidasOracle.org). And speaking of predictions, check out this LiveScience story about the year-old scientific study that said someplace like Mexico could be the site of a disease outbreak. To get a sense of the current state of flu activity, you might want to take a look at Google Flu Trends.

  • The future of vaccination

    AFP - Getty Images
    A medic injects a volunteer with a flu vaccine in Moscow. A new study
    indicates that vaccination against one flu strain could boost immunity
    against other strains - suggesting a strategy to fight future pandemics.

    As officials around the world worry about a potential swine flu pandemic, three newly released studies hint at the next generation of flu fighters - including a "pre-pandemic" vaccine that could last for years, a universal vaccine that could battle a wide variety of flu strains, and a painless patch for flu vaccines.

    It may be years before these innovations make their appearance in your doctor's office or pharmacy - but the current alarm over swine flu could accelerate the development process, said Robert Liddington, professor and director of the Infectious Disease Program at the Burnham Institute for Medical Research.

    "If a serious pandemic did start to arrive, then a lot of these processes would be expedited," he told me today.

    Pre-pandemic planning
    One of the factors complicating the public-health response to the swine flu outbreak in Mexico and elsewhere is the fact that the standard seasonal flu vaccines offer no immunity. It generally takes up to six months to manufacture a vaccine that's effective against a particular flu strain, researchers point out in a study released today by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

    By the time a tailor-made vaccine becomes widely available, the first wave of a flu pandemic may have already run its course, said Iain Stephenson, an infectious-disease expert at Britain's Leicester Royal Infirmary and the University of Leicester.

    Stephenson and his colleagues considered a different scenario, in which people are vaccinated with a flu strain that's close to one that could cause a pandemic later. They focused on avian flu (a.k.a. bird flu) rather than swine flu.

    It turned out that people who were vaccinated against one strain of avian flu several years ago had more immunity against a different strain than people who didn't get an earlier flu shot. The best results were achieved when the previously vaccinated subjects were given a second booster shot. Their virus-fighting response reached a peak just seven days after the booster, compared with a six-week time frame for vaccine virgins who received two shots.

    "This study is the first to show an effective pre-pandemic vaccine approach," Stephenson said in a news release. "This means that we could vaccinate people potentially many years before a pandemic, to generate memory cells that are long-lasting and can be rapidly boosted by a single dose of vaccine when needed."

    The benefits vs. risks for pre-pandemic vaccination have been under discussion for years, and in fact a pre-pandemic vaccine for avian flu (called Prepandrix) was approved for use in Europe last year. Just last week, a U.S. special envoy suggested in Tokyo that medical personnel might be given a pre-pandemic flu vaccine.

    But there are risks, to be sure. For some people, getting vaccinated could bring harmful side effects, as demonstrated during the swine flu debacle of 1976. And you'd have to anticipate what general kind of flu strain would spark a future pandemic. If you vaccinated people against an H5N1 avian-flu outbreak, the effort might have been useless against the current H1N1 swine-flu strain.

    That's why it's so attractive to look for a universal vaccine that could take on a wide variety of flu strains.

    Search for a universal vaccine
    Researchers have made several advances on the universal-vaccine front over the past few weeks. Just today, a team at Saint Louis University reported positive results using a vaccine that was made with proteins from several strains of influenza A and B viruses.

    "This is a significant first step in developing a universal vaccine to protect against pandemic influenza," Robert Belshe, director of the Saint Louis Center for Vaccine Development, said in a news release. The findings were presented at the National Foundation for Infectious Diseases' Conference on Vaccine Research in Baltimore.

    The combination vaccine - known as Bivalent Influenza Peptide Conjugate Vaccine, or BIPCV - was administered to 377 healthy adults in three doses over six months. Belshe said that the low-dose vaccine was well-tolerated and safe, and seemingly effective as well. The vaccine sparked an immune response that was similar to levels associated with protecting flu-infected animals from serious disease and death. However, more testing is needed, Belshe said.

    Liddington was involved in another study aimed at developing a universal vaccine, although he prefers to call it a "universal therapeutic." The antibody-based treatment targets a part of the flu virus that is found in many strains, rather than the part that varies from strain to strain.

    In the study, published online Feb. 22 in the journal Nature Structural and Molecular Biology, researchers reported finding 10 antibodies that were effective against a wide spectrum of influenza A viruses - including the H5N1 avian flu and even the particular strain of H1N1 "Spanish flu" that caused so much trouble in 1918.

    That result suggests that a concoction of the antibodies could serve as a blanket virus-killer. "The virus should be essentially unable to escape through mutation," Liddington said, "because we hit it in its 'Achilles' heel.'"

    Here's another analogy: The research team's leader, Wayne Marasco of Boston's Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Harvard Medical School, compares your typical flu virus to a lollipop. Most vaccines stimulate the immune system to produce antibodies that target the virus' "globular head" - that is, the lollipop's candy top. One vaccine targets red lollipops. Another goes after green ones, or yellow ones. Every time the virus changes its genetic "color," a new vaccine has to be created to stimulate production of a new antibody.

    "That big globular head acts as a decoy," Marasco told me.

    In contrast, the antibodies identified by Marasco's team target the "stick" of the lollipop, which doesn't change. In science-speak, this part of the virus is highly conserved. "The 'stick' is always white," Marasco said, and thus remains vulnerable even when the virus mutates (that is, when the lollipop candy changes color).

    The virus-killer could take the form of an antibody-based medication administered after infection. But the real trick would be to develop a vaccine that stimulates the body's own immune system to go after the stick rather than the candy. "The bottom line is that we need to really evaluate this, and find a way to induce an immune response to the highly conserved area," Marasco said.

    The research team is now gearing up for human clinical trials, and Marasco estimated that it might take three to five years to open up a path toward a universal, one-time-only vaccine.

    In the meantime, Liddington doesn't advise holding back on getting your flu shot. "I think it still makes sense to get vaccinated every year," he said.

    Creating a painless vaccine patch
    That annual flu shot might be a little easier to handle if it weren't for the needle - and another study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences suggests you could eventually get your vaccination in the form of a painless patch.

    For years, researchers at Emory University and Georgia Tech have been working on a system that involves putting flu vaccine on a skin patch containing microneedles the size of hairs. The patch would be applied to the skin, just like a nicotine patch or a contraceptive patch, and in a matter of minutes you'd soak up enough of the vaccine to protect yourself against infection.

    The latest study showed that when mice were given the microneedle treatment, they produced the same level of immune response seen in mice that were given intramuscular, hypodermic immunizations. And when the mice were later infected with a high dose of flu virus, all of the vaccinated mice survived, while all of the unvaccinated mice died.

