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目前所謂的「高科技」幾乎都跟生物學或電腦學有關。它們都是超級專業的領域。我唸大學和研究所時代的熱門話題,如超導體、核融合等等,近60年來都沒有突破性發展。

雖然在回答:「什麼是人類的意識」這個問題上,近50年來也沒有很大的進展,本欄第二篇文章所報導的「人腦-電腦介面」技術,在克復神經系統相關疾病外,應該能從旁幫助我們增加對「意識」的深入了解。

2023是「人工智慧年」。如同其它高科技,「人工智慧」帶來了巨大的負面效應:「足以亂真式造假」。解鈴還需造鈴科技,「人工智慧」可以被用來造假,它自然也必須擔負起偵測或拆穿假象的責任與工作。

政治大戲以外,來年的高科技表演應該也很有看頭。



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Sky skimmers: The race to fly satellites in the lowest orbits yet

Jonathan O'Callaghan, 02/09/25

There's a new race in space, but it's not where you might think. It's happening close to home – in the nearest bit of space, right on the edge of Earth's atmosphere.

High in the skies of Earth, a new space race is underway. Here, just above the boundary where space begins, companies are trying to create a new class of daring satellites. Not quite high-altitude planes and not quite low-orbiting satellites, these sky skimmers are designed to race around our planet in an untapped region, with potentially huge benefits on offer.

Roughly 10,000 satellites are orbiting our planet right now, at speeds of up to 17,000 mph (27,000 km/h). Every one of these delicate contraptions is in constant free-fall and would drop straight back down to Earth were it not for the blistering speeds at which they travel. It's their considerable sideways momentum, perfectly stabilised against the Earth's gravitational pull downwards, that keeps satellites in orbit.

A new class of satellites is aiming to push the limits of this balancing act and plough a much more precarious, lower orbit that would skim the top of Earth's atmosphere. Known as Very Low Earth Orbit (VLEO), spacecraft at these altitudes have to battle against the significantly greater drag from the air in the upper reaches of the atmosphere 
than their loftier cousins, lest they get pushed out of the sky. Should they manage it, however, such satellites might achieve something even more jaw-dropping – they could potentially fly forever.

"When you start describing it to people, it starts to sound like a perpetual motion machine," says Spence Wise, senior vice-president at Redwire, an aerospace firm in Florida. A perpetual motion machine is 
not meant to be possible. But it almost is, in this instance.

A handful of pioneering companies have begun work on designs for satellites that may be able to orbit the planet at these unusually low altitudes while simultaneously harvesting air and using it to make propellant – literally on the fly. This new generation of orbiters could enable ultra-high-definition surveillance of activities on the ground, or superfast satellite-based communications.

If you want to send something into orbit, you have to decide how high your satellite is going to fly. Earth orbits are generally described in terms of altitude and are categorised into 
different sections. In high orbits, 22,000 miles (36,000 km) above Earth, satellites enter a geostationary position, meaning they are always above the same location on Earth below. This is useful for telecommunications and weather monitoring, for example. Next is Medium Earth orbit, which spans from roughly 22,000 miles (36,000km) down to 1,200 miles (2,000 km) above the planet's surface. Below this is Low Earth orbit, which stretches down to altitudes of 250 miles (400 km), where the International Space Station (ISS) is found.

The International Space Station, pictured here about to pass in front of the Moon, occupies the increasingly busy region of low Earth orbit (Credit: Getty Images)
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Even further below this lies VLEO, loosely defined as anything below the ISS and down to an altitude of about 60 miles (100 km). Operating here is difficult because of the influence of Earth's atmosphere. "The atmosphere will increase exponentially as you come down," says Hugh Lewis, a professor of astronautics and a space debris expert at the University of Southampton in the UK.

That creates more drag on your satellite, which can spell doom. As molecules in the atmosphere smash into the satellite, they rob the vehicle of its momentum, causing the tug of our planet's gravity to drag it towards the ground.

A satellite left in medium Earth orbit or above would carry on circling our planet for millennia. In VLEO, however, it would last barely months, weeks, or even days depending on its speed, shape and mass, dictating the amount of drag it produces and thus its lifetime. Once a satellite dips to an altitude of about 60 miles (100km), 
the end is imminent. The intense friction created by the thicker atmosphere subjects the satellite to temperatures of thousands of degrees, ultimately tearing it apart.