    Gary Meek / Georgia Tech
    An array of microneedles was coated with flu vaccine and applied onto mouse skin to test a technique that could lead to low-cost vaccine patches.

    "Our findings show that microneedle patches are just as effective at protecting against influenza as conventional hypodermic immunizations," Emory's Richard Compans, one of the paper's senior authors, said in a news release. "In addition, vaccine delivery into the skin is desirable because of the skin's rich immune network."

    Nowadays, flu vaccines have to be administered by health professionals, as a shot or as a nasal spray - and not everyone can get the nasal spray. More animal studies will have to be run before the microneedles are tested on humans, but if they work as hoped, getting your annual flu vaccine could become a cheap, do-it-yourself job.

    "These micron-scaled needles can be mass-produced using low-cost methods for distribution to doctors' offices, pharmacies and, possibly, people's homes," Georgia Tech's Mark Prausnitz, another co-author of the study, said in the news release.

    Update for 2:50 p.m. ET April 28: In a follow-up phone call, Prausnitz noted that the microneedle technique is being tested with other medications as well - including a hormone treatment for osteoporosis that is being developed by California-based Zosano Pharma.

    Tests of the flu vaccine will proceed first with ferrets, which provide a better model than mice for flu susceptibility. Human clinical trials are likely to begin next year, and if all goes well, the patches should become available in the three- to five-year time frame, Prausnitz said.

    One issue to be resolved is to make sure the dry vaccine used on the microneedle patches is as effective as the wet vaccine used in conventional intradermal vaccines, he said. Another issue would be to make sure the system is as foolproof as possible. "Can we design a system so well that if we hand it off to somebody, it will be done right?" he asked.

    Flu vaccine patches will likely turn up first in the doctor's office, but the longer-range goal is to make the system so easy to use that the patches can be sent through the mail and applied directly by the patient. That could boost vaccination rates in areas that are underserved by trained medical personnel - for example, rural Mexico, which is thought to be where the current swine-flu outbreak began.

    Emory microbiologist Ioanna Skountzou, another member of the research team, said the microneedles are so small "they do not cause any irritation to the skin." Eventually, the tiny metal prongs would likely be replaced by even tinier hairs of polymer that could dissolve right in the skin.

    "The skin is the best think I can think of for vaccine delivery, and drug delivery in general," she told me.

    Another benefit of the technology is that you might be able to get the same protective effect from a smaller amount of antigen, Skountzou said. That would ease the burden on drug-makers, allowing more people to get a low-cost, painless "flu shot" more quickly.

  • Happy birthday, Hubble

    NASA via AFP - Getty Images file
    The Hubble Space Telescope gets its own photo op after a 2002 servicing session.

    There's plenty to celebrate today as the Hubble Space Telescope turns 19 years old: The billion-dollar orbiting observatory is still in business, even though some people thought it should have failed by now. And after years and months of delay, it looks as if help is finally on the way. The shuttle Atlantis is set to deliver hundreds of millions of dollars' worth of belated birthday gifts next month.

    Since the telescope's launch aboard the shuttle Discovery on April 24, 1990, Hubble has traveled 2.8 billion miles in space during more than 100,000 orbits around the earth. More than 570,000 pictures have been taken of about 29,000 celestial objects. The data transmissions sent back from Hubble add up to almost 39 trillion bytes - twice as much as all the data contained in all the books in the Library of Congress.

    You can find these and other fun facts on the Space Telescope Science Institute's Hubble trivia page. You'll also find a rundown of Hubble's top discoveries to date - including insights into the nature of dark matter and dark energy, the speed-up of our expanding universe and the development of galaxies, stars and planets.

    Just in the past month, Hubble has delivered a new batch of beauties, including its 19th-anniversary picture of a galactic "fountain of youth," a stunning view of an intergalactic smashup and a "People's Choice" picture of a three-galaxy traffic jam.

    And there's much more to come, thanks to the Atlantis mission now due for launch as early as May 11: If all goes as planned, two new and improved instruments will be installed, two more will be fixed, and the telescope will be outfitted with new batteries and gyroscopes to keep it on track until the 2013-2014 time frame.

    In honor of Hubble's birthday, we've turned this week's Sci-Q test into a Hubblefest. We're also serving up a fresh selection of cosmic images from the past month, including a couple of Hubble's highlights. If you're looking for bigger versions of our Month in Space Pictures, here's the lineup:

    • Room with a view: NASA's Human Spaceflight Web site has a nice selection of "billion-dollar photographs" showing the international space station.
    • Green space: The Joint Astronomy Center shows off the Orion Molecular Cloud.
    • Emerald Isle: NASA's MODIS Web puts Ireland front and center. Note that the picture was taken on the day after St. Patrick's Day.
    • Rings revealed: The Cassini imaging team's CICLOPS Web site has Saturn and its rings covered. By the way, The Boston Globe's "Big Picture" made a big deal out of Cassini's images this week.
    • New spy in the sky: Feast your eyes on a bigger view of India's satellite launch.
    • Bridge breakup: NASA's Earth Observatory focuses on the collapse of Antarctica's Wilkins Ice Bridge.
    • Heavenly crash: We've already mentioned the galaxy-cluster collision. If you need a hint to help with the Sci-Q test, here's another Web link.
    • Touchdown: You'll find lots of pictures of Discovery's landing on NASA's Human Spaceflight site (keep clicking through the last pages).
    • Billionaire's space odyssey ends: NASA's Human Spaceflight, again, for the win. Or this one, come to think of it.
    • Weird Mars: It wouldn't be "Month in Space Pictures" without a cool shot from the HiRISE camera on NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.
    • Vietnam's rice bowl: The European Space Agency's Envisat probe focuses on the mighty Mekong Delta.
    • Past and present: Get a good look at NASA's next spaceship.
    • Pair of pinwheels: This picture of interweaved galaxies is one of Hubble's biggest crowd-pleasers from the past month.
    • North Korea's launch: DigitalGlobe has the big picture when it comes to Pyongyang's latest blastoff.
    • South Korea's answer: You can read the lettering on this view of South Korea's KSLV-1 rocket.
    • Blue Lagoon: The big picture of Atafu Atoll from NASA's Earth Observatory will almost make you forget about the discord on the Korean Peninsula.
    • Spiders on Mars! HiRISE's view of a "starburst spider" on Mars looks only slightly less eerie when you see it close up.
    • A river runs through it: DigitalGlobe's view of the North Dakota flooding looks stark in black and white - and the contrast with pre-flood imagery is stark as well.
    • Hand of God: This picture from Chandra generated a lot of debate here on Cosmic Log last week.
    • Martian panorama: NASA's Mars rover Web site has bigger versions of the Spirit rover's panorama. Get out the 3-D glasses!
    • Flying saucer: The weird galaxy NGC 7049 stars in another stunning image from Hubble, highlighted by the European Space Agency's Hubble team.
    • Double shuttles: Get a good look at this view of Atlantis and Endeavour on their launch pads, and check out other double-shuttle images from Kennedy Space Center's media archive. After next month, you may never see this again.

    We have plenty more to see when it comes to Hubble highlights: Check out our slideshow of Hubble's greatest hits, our must-see audio slideshow about fixing Hubble through the years, and our "Long View" interactive guide to Hubble.

    Correction for 9:30 p.m. ET: I've fixed the reference to the reading on Hubble's odometer after several commenters pointed out my regrettable error. Thanks for keeping me honest.

  • Real robots rock!

    From left: Intuitive Surgical, iRobot, NASA
    The latest Robot Hall of Fame inductees include the da Vinci Surgical System, the
    Roomba floor-cleaning robot and NASA's Mars Exploration Rovers.

    The Robot Hall of Fame may sound like a science-fiction museum, but the latest inductees actually include more real robots than fictional ones. Among the stars of the show are a couple of contraptions that have surpassed science-fiction expectations: NASA's twin Mars rovers.

    The other robots on the honor roll are also worthy of recognition:

    • iRobot's Roomba floor-cleaning machine, arguably the first robot to do useful work in the living room (and pay off on the technological promise of "The Jetsons").
    • Intuitive Surgical's da Vinci Surgical System, which helps doctors do precision surgery in operating rooms (including prostate gland removal ... yow!).
    • Huey, Dewey and Louie, the cute robotic gardeners from the classic 1972 environmental sci-fi movie "Silent Running" (just in time for Earth Day).
    • The T-800 Terminator, the killer robot from the future that was featured in the 1984 movie "The Terminator" (a role that arguably boosted Arnold Schwarzenegger's career as California's "Governator").

    But could any of those other honorees work on the radiation-blasted surface of another planet, sending back science for more than five years without a single service call? I didn't think so!

    The "Class of 2010" inductees were announced on Tuesday in Pittsburgh by the Carnegie Science Center and Carnegie Mellon University, during a preview of the science center's Roboworld exhibition. Starting in June, Roboworld will serve as the permanent home for the Robot Hall of Fame.

    The Hall of Fame was created in 2003 to pay tribute to the fictional and real robots that have "inspired and embodied breakthrough accomplishments in robotics." Inductees are selected by a jury of scholars, researchers, writers, designers and entrepreneurs. The latest batch of robots will officially take their place next year.

    Matt Mason, director of Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute, noted that the real robots outnumbered the fictional creations for the second time in a row. "We in the robotics field believe this is the beginning of a trend, as robots such as Spirit and Opportunity, Roomba and da Vinci are approaching or even exceeding performance levels that once were only imagined," he said in the university's news release.

    The Mars rovers, Spirit and Opportunity, are all about "exceeding performance levels": NASA's original mission plan called for the six-wheeled, golf-cart-sized probes to last 90 days on the Martian surface - but they're still in business more than five years after they bounced to their landings on opposite sides of the planet.

    It hasn't always been easy. In fact, as the years went on, the two rovers have developed different "personalities" in the minds of their controllers back here on Earth.

    Cornell astronomer Steve Squyres, who heads up the rover science team, has often called Opportunity "Little Miss Perfect": Sure, she sometimes gets into scrapes, like the time she was hung up on a Martian sand dune, but overall she's had an easy time of it and tends to grab the headlines.

    Mark Ralston / AFP
    This is a T-800 Terminator model
    used in "Terminator 3:
    Rise of the Machines."


    Spirit, on the other hand, is like the heroine in one of those dark Dickensian novels. "Spirit had to work for everything - literally had to climb a mountain on Mars," Squyres once said. You might say she's been working her fingers to the bone ... if she had fingers, that is. As it is, she's got one wheel out of commission and has to drag it behind her, rolling backwards over rough terrain. Lately, she's also been suffering recurring bouts of amnesia.

    But Spirit is still on the march, investigating an intriguing plateau named "Home Plate" (the name refers to the rock formation's resemblance to a baseball diamond's home plate). Opportunity, meanwhile, is breezing along on its way to its next big photo op: the 13.7-mile-wide (22-kilometer-wide) Endeavour Crater.

    The other robots have their emotional appeal as well: To the outside world, Roombas may be nothing more than faceless floor-cleaning machines - but some owners have been known to give nicknames to their gizmos, erect Web sites in their honor and trade Roomba tips on online discussion groups.

    As for da Vinci ... well, how can you not invest some emotional capital in the device that's doing the cutting during your hysterectomy, prostatectomy, heart-valve repair or weight-loss surgery?

    When it comes to fictional robots, the Terminator has already gained immortality in the Library of Congress' National Film Registry, and the T-800's Hall of Fame status only adds to its status as a robo-icon.

    "The Terminator represents humankind's greatest fear of robots: that they may one day turn on us, their creators, and seek to exterminate the human race," Don Marinelli, executive producer of Carnegie Mellon's Entertainment Technology Center, said in Tuesday's news release. The worry about a robot "nerdocalypse" has long been a part of the debate over the coming singularity.

    Huey, Dewey and Louie are robots of a different color: In "Silent Running," they're the ones who help preserve Earth's species - even after the humans decide they're no longer worth preserving.

    Universal
    Space oasis crewman Freeman Lowell (Bruce Dern) teaches gardening
    skills to the robots Huey and Dewey in the movie "Silent Running."

    If that sounds familiar, that may be because Carnegie Mellon's Robotics Institute is involved in a $10 million Agriculture Department program that uses autonomous robotic vehicles to help tend apple orchards and orange groves. Or it may be because the "Silent Running" storyline resonates in a more recent robot movie, "WALL-E."

    Speaking of "WALL-E," I'd have to say that the movie's cute robot star should be on the list for a future spot in the Hall of Fame (even though some still debate whether WALL-E was a rip-off of Johnny 5 in "Short Circuit"). Every time the Robot Hall of Fame comes up for discussion, I like to open up the nominations for our "Robot People's Choice" award. So now is the perfect time to nominate your favorite yet-to-be-honored robot - or take issue with the selections so far.