All satellites pass through VLEO on their way up or down, but not many have purposefully tried to stay there. One 
such spacecraft, however, was the European Space Agency's Gravity Field and Steady-State Ocean Circulation Explorer (GOCE) satellite. Launched in 2009, it orbited at an altitude of around 155 miles (250km), using an ion propulsion system to fire out charged particles behind the spacecraft. This gave it a constant level of thrust that could counteract the drag of the atmosphere.

GOCE was intended to measure Earth's gravitational field with extreme precision, which it achieved. But it also demonstrated the design choices that were necessary for operating in VLEO. It had a sleek, elongated form that helped it to overcome atmospheric drag. "It looked like a dart," says Lewis. GOCE ultimately ran out of fuel and 
burned up in the atmosphere on re-entry in 2013.

This new generation of orbiters could enable ultra-high-definition surveillance of activities on the ground, or superfast satellite-based communications
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Several companies are now trying to do something even more impressive. They are developing technology to harvest molecules from the thin layer of air that is present in VLEO in order to actually propel satellites here. Such a system, called
Air-Breathing Electric Propulsion (ABEP), has been made possible by advancements in electric and ion propulsion in recent years. In essence, it involves fixing a large bucket or opening to the front of the satellite, into which gas molecules from the atmosphere flow before they are ionised to create plasma that generates thrust.

"The idea is to use the same air slowing down your satellite as a propellant," says Francesco Romano, a scientist at the Swiss Plasma Center in Lausanne, Switzerland, who has 
previously studied this technology. Using electric and magnetic fields, the engine would ionise gas from the atmosphere, taking away one electron from each molecule, to produce a free electron and an ion. Then, using magnets, the electrons and ions are pushed out the back of the spacecraft, producing thrust. "Theoretically, if you can generate a thrust that is the same as your drag, you stay at this altitude for an infinite amount of time," says Romano.

To date, an assortment of experimental ABEP systems have been able to produce relatively small amounts of thrust at ground level, but their 
feasibility in orbit has yet to be properly tested.

One company investigating the potential of ABEP is 
Stellar Advanced Concepts in London. Together with another firm in the Netherlands and the University of Manchester, the company received a grant of £390,000 ($510,000) from the British government towards their efforts in July 2024. They hope to launch a demonstration of the technology into space by 2027. "That would be a small satellite with a small payload, maybe an Earth observation camera of some kind, as a proof of principle," says Newsam.

Orbital real-estate is becoming increasingly precious as more and more satellites are launched every year (Credit: Getty Images)
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A start-up called 
Kreios Space, based in Vigo, Spain, is also working on an ABEP prototype it aims to fly by 2026. In Kreios's case, this would be a small satellite "that allows us to do all the testing in orbit in different altitudes," says Adrián Senar Tejedor, the company's CEO and co-founder. The optimal altitude for thrust and drag balancing is expected to be between 125 to 155 miles (200 to 250 km). "That's the sweet spot," says Senar Tejedor.

But he points out that significant contracts for developing this technology are emerging on the other side of the Atlantic.

The US Department of Defense's Otter program has already committed 
more than $20m (£16m) to help several companies develop air-breathing VLEO satellites. One of them, Redwire is designing a sleek "orbital drone" called SabreSat.

Redwire's design for a satellite has solar panels facing edge-on to its motion, like the fins of a fish, in order to reduce drag on the spacecraft. The company says SabreSat would be able to spend up to seven years in VLEO. The build would be modular, so that different versions of the satellite could fly with different instruments on board. "You can think of it like a ship," says Wise. "It has bulkheads, and we're able to add additional bulkheads to increase the length."

The European arm of Redwire is concurrently developing its own VLEO satellite, called 
Phantom, as part of a European Space Agency (Esa) project called Skimsat. "We're currently in the middle of the design stage, and the team is working towards a launch in 2027 or 2028," says Juan Pablo Ramos, business development manager for Redwire in Antwerp, Belgium.

With the right kind of intake and engine, the air that threatens to push satellites out of orbit could also be used as fuel to keep them in the air (Credit: Stellar AC)
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Phantom will not use air-breathing technology, however. Instead, it will rely on a specific blend of undisclosed materials on the satellite to reduce drag and an aerodynamic cone-shaped front. "The cone is designed to improve drag and protect the instruments," says Ramos.