    To refresh your memory, here's the list of past Hall of Fame inductees. These robots and the newly named Class of 2010 are ineligible for the "People's Choice" prize:

    • 2003: HAL 9000, Mars Pathfinder Sojourner rover, R2-D2, Unimate.
    • 2004: ASIMO, Shakey, Astro Boy, Robby the Robot, C-3PO.
    • 2006: AIBO, SCARA, David (from "A.I."), Maria (from "Metropolis"), Gort (from "The Day the Earth Stood Still").
    • 2008: Raibert Hopper, NavLab 5, LEGO Mindstorms, Lt. Cmdr. Data (from the "Star Trek" saga).

    I'll run through the comments you leave below, get a sense of the leading candidate and post the People's Choice as an addendum to this item. In case you're wondering, previous People's Choice winners have included Robby the Robot (2003), NASA's Spirit and Opportunity rovers (2004), B9 from "Lost in Space" (2006) and the NASA rovers again in 2007-2008.

    Update for 11:55 a.m. ET April 24: John Callas, project manager for the rover team at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, says engineers are trying to help the Spirit rover cope with computer glitches. "The natural question is, 'Is this an age-related effect?' And it could be," he told me Thursday.

    However, the team still doesn't yet have enough information to track down the factors behind a recent string of unexpected reboots, he said. Whether the problem is age or something else, the rover team might just have to find ways to work around the glitches. "It's reasonable to expect that this may be another quirky behavior for the rover," Callas said.

    Spirit's handlers are pressing on with their plan to send Spirit southward, from Home Plate to a couple of new sites nicknamed Goddard and Von Braun. Those sites may exhibit further evidence of hydrothermal activity during the region's ancient past, Callas said.

    Late Thursday, at the end of Spirit's 1,886th Martian day (or "sol") of surface operations, Callas had some good news to report:

    "Spirit successfully drove today on Sol 1886. Approximately 1.7 meters of progress was made in difficult, high-slip terrain. The drive sequence ran to completion without error. No faults or warnings were reported. Spirit is power positive, thermally stable and responsive to communication. Solar array energy production improved by more than 10 percent from a dust cleaning event on Sol 1881. The Sol 1887 plan will conduct science remote sensing. Near-normal tactical operations planning will continue for the period ahead and will include enhanced rover telemetry collection techniques to watch for any future anomalous behavior. There is still no explanation for these anomalies. The project is continuing the investigation."

    Callas told me he was gratified to hear that the rovers have received new honors. He noted that "Spirit and Opportunity are in that elite vanguard that probably only Voyager 1 and Voyager 2 now share." They've outlived not only their expected life spans, but their originally planned missions as well. Each new turn of the wheel brings the rovers to unexplored frontiers - whether that's Goddard for Spirit, or Endeavour Crater for Opportunity.

    "The objectives have not diminished for these two rovers after five years," Callas said, "and perhaps our greatest discoveries are still ahead of us."

  • How smart can the grid get?

    Charlie Riedel / AP file
    Click for video: Smarter grids can save money and the environment. Click on the image above to watch a video from NBC's TODAY show.


    Utilities and energy companies are flocking to roll out pilot projects for a smarter electric grid, taking advantage of billions of dollars in federal stimulus money. The idea is to deliver energy more efficiently and cut back on fossil-fuel use.

    Great idea ... but just how smart should a power grid get? That's a question raised when you pair the reports about potential electric-grid investments with reports about potential electric-grid intrusions.

    "You hear some people say, 'At last I can have a programmable thermostat,'" said Stewart Baker, a former assistant secretary for the Department of Homeland Security. "I almost expect them to add, '... and someone from Nigeria can program it for me.'"

    Baker, who now specializes in technology and security issues at the law firm Steptoe & Johnson in Washington, isn't opposed to smart-grid technology per se. "We have only begun to see the most obvious ways in which a smarter grid would help us," he said. He's just worried that security concerns might get brushed aside in the rush to computerize the country's antiquated electric distribution systems.

    The discussions over the electric grid's future touch on a tangle of top issues - not just national security, but energy, economics, the environment and engineering as well.

    The payoff from a smarter grid
    Experts say there's a crying need for grid modernization. More efficient transmission and use of electricity is good for the environment: Smoothing out the peaks and valleys of power consumption could reduce the need for more power facilities, many of which are fueled by non-renewable, carbon-emitting sources such as coal, oil and natural gas.

    In addition to the environmental factors, there are economic factors to consider: Some experts claim that grid glitches cost the American economy more than $100 billion a year. At the same time, upgrading the grid doesn't come cheap: The total price tag, spread out over years or even decades, has been set at figures ranging from $200 billion to more than $800 billion.

    In light of those numbers, the nearly $4 billion in stimulus money offered last week by the Energy Department for smart-grid projects might look like a pittance. But it's enough to get the attention of power-industry heavyweights.

    Among the companies announcing projects in the wake of last week's announcement are National Grid, which is planning a $240 million smart-grid upgrade in upstate New York; a Northwest utility consortium led by the Bonneville Power Administration that's reportedly seeking around $200 million; and another consortium led by Florida Power & Light that is planning a $200 million initiative in Miami-Dade County. (One of FPL's partners is GE, which owns NBC Universal, which in turn is a partner in the msnbc.com joint venture.)

    The Miami project would involve installing high-tech control systems at power stations, as well as encouraging the use of energy-smart appliances, thermostats and electric meters in homes and businesses. For example, smart washers and dryers can be programmed to do their business during off-peak hours, leveling the load on the local grid. Smart thermostats can automatically adjust themselves to your daily routine. Smart meters can show you how to trim back on power consumption (and your power bill).

    The cost savings can range from less than 5 percent to more than 25 percent, depending on whether you're a lackadaisical power user or the home-electricity equivalent of a hypermiler. Kevin and Jodi Linn, a Miami couple profiled on NBC's TODAY show as early adopters of smart-grid technology, say they're saving $100 a month by keeping a close watch on their in-home energy display.

    "You can see the fruits of your labor - you really can. You can see it on a graph, and eventually you'll see it in your bill," Kevin Linn said.

    "He doesn't compare his bill with his neighbors," Jodi Linn added. "He shows off his bill to his neighbors."

    Working out the financial angle
    The Miami project will start out with infrastructure upgrades that will benefit about 1 million customers over the next two years. About 1,000 homes will be enrolled in a trial of advanced technology like the Linns' "eco-panel" energy display. If the $200 million project goes well, Florida Power & Light would move forward with a $500 million second phase, extending the program to all of its 4.5 million Florida customers.