Getting to orbit soon is important. "I expect it to become increasingly popular," says Newsam. "I do think it's important to have first-mover advantage. Whoever gains the credibility of being able to produce an ABEP system, they would win the orders. But there should end up being a reasonably big market."

There are some very good reasons for operating a satellite in VLEO. The first is Earth imaging – the closer you are to Earth, the higher resolution your images can be. "You could either have smaller cameras and gain the same quality of data, or the same camera and get a higher resolution," adds Newsam.

That might be useful for the military, but also for civilian purposes too. "There are lots of applications in maritime, agriculture, wildfire monitoring," says Senar Tejedor. And there could be scientific benefits from studying the atmosphere in VLEO. Putting sensors on satellites operating here "would be a dream", says Sean Elvidge, an assistant professor of space environment at the University of Birmingham in the UK. "It would tell us an awful lot about the environment."

The other major application of being in VLEO is that you are closer to the ground for communications. That is particularly useful for space internet services, like SpaceX's 
Starlink network, which currently beams the internet to receivers on the ground from higher orbits. By using lower satellites in VLEO, the antennas can act like mobile phone towers and beam the internet straight to your phone. "Going direct to a cell phone is a challenging task to do from space," says Tim Farrar, a satellite communications expert in California. "These lower [orbits] could enable a direct-to-cell constellation."

The overall global market for VLEO satellite services could be vast. "We expect it to be around $15 bn (£11.5 bn) in 2032," says Senar Tejedor.

Air-breathing electric propulsion engines produce a stream of plasma that can generate thrust (Credit: Kreios Space)
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An oft-touted benefit of VLEO, aside from the various novel applications, is that this kind of orbit is self-cleaning. Generally, defunct or dead satellites in VLEO will eventually fall back into the deeper atmosphere and break up, limiting the volume of space junk that would otherwise be left orbiting Earth.

While this is true, Lewis points out that debris generated in VLEO can sometimes get flung into higher orbits, posing problems for other satellites. An Indian
anti-satellite missile test in VLEO in 2019, for example, sent debris up to an altitude of 870 miles (1,400 km) and it remained in orbit for 18 months, says Lewis. "If you have a collision or energetic explosion, some of those fragments can be ejected into larger orbits," he says. "It's not this perfect environment."

Having lots of new satellites potentially operating in VLEO is also going to make for a complicated environment, says Victoria Samson, chief director of space security and stability at the Secure World Foundation in Washington DC in the US. Operating in VLEO is "not a cut and dry thing", says Samson.

At such altitudes, satellites are particularly sensitive to the effects of the Sun, since heat can shrink or swell Earth's atmosphere as solar activity waxes and wanes. This caused trouble for 
38 newly launched SpaceX Starlink satellites in 2022 when a geomagnetic storm caused the amount of atmospheric drag to increase by up to 50%, causing them to be pulled back towards Earth and burn up. It is a risk that will need to be carefully monitored by keeping a close eye on space weather forecasts, says Samson.

Yet there's little doubt about the rising interest in this poorly exploited region at the very edge of space. "There is a race," says Senar Tejedor. And whoever can crack VLEO first will usher in a new era of space technology.


* This article has been updated to clarify that Redwire will not achieve limitless VLEO with its SabreSat satellite under its contract with Darpa. It will be able to support a mission lifetime of up to seven years. 

If you liked this story, 
sign up for The Essential List newsletter – a handpicked selection of features, videos and can't-miss news, delivered to your inbox twice a week. 

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請參考A New Method of Nuclear Fusion Is the Key to Revealing Alien Worlds, Scientists Say

China’s ‘artificial sun’ sets nuclear fusion record, runs 1,006 seconds at 180 million°F

Nuclear fusion, which is the source of the energy released from the Sun is considered the ultimate energy source even on Earth.

Abhishek Bhardwaj, 01/21/25


The Experimental Advanced Superconducting Tokamak (EAST) – also called ‘artificial sun’ - has achieved the milestone of 1,006 seconds of operations for sustained plasma temperature above 180 million degrees Fahrenheit (100 million degrees Celsius).

The ‘artificial sun’ is now capable of replicating the operational environment of a future nuclear fusion power plant, as per Chinese scientists.

China says it is a world record for the experimental device which is part of China’s ‘artificial sun’ project – which aims to make nuclear fusion reactors a commercial reality.