    One little snag is that the Energy Department's draft guidelines would limit its matching grants for smart-grid upgrades to a range of $100,000 to $20 million. But the companies behind most of these projects want the federal government to cover half the cost, which means they're hoping for grants on the order of $100 million per project.

    It looks as if something's got to give: The grant limit will have to be raised, or larger projects will have to be broken up into smaller pieces, or companies will have to pick up more of the bill for grid upgrades. All this could be sorted out next month when federal officials are due to meet with energy-industry executives.

    Working out the security angle
    And then there are the computer security concerns: Some security experts say the increased level of computer networking that comes along with smart-grid technology could leave utilities more vulnerable to cyberattacks. That's not a happy thought, particularly in light of reports that foreign governments have been mapping out network vulnerabilities at U.S. utilities.

    Msnbc.com's Red Tape chronicler, Bob Sullivan, reported that the issue generated a lot of buzz at a recent conference. He quoted Alan Paller of the security firm SANS as saying, "There was real anger by the security guys, saying these people are out selling new meters that can be taken over by a computer worm."

    Baker shares that concern. "It is all too easy to imagine that people would sabotage the system," he told me this week.

    He said he had "no doubt that people are trying to improve the security of this system and trying to build it in from the start," but he worried that the job required the kind of spy-vs.-spy mind-set that companies aren't accustomed to using.

    "You can't expect companies to fully protect themselves from threats that might include nation-state attacks," Baker said.

    Some security experts worry that smart-grid networks tend to rely on Internet Protocol, or IP, the same open standard that's used on the Internet. But Mark Bubriski, a spokesman for Florida Power & Light, told me that next-generation power management systems will take advantage of all the security measures that have been developed since the Internet was born.

    He noted that FPL's partners included a couple of the biggest names in networking. "Over the past 20 years, we have witnessed the transition of key infrastructure to IP, and Cisco Systems has actually helped lead this transition," Bubriski said. "GE has been a global leader in providing grid automation and protection for more than 25 years."

    He voiced confidence that the "most extensive and holistic smart-grid implementation in the country" would be secure from cyberattackers as well.

    Baker said the utilities and their network-savvy partners might have to walk a fine line in order to make their smart-grid systems easy for consumers to use and hard for hackers to ruin. "When you're done, some of the advantages that you want to have start to diminish," he said. "It's a lot less attractive if what you have to do is remember a 15-character password that changes every three months."

    It just goes to show that whenever you're talking about vital infrastructure, saving money and saving the environment aren't the only factors you have to consider.

    "We should not say, 'Oh, gosh, that sounds great! I want to have a system for the grid that's just like the system we have on the Internet!'" Baker said. "We ought to be a little conservative, and we ought to build in safeguards."

  • Celebrate Earth and space

    Earth Day is a great day to celebrate our planet, reflect on new ways to protect it - and widen your planetary perspective as well.

    To mark the occasion, you can download the latest goodies from the Hubble Space Telescope, send out personalized postcards of our home planet and catch one of the season's best sky shows.

    It turns out that the 40th annual observance of Earth Day on April 22 is just one reason to celebrate: Wednesday also marks the peak of the spring season's best-known meteor shower, the Lyrids. Then, on Friday, Hubble officially turns 19 years old - and that's why so many treats from outer space are being made available this week.

    Here are some ways to maximize the cosmic celebration:

    See Earth from space
    We all know that many of the top benefits from outer space flow from the constellations of satellites orbiting our planet. It's hard to imagine how modern society can function without the video, voice and data signals that are beamed around the world.

    One of DISH Network's telecom satellites, EchoStar 11, is equipped with a camera that keeps daily watch on the world from a height of 22,000 miles (35,400 kilometers) - and on Wednesday, you'll be able to see the world the way EchoStar's Earth Watch camera sees it. You can even send free Earth e-cards to your friends online.

    The e-cards are part of a promotional offer from Give the World, a service from Houston-based Space Services Inc. that prints up Earth-view pictures for sale. Space Services is also involved in memorial launches like the one that sent "Star Trek" actor James "Scotty" Doohan's ashes into space - but this venture focuses on future inspiration rather than past remembrance.

    "The photos taken by DISH Network's Earth Watch camera remind us all of the need to care for our home planet," Charles Chafer, Space Services' chief executive officer, said in a news release.

    GivetheWorld.com
    E-cards showing views of our home planet are being sent out on Earth Day.

    For more Earth Day views from space, tune into NASA Television from 6 to 9 a.m., noon to 2 p.m. and 4 to 7 p.m. ET. Those are the times when NASA will broadcast high-definition views of Earth as seen from the international space station, 220 miles (350 kilometers) up. You can watch NASA TV online 24/7, of course.

    NASA is offering a long lineup of Earth Day resources and activities this week, and on Wednesday you'll find out which space achievement has been judged the "biggest hit for the home planet" in an online poll. (Looks like GPS navigation is going to be a shoo-in.)

    And for some of the best-ever views of Earth from space, you simply have to check out our "greatest hits" from space crews and orbiting satellites (plus this bonus round).

    Catch a sky show
    If the skies are clear, you can begin your Earth Day celebration early by going out after midnight tonight to watch the Lyrid meteor shower at its peak. Conditions are expected to be ideal, due to the fact that the moon is nearly new and shouldn't interfere with viewing.

    Roen Kelly / Astronomy
    Lyrid meteors appear to emanate from the
    constellation Lyra, as shown in this graphic.
    Click on the image for more information
    from Astronomy magazine.


    Lyrid meteors are sparked by bits of debris left behind by Comet Thatcher. Those bits create meteor trails in the upper atmosphere every year in mid-April, when Earth passes through Thatcher's trail. The best viewing occurs between midnight and dawn.

    Although the Lyrids seem to emanate from the constellation Lyra, they can appear anywhere in the night sky. maximize your viewing experience, find a comfortable place with clear, open skies, far away from city lights. Spread out a chaise lounge, keep warm, and keep your eyes open. You could see as many as 10 to 20 Lyrids during the peak hour.

    Astronomy magazine provides a preview of the Lyrids, and you can also learn more about the meteor shower from this archived sky guide.

    As long as you're up, check out the close encounter between the moon and Venus right around sunrise. Space.com, Science @ NASA and Sky & Telescope have the details. You might even catch the glint of the international space station in early-morning skies.

    Wish Hubble a happy birthday
    In addition to being our home, Earth is our jumping-off point for the universe beyond - and the Hubble Space Telescope is one of humanity's best instruments for taking a virtual leap into the cosmos.

    NASA / ESA / STScI / AURA

    Galaxies swirl in this 19th-birthday picture from
    Hubble. Click on the image for bigger versions.


    Friday marks the 19th anniversary of Hubble's launch aboard the space shuttle Discovery, which means the grand old space telescope will be entering its 20th year of operation.

    To celebrate the occasion, Hubble's international team has released a stunning image of interacting galaxies and a cosmic "fountain of youth."

    The picture shows a galactic trio known as Arp 194, 600 million light-years away in the constellation Ursa Major. (One light-year equals 6 trillion miles or 10 trillion kilometers, the distance that a beam of light travels in a year.)

    Two of the galaxies are colliding in the upper part of the frame, and the gravitational interaction has thrown off a bright blue stream of newborn stars. It may looks as if that 100,000-light-year-long "fountain" is trickling down into the galaxy in the lower half of the image, but that's an illusion. In reality, that galaxy just happens to be in the background.

    This video explains it all for you, and if you head over to the European Space Agency's Hubble Web portal, you can download a printworthy picture of the cosmic clash as well as other online goodies.

    Over the past 19 years, Hubble has made more than 880,000 observations and snapped more than 570,000 images of 29,000 celestial objects, according to the Space Telescope Science Institute. Although the "fountain of youth" label isn't meant to be taken literally, the telescope is in fact due for some much-needed rejuvenation next month: If all goes according to plan, shuttle astronauts will upgrade some instruments, repair others, and give Hubble fresh batteries and gyros that should see it through until at least 2013.

    For more great views from space, as seen by Hubble and other out-of-this-world observers, click through our Space Gallery. We hope these views will add to your appreciation for "Spaceship Earth" on Earth Day.

  • Twitter with your brain

    UW-Madison
    Click for video: University of Wisconsin researcher Adam Wilson composes
    a Twitter message using a system that reads his brain waves. Click on the
    image to watch a video explaining how the message was sent.

    "GO BADGERS" isn't an unusual message to get from the University of Wisconsin at Madison - particularly when it's a status update from Twitter, the texting service that limits users to 140 characters at a time.

    The unusual thing about this message is how it got to Twitter in the first place: via brain waves.

    University of Wisconsin doctoral student Adam Wilson's cheer for the hometown team is among the first direct brain-to-Twitter messages ever sent - and it points the way to better communication systems for paralyzed patients who have to cope with the conditions faced by physicist Stephen Hawking and the late Jean-Dominique Bauby, author of "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly."

    Wilson suffers no such disability - but he put on the electrode-equipped cap and sent out Twitter updates with his thoughts in order to test out the system. "SPELLING WITH MY BRAIN," he says in one of the messages.

    The first step in the process involves looking at an array of characters that flash on a computer screen.

    "All the letters come up, and each one of them flashes individually," Justin Williams, a UW assistant professor of biomedical engineering who serves as Wilson's faculty adviser, explained in a news release issued today. "And what your brain does is, if you're looking at the 'R' on the screen and all the other letters are flashing, nothing happens. But when the 'R' flashes, your brain says, 'Hey, wait a minute. Something's different about what I was just paying attention to.' And you see a momentary change in brain activity."

    The electrodes embedded in the cap read that change and figure out which character is associated with it - although sometimes it takes a few repeats to get the letter absolutely right. "Some people, for whatever reason, are better at this," Williams told me today. "They have stronger brain signals for the given activity."

    Users can pick up the pace with practice: "I've seen some people do up to eight characters per minute," Wilson said.

    One by one, the letters add up on the computer screen. When the message is complete, Wilson concentrates on the "Twit" box on the screen. The software then sends out Wilson's message to the Twitter service. Anyone who has signed up to "follow" Wilson's updates gets the message instantly, via computer or cell phone.

    Unlocking 'locked-in' patients
    Williams said his research group has been working on communication tools for people who suffer from "locked-in syndrome" - a neurological condition, often associated with stroke, that almost completely paralyzes the body while leaving the mind intact.

    Experts estimate that 25,000 to 50,000 patients in the U.S. have the condition. Such patients can't use the mouth- or eye-controlled systems often employed by quadriplegic patients. Typically, they can communicate only by blinking their eyes in code. (Stephen Hawking, who has a progressively worsening case of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, has most recently been using a communication system that responds to twitches in his cheek muscles.)

    The system to replace eye-blinking with brain-wave readings was developed by Williams and Wilson in collaboration with Gerwin Schalk and colleagues at the Wadsworth Center in Albany, N.Y.

    "Our group has been trying to do things via e-mail or more standard messaging, but that's not really well-suited," Williams said. Locked-in patients "don't necessarily have the capacity to write out complex e-mails, or to pick out the groups of people to send them to," he explained.

    "When we talk to these people," Williams said, "the things they want to do is send simple messages to the people who are thinking of them." The message might be as simple as saying that they're doing OK today, or that they need someone to come by.

    Twitter to the rescue
    That makes Twitter "the perfect application" for the system, Williams said. Patients can send a simple message to everyone who wants to know how they're doing - and can keep track of everyone they're following.

    "This is one of the first - and perhaps - most useful - integrations of brain-computer interface technologies with Internet technologies to date," the Wadsworth Center's Schalk said in today's news release.

    Researchers at the Wadsworth Center and the University of Tubingen in Germany plan to begin in-home trials of the system with locked-in patients later this year.

    "It could be a very enabling technology for those patients," Williams told me, "because it gives them an opportunity to interface with the electronic world where someone on the other end wouldn't necessarily know that they're disabled."

    The ideal would be to develop an inexpensive system that would allow the user to communicate through a wired baseball cap that's hooked up to a home computer system. A somewhat more intrusive system, which would involve implanting electrodes just under the skin, could significantly improve the pace of communication, Williams said.

    However, Williams can't yet predict how much a practical brain-wave communication system might cost, or when it might become commercially available. "We're not really in that business, but it would be great if somebody were interested in that," he said.

    And that's another reason why Williams and his fellow researchers were so attracted to the idea of Twittering with the brain. "Since Twitter is very popular, certainly among younger-age people, this will help convince people that science and engineering careers can have some impact on the way people live," Williams said.


    Funding for the research was provided by the National Institutes of Health, the UW-Madison Institute for Clinical and Translational Research, the UW-Madison W.H. Coulter Translational Research Partnership in Biomedical Engineering and the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.

    For more about mind-reading technologies, check out our archived reports about devices that interpret your spatial memories, decipher what you're thinking about and catch your brain boo-boos.

  • Celebrity science quiz

    Today show
      Click for quiz: Why
      was Leonardo da Vinci
      in the news?


    Where can you find Stephen Colbert, President Obama, Cleopatra and Leonardo da Vinci all in one place? The Technology & Science section here at msnbc.com, of course. All these celebrities, past and present, were in the news over the past week.