The breakthrough achieved on Monday has surpassed the situations needed for future nuclear fusion reactors, as per China.

China’s ‘artificial sun’ passes 1,000 seconds benchmark

As per a 
release by the State Council Information Office of China, the 1,000-second benchmark is considered an important step in nuclear fusion research.

The success has been achieved by the Institute of Plasma Physics under the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Hefei, east China's Anhui Province.

It surpasses the 
earlier record set by EAST itself in 2023 – when the ‘artificial sun’ ran for 403 seconds non-stop. Prior to this, the record stood at 101 seconds, which was achieved in May 2021.

Nuclear fusion, which is the source of the energy released from the Sun is considered the ultimate energy source even on Earth since the process does not create any carbon emissions or radioactive material as a by-product.

When hydrogen atoms are superheated to temperatures above 180 million degrees Fahrenheit, the resulting plasma creates conditions that allow the atoms to merge and form helium, releasing vast amounts of energy during this process.

The 180 million degrees Fahrenheit is essential for successfully generating electricity, along with stable long-term operation, and ensuring controllability in nuclear fusion devices.

"A fusion device must achieve stable operation at high efficiency for thousands of seconds to enable the self-sustaining circulation of plasma, which is critical for the continuous power generation of future fusion plants," said Song Yuntao, 
ASIPP director, as per a report by China's state news agency Xinhua.

Upgrades in EAST and contribution to ITER

As per 
the release, several EAST systems have been upgraded since the last round of experiments. One of these is the heating system, which earlier used to operate at the equivalent of nearly 70,000 household microwave ovens. It has now doubled its power output.

The 
final goal of the ‘artificial sun’ is to create nuclear fusion like the sun to provide an endless, clean energy source. It also aims to provide systems needed for space exploration beyond the solar system.

China joined the International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) program in 2006 as its seventh member. Beijing is responsible for approximately 9 percent of the project’s construction, and ASIPP is the main unit of its mission.

ITER, which is being built in southern France, will be the world's largest magnetic confinement plasma physics experiment device and the largest experimental tokamak nuclear fusion reactor, once completed.

The achievements of EAST will 
contribute towards the ITER and China Fusion Engineering Test Reactor (CFETR).

"We hope to expand international collaboration via EAST and bring fusion energy into practical use for humanity," said Song. 


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2024年7個值得觀察的高科技 -- Michael Eisenstein
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請至原網頁參看相關圖片7個高科技沒有包括ChatGPT;最後附有相關說明由於內容是高科技領域,術語和專有名詞過多故索引從缺;請自行上網搜尋。


Seven technologies to watch in 2024

Advances in artificial intelligence are at the heart of many of this year’s most exciting areas of technological innovation

Michael Eisenstein, 01/22/24

From protein engineering and 3D printing to detection of deepfake media, here are seven areas of technology that Nature will be watching in the year ahead.

Deep learning for protein design

Two decades ago, David Baker at the University of Washington in Seattle and his colleagues achieved a landmark feat: they used
computational tools to design an entirely new protein from scratch. ‘Top7’ folded as predicted, but it was inert: it performed no meaningful biological functions. Today, de novo protein design has matured into a practical tool for generating made-to-order enzymes and other proteins. “It’s hugely empowering,” says Neil King, a biochemist at the University of Washington who collaborates with Baker’s team to design protein-based vaccines and vehicles for drug delivery. “Things that were impossible a year and a half ago — now you just do it.”

Much of that progress comes down to increasingly massive data sets that link protein sequence to structure. But sophisticated methods of deep learning, a form of artificial intelligence (AI), have also been essential.

‘Sequence based’ strategies use the large language models (LLMs) that power tools such as the chatbot ChatGPT (see ‘ChatGPT? Maybe next year’). By treating protein sequences like documents comprising polypeptide ‘words’, these algorithms can discern the patterns that underlie the architectural playbook of real-world proteins. “They really learn the hidden grammar,” says Noelia Ferruz, a protein biochemist at the Molecular Biology Institute of Barcelona, Spain. In 2022, her team developed an algorithm called ProtGPT2 that consistently comes up with synthetic proteins that fold stably when produced in the laboratory
1. Another tool co-developed by Ferruz, called ZymCTRL, draws on sequence and functional data to design members of naturally occurring enzyme families2.

Sequence-based approaches can build on and adapt existing protein features to form new frameworks, but they’re less effective for the bespoke design of structural elements or features, such as the ability to bind specific targets in a predictable fashion. ‘Structure based’ approaches are better for this, and 2023 saw notable progress in this type of protein-design algorithm, too. Some of the most sophisticated of these use ‘diffusion’ models, which also underlie image-generating tools such as DALL-E. These algorithms are initially trained to remove computer-generated noise from large numbers of real structures; by learning to discriminate realistic structural elements from noise, they gain the ability to form biologically plausible, user-defined structures.

RFdiffusion software
3 developed by Baker’s lab and the Chroma tool by Generate Biomedicines in Somerville, Massachusetts4, exploit this strategy to remarkable effect. For example, Baker’s team is using RFdiffusion to engineer novel proteins that can form snug interfaces with targets of interest, yielding designs that “just conform perfectly to the surface,” Baker says. A newer ‘all atom’ iteration of RFdiffusion5 allows designers to computationally shape proteins around non-protein targets such as DNA, small molecules and even metal ions. The resulting versatility opens new horizons for engineered enzymes, transcriptional regulators, functional biomaterials and more.

Deepfake detection

The explosion of publicly available generative AI algorithms has made it simple to synthesize convincing, but entirely artificial images, audio and video. The results can offer amusing distractions, but with multiple ongoing geopolitical conflicts and a US presidential election on the horizon, opportunities for weaponized media manipulation are rife.

Siwei Lyu, a computer scientist at the University at Buffalo in New York, says he’s seen numerous AI-generated ‘deepfake’ images and audio related to the Israel–Hamas conflict, for instance. This is just the latest round in a high-stakes game of cat-and-mouse in which AI users produce deceptive content and Lyu and other media-forensics specialists work to detect and intercept it.

One solution is for generative-AI developers to embed hidden signals in the models’ output, producing watermarks of AI-generated content. Other strategies focus on the content itself. Some manipulated videos, for instance, replace the facial features of one public figure with those of another, and new algorithms can recognize artefacts at the boundaries of the substituted features, says Lyu. The distinctive folds of a person’s outer ear can also reveal mismatches between a face and a head, whereas irregularities in the teeth can reveal edited lip-sync videos in which a person’s mouth was digitally manipulated to say something that the subject didn’t say. AI-generated photos also present a thorny challenge — and a moving target. In 2019, Luisa Verdoliva, a media-forensics specialist at University Federico II of Naples, Italy, helped to develop FaceForensics++, a tool for spotting faces manipulated by several widely used software packages
6. But image-forensic methods are subject- and software-specific, and generalization is a challenge. “You cannot have one single universal detector — it’s very difficult,” she says.

And then there’s the challenge of implementation. The US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s Semantic Forensics (SemaFor) programme has developed a useful toolbox for deepfake analysis, but, as reported in Nature (see
Nature 621, 676–679; 2023) major social-media sites are not routinely employing it. Broadening the access to such tools could help to fuel uptake, and to this end Lyu’s team has developed the DeepFake-O-Meter7, a centralized public repository of algorithms that can analyse video content from different angles to sniff out deepfake content. Such resources will be helpful, but it is likely that the battle against AI-generated misinformation will persist for years to come.

Large-fragment DNA insertion

In late 2023, US and UK regulators approved the first-ever CRISPR-based gene-editing therapy for sickle-cell disease and transfusion-dependent β-thalassaemia — a major win for genome editing as a clinical tool.

CRISPR and its derivatives use a short programmable RNA to direct a DNA-cutting enzyme such as Cas9 to a specific genomic site. They are routinely used in the lab to disable defective genes and introduce small sequence changes. The precise and programmable insertion of larger DNA sequences spanning thousands of nucleotides is difficult, but emerging solutions could allow scientists to replace crucial segments of defective genes or insert fully functional gene sequences. Le Cong, a molecular geneticist at Stanford University in California and his colleagues are exploring single-stranded annealing proteins (SSAPs) — virus-derived molecules that mediate DNA recombination. When combined with a CRISPR–Cas system in which the DNA-slicing function of Cas9 has been disabled, these SSAPs allow precisely targeted insertion of up to 2 kilobases of DNA into the human genome.