    The big question is, why were they in the news? Let's make that 10 big questions. Today, we're rolling out the celebrity edition of msnbc.com's Science and Space Quiz - or the Sci-Q test for short.

    It's been a while since we've had a fresh Sci-Q test, but we're going to revive it as an end-of-the-week feature - OK, maybe not every week, but often enough to keep your Sci-Q skills sharp.

    One of the best things about the test is that we link to the stories you've missed. You can read up on the week's developments, take the quiz again and impress your friends with a 100 percent score.

    But wait, there's more: Feel free to use this Sci-Q posting as an "open mike" (or is that "open mic"?) for your comments and questions about space, science, exploration and innovation. Maybe you've got a comment about a story appearing on msnbc.com (like goat-cloning or polar bear bites, perhaps?). Maybe there's something you've seen somewhere else that you want to point out (like the latest alarm bells about NASA spaceflight). Or maybe you just want to register a suggestion for future follow-up (for example, whatever happened to that "backward causality" research project?).

    Got something on your mind? The floor is yours. Just leave a comment below.

  • How's my driving? Ask my car

    Shawn Allen / NADS / Univ. of Iowa
    Meiji Zhang tries to use a cell phone in a driving simulator that's designed to work
    like a Chevy Malibu. The University of Iowa's National Advanced Driving Simulator
    helps researchers safely study a wide variety of driving situations.

    Using gadgets while you're driving can be a very bad thing, but an expert on automotive distractions says using a gadget that watches you while you're driving can be a very good thing.

    "People don't always understand the degree of distraction they may be exposing themselves to ... so the idea is to help people understand that distraction by providing them with feedback," John D. Lee, a professor of mechanical and industrial engineering at the University of Iowa, told me today.

    Lee outlines the magnitude of the problem in an essay published in this week's issue of the journal Science: More than 40,000 people die every year in motor vehicle crashes, and research indicates that failures of attention - including distractions or drowsiness - probably played a role in most of those crashes.

    Crashes and near-crashes are about three times as likely to happen when the driver is performing a complex task not related to driving (such as dialing a phone or even texting), and twice as likely during a moderately complex task (such as inserting a CD), Lee reported.

    As new technologies are introduced, the list of potential distractions keeps getting longer. Questions have been raised about dashboard GPS navigation devices, for example, as well as "green" energy-monitoring displays.

    Of course, most drivers overestimate their own abilities: In one survey, 88 percent of the respondents judged themselves to be safer than the average driver. And Lee said his own camera-monitoring research has shown that teen drivers in particular "don't notice what they don't notice."

    In one case he studied, a driver looked away from the road for 6 seconds to tap out a text message on her phone, slipped out of her lane and came to attention only when the tires hit the curb. "When she actually saw the video from the perspective of the camera, she was shocked to learn that she almost hit a telephone pole at 40 miles per hour," Lee said.

    So how does watching the driver help? Lee's method was to install a special camera system  that saves video snippets for the 10 seconds before and after every abrupt movement on the road.

    "We took that video, put it on a CD, and then we had a 'report card' that shows the number of events that the teen driver experienced over time," he said. "It had a pretty dramatic effect on teens, in terms of the frequency of these abrupt steering and braking events that are often associated with distractions."

    After the feedback sessions, the number of events triggered by risky drivers declined 89 percent, Lee said, and the rate of risky driving remained low even six weeks later.

    After-the-fact monitoring systems are being used to check up on motor-fleet drivers as well as teenagers, and Lee told me it won't be long before real-time monitors show up as well. "There are video cameras that are being developed and actually being put into cars - high-end Toyota and Volvo models, for example. [They're] video-based face-tracking systems that tell whether the driver is looking at the road or looking into the car," he said.

    NADS / Univ. of Iowa
    A computer-generated graphic shows the University of Iowa's
    National Advanced Driving Simulator, with a cutaway view of a
    vehicle cab and projection screens inside.

    Such a feature, sometimes known as a drowsiness warning system, would likely be wrapped up as an optional package with other advanced safety features such as forward collision avoidance, side collision warning and blindspot detection, Lee said. Among the oft-used catchphrases for these technologies is "intelligent transportation system" or "intelligent vehicle technology."

    Japan's Nissan Motor Co. even suggested that future cars could automatically sound an alarm and release "a stimulating mint fragrance" if they sense that the driver is dozing off.

    Can a car become too smart for our own good? Last year, my colleague Bob Sullivan wrote about computerized car-trackers that could record when and how far you're driving - as well as how many abrupt stops and starts you put your car through. Some insurance companies are offering discounts for drivers who use the tracking devices, but privacy watchdogs worry that this sort of thing could eventually turn Big Brother into a back-seat driver.

    "Obviously there are issues of privacy that come into play as you collect these data about drivers," Lee said. "I think about that, but I really haven't studied that in detail."

    Instead, Lee is focusing on technologies that will help drivers help themselves. "Having your car know a little bit more about you and your behavior might well be worth it in terms of the number of lives saved," he said.


    What do you think? Will artificially intelligent driving bring us closer to highway nirvana or a "Duel" nightmare? Feel free to add your comments below.

  • The hubbub over the Hand

    P.Slane et al. / SAO / NASA / CXC
    A rapidly spinning neutron star known as PSR B1509-58 spews out patterns of
    energy that look like a blue cosmic hand in this Chandra X-ray image.

    An X-ray probe's picture of a celestial "Hand," 17,000 light-years from Earth, has stirred up spiritual responses on a par with the Hubble Space Telescope's famous Pillars of Creation and the Eye of God - plus a couple of lighthearted laughs.

    The scientific story behind the Chandra X-ray Observatory's image of PSR B1509-58 (or B1509 for short) is powerful enough: The image shows a pulsar - that is, a rapidly spinning neutron star - in the southern constellation Circinus. The pulsar has a magnetic field at its surface that's estimated to be 15 trillion times as strong as Earth's, and that makes B1509 one of the most powerful electromagnetic generators in the galaxy.

    All that energy drives streams of electrons and ions through the nebula surrounding the star, and in the picture above, those streams are shown in blue. When the magnetically charged torrents hit knots of material in a neighboring cloud of gas known as RCW 89, the energy is released in X-ray emissions that are shown here in red.

    It just so happens that the blue streams of energy look like gigantic cosmic fingers, reaching out over scores of light-years of outer space to the gas cloud. And that's how this picture, released on April 3, came to be called "the Hand of God."