Other methods exploit a CRISPR-based method called prime editing to introduce short ‘landing pad’ sequences that selectively recruit enzymes that in turn can precisely splice large DNA fragments into the genome. In 2022, for instance, genome engineers Omar Abudayyeh and Jonathan Gootenberg at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge and their colleagues first described programmable addition through site-specific targeting elements (PASTE), a method that can precisely insert up to 36 kilobases of DNA
8. PASTE is especially promising for ex vivo modification of cultured, patient-derived cells, says Cong, and the underlying prime-editing technology is already on track for clinical studies. But for in vivo modification of human cells, SSAP might offer a more compact solution: the bulkier PASTE machinery requires three separate viral vectors for delivery, which could undermine editing efficiency relative to the two-component SSAP system. That said, even relatively inefficient gene-replacement strategies could be sufficient to mitigate the effects of many genetic diseases.

And such methods are not just relevant to human health. Researchers led by Caixia Gao at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing developed PrimeRoot, a method that uses prime editing to introduce specific target sites that enzymes can use to insert up to 20 kilobases of DNA in both rice and maize
9. Gao thinks that the technique could be broadly useful for endowing crops with disease and pathogen resistance, continuing a wave of innovation in CRISPR-based plant genome engineering. “I believe that this technology can be applied in any plant species,” she says.

Brain–computer interfaces

Pat Bennett has slower than average speech, and can sometimes use the wrong word. But given that motor neuron disease, also known as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, had previously left her unable to express herself verbally, that is a remarkable achievement.

Bennett’s recovery comes courtesy of a sophisticated brain–computer interface (BCI) device developed by Stanford University neuroscientist Francis Willett and his colleagues at the US-based BrainGate consortium
10. Willett and his colleagues implanted electrodes in Bennett’s brain to track neuronal activity and then trained deep-learning algorithms to translate those signals into speech. After a few weeks of training, Bennett was able to say as many as 62 words per minute from a vocabulary of 125,000 words — more than twice the vocabulary of the average English speaker. “It’s really truly impressive, the rates at which they’re communicating,” says bioengineer Jennifer Collinger, who develops BCI technologies at the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania.

BrainGate’s trial is just one of several studies from the past few years demonstrating how BCI technology can help people with severe neurological damage to regain lost skills and achieve greater independence. Some of that progress stems from the steady accumulation of knowledge about functional neuroanatomy in the brains of individuals with various neurological conditions, says Leigh Hochberg, a neurologist at Brown University in Providence, Rhode Island, and director of the BrainGate consortium. But that knowledge has been greatly amplified, he adds, by machine-learning-driven analytical methods that are revealing how to better place electrodes and decrypt the signals that they pick up.

Researchers are also applying AI-based language models to speed up the interpretation of what patients are trying to communicate — essentially, ‘autocomplete’ for the brain. This was a core component of Willett’s study, as well as another
11 from a team led by neurosurgeon Edward Chang at the University of California, San Francisco. In that work, a BCI neuroprosthesis allowed a woman who was unable to speak as a result of a stroke to communicate at 78 words per minute — roughly half the average speed of English, but more than five times faster than the woman’s previous speech-assistance device. The field is seeing progress in other areas as well. In 2021, Collinger and biomedical engineer Robert Gaunt at the University of Pittsburgh implanted electrodes into the motor and somatosensory cortex of an individual who was paralysed in all four limbs to provide rapid and precise control over a robotic arm along with tactile sensory feedback12. Also under way are independent clinical studies from BrainGate and researchers at UMC Utrecht in the Netherlands, as well as a trial from BCI firm Synchron in Brooklyn, New York, to test a system that allows people who are paralysed to control a computer — the first industry-sponsored trial of a BCI apparatus.

As an intensive-care specialist, Hochberg is eager to deliver these technologies to his patients with the most severe disabilities. But as BCI capabilities evolve, he sees potential to treat more-moderate cognitive impairments as well as mental-health conditions, such as mood disorders. “Closed-loop neuromodulation systems informed by brain–computer interfaces could be of tremendous help to a lot of people,” he says.

Super-duper resolution

Stefan Hell, Eric Betzig and William Moerner were awarded the 2014 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for shattering the ‘diffraction limit’ that constrained the spatial resolution of light microscopy. The resulting level of detail — in the order of tens of nanometres — opened a wide range of molecular-scale imaging experiments. Still, some researchers yearn for better — and they are making swift progress. “We’re really trying to close the gap from super-resolution microscopy to structural-biology techniques like cryo-electron microscopy,” says Ralf Jungmann, a nanotechnology researcher at the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Planegg, Germany, referring to a method that can reconstruct protein structures with atomic-scale resolution.