    This week the online polls sprouted: Was this truly a divine revelation, or merely a natural phenomenon? As of today, 19 percent of the click-voters at the Weekly World News backed the idea that the image was "God showing us his presence," as opposed to 35 percent who said it was nothing more than an astronomical event and 46 percent who said it was "an explainable apparition but still illustrates the beauty of what God created."

    At one point, 40 percent of the votes in the New York Daily News' poll supported the idea the picture captured the hand of God, with 60 percent going with the view that it was a natural stellar formation. We all know that these polls are pretty unscientific to begin with, but over on the Pharyngula blog, "godless" evolutionary biologist P.Z. Myers crowned the Daily News' effort as "the dumbest poll yet."

    "My respect for humanity can only be restored if that 40 percent is reduced," Myers wrote.

    Sure enough, the tally has now shifted to 96 percent for the natural stellar formation, and just 4 percent for the literal hand of God.

    Or is that the hand of an alien Apollo reaching for a UFO?

    In addition to delving into the astronomical wonders that gave rise to the image, Bad Astronomy's Phil Plait recalls the "Star Trek" episode in which a giant hand seizes control of the Starship Enterprise.

    Meanwhile, on Discovery.com's Space Disco blog, Dave Mosher revealed what the Hand of God was really reaching for.

    For extra doses of uplifting space imagery, check out our Space Gallery. If it's cosmic curiosities you're after, you won't want to miss the Red Rectangle, the Double Helix Nebula and the Cone Nebula, as well as the Hexagon and the One-Eyed Monster at Saturn. And if you're in a mischievous mood, you can reflect on the meaning of the Cosmic Finger of Friendship.

  • Is Twitter evil?

    Getty Images file
    Are Twitter tweets too
    fast-paced to let nobler
    emotions sink in?


    Researchers probing the workings of the brain have found that it takes longer for feelings of social compassion and admiration to register on our neural circuits - and they worry that the rapid-fire effect of texting and tweeting could have "potentially negative consequences" for our moral fiber.

    The findings serve as fresh fuel for the debate over social networking's effect on the human psyche: Just this month, we've seen how social-network surfers can improve their office productivity, help catch criminals or head off a potential suicide (with an assist from celebrity Demi Moore!). We've also heard about Twitter torments, Facebook failures and social-network stress.

    The brain-scan study, conducted by scientists at the University of Southern California and due for publication online this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, takes a different perspective.

    Rather than looking at the effects of Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, etc., the researchers studied how the some of the noblest emotions we can summon - admiration for the virtues of others, and compassion for others' distress - are processed. The potential connection to the pace of online social networking and other digital media emerged as a follow-up observation.

    Here's how the experiment was done: Thirteen interview subjects were told five kinds of stories about anonymous men and women:

    • Stories about personal virtue in the face of adversity (for instance, dogged dedication to an important cause).
    • Stories about performing a rare and difficult feat that didn't involve overcoming adversity (such as a virtuosic musical performance).
    • Stories about social or psychological pain (someone dealing with grief or despair, for example).
    • Stories about physical pain (such as a sports injury).
    • Non-emotional stories about ordinary life (which served as the experiment's control factor).

    After the subjects heard all the stories, they were put into MRI brain-scanning machines and asked to recall the stories as well as the emotions associated with those stories. The researchers then looked for differences in brain activity as the various stories were recalled.

    Immordino-Yang et al. / PNAS
    This chart shows how blood-oxygen levels in the
    brain's anterior insula varied over time for four
    emotional conditions: admiration for virtue (AV,
    green); admiration for skill (AS, yellow);
    compassion for social pain (CSP, blue); and
    compassion for physical pain (CPP, red).


    The stories that focused on social interactions registered in parts of the brain that were close to but not identical to the areas activated by tales about great skill or physical pain (in the posteromedial cortices, if you must know). It took several seconds longer for the emotional response associated with virtue or psychological distress to peak (10 to 12 seconds for psychological pain vs. six seconds for physical pain). The response lasted longer as well.

    That means it may take longer for the impact of a social or psychological situation to sink in, compared with a situation that involved sheer physicality, the researchers said.

    "For some kinds of thought, especially moral decision-making about other people's social and psychological situations, we need to allow for adequate time and reflection," Mary Helen Immordino-Yang of USC's Brain and Creativity Institute said in a news release.

    Her colleagues in the experiment, all from USC, included team leader Antonio Damasio, Hanna Damasio and Andrea McColl. In the paper, the researchers said their findings "could have important implications for the role of culture and education in the development and operation of social and moral systems."

    Heavy reliance on a rapid stream of info snippets through television, online feeds and social networks may cut down on the time required for feelings of admiration or compassion to sink in fully, the researchers said.

    "The rapidity and parallel processing of attention-requiring information, which hallmark the digital age, might reduce the frequency of full experience of such emotions, with potentially negative consequences," they said in the paper.

    Immordino-Yang put it another way: "If things are happening too fast, you may not ever fully experience emotions about other people's psychological states, and that would have implications for your morality."

    She stressed that the research doesn't indict Twitter, Facebook or any other specific social-networking tool. "It's not about what tools you have, it's about how you use those tools," she said.

    Other researchers said they weren't so worried about online means of communication, which at least let you withdraw your fingers from the keyboard and reflect on what's being said. (Just ask Demi Moore about that.) USC media scholar Manuel Castells said he was more concerned about "fast-moving television or virtual games."

    "In a media culture in which violence and suffering become an endless show, be it in fiction or in infotainment, indifference to the vision of human suffering gradually sets in," he said in the USC news release.

    Antonio Damasio, who is the director of the Brain and Creativity Institute, agreed. "What I'm more worried about is what is happening in the juxtapositions that you find, for example, in the news," he said. "When it comes to emotion, because these systems are inherently slow, perhaps all we can say is, 'Not so fast.'"

    Is it time to put down the smart phone and pick up a good book? Or do a good deed? Let me know what you're thinking by leaving a comment below - or sending me a tweet if you must. And if you're looking for more about morality, check out these mind-blowing ideas from the Origins Symposium in Arizona.

    Update for 8:30 p.m. ET April 15: WalletPop's Josh Smith truth-squads the suggestions about Twitter's immorality and quotes Antonio Damasio as saying, "The claim that Twitter makes us immoral is not ours, and has nothing to do with the study." Twitter was specifically referenced in the news release based on the study, but not in the study itself or in Damasio's quotes. (When the study is published, you can find it by clicking here.) As I note above, Damasio voiced more concern about the effects of rapid-fire news blurbs. Smith says that "twittering won't make you any less moral than the next guy, unless of course you're following Satan."

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