Researchers led by Hell and his team at the Max Planck Institute for Multidisciplinary Sciences in Göttingen made an initial foray into this realm in late 2022 with a method called MINSTED that can resolve individual fluorescent labels with 2.3-ångström precision — roughly one-quarter of a nanometre — using a specialized optical microscope
13.

Newer methods provide comparable resolution using conventional microscopes. Jungmann and his team, for instance, described a strategy in 2023 in which individual molecules are labelled with distinct DNA strands
14. These molecules are then detected with dye-tagged complementary DNA strands that bind to their corresponding targets transiently but repeatedly, making it possible to discriminate individual fluorescent ‘blinking’ points that would blur into a single blob if imaged simultaneously. This resolution enhancement by sequential imaging (RESI) approach could resolve individual base pairs on a DNA strand, demonstrating ångström-scale resolution with a standard fluorescence microscope.

The one-step nanoscale expansion (ONE) microscopy method, developed by a team led by neuroscientists Ali Shaib and Silvio Rizzoli at University Medical Center Göttingen, Germany, doesn’t quite achieve this level of resolution. However, ONE microscopy offers an unprecedented opportunity to directly image fine structural details of individual proteins and multiprotein complexes, both in isolation and in cells
15.

ONE is an expansion-microscopy-based approach that involves chemically coupling proteins in the sample to a hydrogel matrix, breaking the proteins apart, and then allowing the hydrogel to expand 1,000-fold in volume. The fragments expand evenly in all directions, preserving the protein structure and enabling users to resolve features separated by a few nanometres with a standard confocal microscope. “We took antibodies, put them in the gel, labelled them after expansion, and were like, “Oh — we see Y shapes!” says Rizzoli, referring to the characteristic shape of the proteins.

ONE microscopy could provide insights into conformationally dynamic biomolecules or enable visual diagnosis of protein-misfolding disorders such as Parkinson’s disease from blood samples, says Rizzoli. Jungmann is similarly enthusiastic about the potential for RESI to document reorganization of individual proteins in disease or in response to drug treatments. It might even be possible to zoom in more tightly. “Maybe it’s not the end for the spatial resolution limits,” Jungmann says. “It might get better.”

Cell atlases

If you’re looking for a convenient cafe, Google Maps can find nearby options and tell you how to get there. There’s no equivalent for navigating the much more complex landscape of the human body, but ongoing progress from various cell-atlas initiatives — powered by advances in single-cell analysis and ‘spatial omics’ methods — could soon deliver the tissue-wide cellular maps that biologists crave.

The largest — and perhaps the most ambitious — of these initiatives is the Human Cell Atlas (HCA). The consortium was launched in 2016 by cell biologist Sarah Teichmann at the Wellcome Sanger Institute in Hinxton, UK, and Aviv Regev, now head of research and early development at biotechnology firm Genentech in South San Francisco, California. It encompasses some 3,000 scientists in nearly 100 countries, working with tissues from 10,000 donors. But HCA is also part of a broader ecosystem of intersecting cellular and molecular atlas efforts. These include the Human BioMolecular Atlas Program (HuBMAP) and the Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative Cell Census Network (BICCN), both funded by the US National Institutes of Health, as well as the Allen Brain Cell Atlas, funded by the Allen Institute in Seattle, Washington.

According to Michael Snyder, a genomicist at Stanford University and former co-chair of the HuBMAP steering committee, these efforts have been driven in part by the development and rapid commercialization of analytical tools that can decode molecular contents at the single-cell level. For example, Snyder’s team routinely uses the Xenium platform from 10X Genomics in Pleasanton, California, for its spatial transcriptomics analyses. The platform makes it possible to survey the expression of roughly 400 genes at once in 4 tissue samples every week. Multiplexed antibody-based methods such as the PhenoCycler platform by Akoya Biosciences in Marlborough, Massachusetts, allow the team to track large numbers of proteins with single-cell resolution in a format that enables 3D tissue reconstruction. Other ‘multiomics’ methods allow scientists to profile multiple molecular classes in the same cell at once, including the expression of RNA, the structure of chromatin and the distribution of protein.

Last year saw dozens of studies showcasing progress in the generation of organ-specific atlases using these techniques. In June, for example, the HCA released an integrated analysis of 49 data sets from the human lung
16. “Having that very clear map of the lung informs the changes that happen in diseases like lung fibrosis, different tumours, even for COVID-19,” says Teichmann. And in 2023, Nature released an article collection (see go.nature.com/3vbznk7) highlighting progress from HuBMAP and Science produced a collection detailing the work of the BICCN (see go.nature.com/3nsf4ys).

Considerable work remains — Teichmann estimates that it will be at least five years before the HCA reaches completion. But the resulting maps will be invaluable when they arrive. Teichmann, for example, predicts using atlas data to guide tissue- and cell-specific drug targeting, while Snyder is eager to learn how cellular microenvironments inform the risk and aetiology of complex disorders such as cancer and irritable bowel syndrome. “Will we solve that in 2024? I don’t think so — it’s a multiyear problem,” Snyder says. “But it’s a big driver for this whole field.”

Nanomaterials printed in 3D

Weird and interesting things can happen at the nanometre scale. This can make materials-science predictions difficult, but it also means that nanoscale architects can manufacture lightweight materials with distinctive characteristics such as increased strength, tailored interactions with light or sound, and enhanced capacity for catalysis or energy storage.

Several strategies exist for precisely crafting such nanomaterials, most of which use lasers to induce patterned ‘photopolymerization’ of light-sensitive materials, and over the past few years, scientists have made considerable headway in overcoming the limitations that have impeded broader adoption of these methods.

One is speed. Sourabh Saha, an engineer at the Georgia Institute of Technology in Atlanta, says that the assembly of nanostructures using photopolymerization is roughly three orders of magnitude faster than other nanoscale 3D-printing methods. That might be good enough for lab use, but it’s too slow for large-scale production or industrial processes. In 2019, Saha and mechanical engineer Shih-Chi Chen at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and their colleagues showed that they could accelerate polymerization by using a patterned 2D light-sheet rather than a conventional pulsed laser
17. “That increases the rate by a thousand times, and you can still maintain those 100-nanometre features,” says Saha. Subsequent work from researchers including Chen has identified other avenues for faster nanofabrication18.

Another challenge is that not all materials can be printed directly through photopolymerization — such as metals. But Julia Greer, a materials scientist at the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, has developed a clever workaround. In 2022, she and her colleagues described a method in which photopolymerized hydrogels serve as a microscale template; these are then infused with metal salts and processed in a way that induces the metal to assume the structure of the template while also shrinking
19. Although the technique was initially developed for microscale structures, Greer’s team has also used this strategy for nanofabrication, and the researchers are enthusiastic about the potential to craft functional nanostructures from rugged, high-melting-point metals and alloys.

The final barrier — economics — could be the toughest to break. According to Saha, the pulsed-laser-based systems used in many photopolymerization methods cost upwards of US$500,000. But cheaper alternatives are emerging. For example, physicist Martin Wegener and his colleagues at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany have explored continuous lasers that are cheaper, more compact, and consume less power than standard pulsed lasers
20. And Greer has launched a start-up company to commercialize a process for fabricating nanoarchitected metal sheets that could be suitable for applications such as next-generation body armour or ultra-durable and impact-resistant outer layers for aircraft and other vehicles.

 
***********


ChatGPT? Maybe next year

Readers might detect a theme in this year’s technologies to watch: the outsized impact of deep-learning methods. But one such tool did not make the final cut: the much-hyped artificial-intelligence (AI)-powered chatbots. ChatGPT and its ilk seem poised to become part of many researchers’ daily routines and were feted as part of the 2023 Nature’s 10 round-up (see 
go.nature.com/3trp7rg). Respondents to a Nature survey in September (see go.nature.com/45232vd) cited ChatGPT as the most useful AI-based tool and were enthusiastic about its potential for coding, literature reviews and administrative tasks.

Such tools are also proving valuable from an equity perspective, helping those for whom English isn’t their first language to 
refine their prose and thereby ease their paths to publication and career growth. However, many of these applications represent labour-saving gains rather than transformations of the research process. Furthermore, ChatGPT’s persistent issuing of either misleading or fabricated responses was the leading concern of more than two-thirds of survey respondents. Although worth monitoring, these tools need time to mature and to establish their broader role in the scientific world.

Nature 625, 844-848 (2024)

doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-024-00173-x

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