122 - Dressing Dogs, Octopus Farming, and Lemnian Earth - HealthHippieMD Week In Review
Important Notice:
As you may have noticed, I’ve been changing the newsletter. The audio overview (below) is the first of those changes. With the new year, I plan to migrate the newsletter from Mailchimp to Substack (the HealthHippieMD website won’t change). With the migration you will receive a welcome email, but from a reader’s standpoint, I hope everything will be seamless. Please check your spam folder if you don’t receive the newsletter next weekend after the migration. I hope you’ll bear with me as I troubleshoot the inevitable wrinkles over the next few weeks. Thanks again for reading and your support!
Dream Machines
Artificial intelligence's so-called hallucinations, often dismissed as errors, are redefining innovation in science. These imaginative outputs aid researchers in creating novel proteins, designing advanced medical devices, and unlocking biological mysteries. Pioneers like Nobel laureate David Baker have harnessed AI's creative leaps to design over 10 million new proteins, some with transformative medical applications. Beyond biochemistry, A.I.-inspired designs improve technologies such as catheters and weather modeling. While "hallucinations" may evoke skepticism, scientists prefer seeing them as exploratory tools grounded in physics and biology. With careful testing, these bursts of computational creativity could propel breakthroughs, from fighting diseases to reimagining sustainable technologies. How Hallucinatory AI Helps Science Dream Up Big Breakthroughs - The New York Times (gift article).
Befriend Your Other Selves
How connected do you feel to the person you once were or hope to become? Psychologists call this "self-continuity," a trait that enhances emotional resilience and guides long-term decision-making. By fostering a sense of coherence—through practices like writing letters to your future self or reflecting on personal growth—you can bridge the gap between past regrets and aspirations. Back in 2014, I was interested in this topic. I wrote a grant proposal using self-continuity to promote health-related behaviors, but it was never funded. Making Friends with Your Past and Future Selves.
The Friendship Deficit
In an increasingly isolated world, Americans spend half as much time with friends as they did two decades ago. This growing loneliness has profound effects on mental and physical health. The solution isn't grand gestures but integrating friendship into everyday life—sharing meals, running errands, or watching TV together. Simple connections nurture profound relationships. Opinion | Feeling alone? Here's what the data says about how to fix that. - Washington Post.
Strengthening Relationship Maturity
Emotional immaturity can leave you feeling drained and disconnected, but emotional maturity transforms relationships into spaces of clarity and joy. This article explores recognizing immature traits, like an inability to apologize or accept feedback and offers strategies to foster healthier dynamics. It emphasizes the importance of firm boundaries, clear communication, and surrounding yourself with emotionally reliable people who uplift and energize you. How to Build an Emotionally Mature Relationship | Psychology Today.
Outwitting AI Scams
As AI-powered scams grow more sophisticated, families face new challenges in verifying identity. This article emphasizes the importance of creating unique family passphrases to protect against fraudsters exploiting voice cloning and deepfakes. It's a low-tech but highly effective way to maintain control, ensuring security in a digital age of deception. You Need to Create a Secret Password With Your Family | WIRED.
+see also: Emotional intelligence is the best defence against GenAI threats - Big Think.
Health Bots and Hiccups
AI tools are rapidly becoming part of healthcare, assisting doctors with note-taking and drafting patient communications. While promising, these systems bring bias, inaccuracies, and over-reliance risks. This exploration highlights the potential to ease physician workloads and the critical need for human oversight to ensure safe, personalized care. Doctors are using AI. Will it make health care better or break it? - The Washington Post (gift article).
Dressing Dogs for the Chill
Not all dogs are naturally equipped for winter weather. Small, short-haired, or elderly pups often need protective gear to brave the cold. Do dogs need winter jackets in the cold? In most cases, yes. - The Washington Post (gift article) examines the practical need for canine winter wear, blending safety with the growing trend of stylish pet apparel. From sweaters to booties, dog fashion meets function in cold climates.
Rethinking Octopus Farming
Octopuses are remarkable creatures with complex intelligence, memory, and problem-solving skills. As demand for octopus farming grows, ethical concerns mount. Are Octopuses Too Smart to Be Farmed? | Scientific American delves into the cognitive sophistication of cephalopods, questioning whether their intellect and behavior make them unsuitable for mass farming, despite their popularity in global cuisines.
Pain Points
Pain avoidance often leads to more suffering, both physically and emotionally. By reframing pain through philosophical and therapeutic approaches like mindfulness and acceptance, individuals can transform it from an adversary into a manageable aspect of life. Why the Right Philosophy Is the Best Pain Medication - The Atlantic challenges modern notions of eliminating pain and instead advocates for thriving despite it. I learned quite a bit from this article. Well worth a read.
Food Math: Scoring Health in the Aisles
Nutrient profiling systems are revolutionizing how we approach food choices, simplifying complex nutrition data into clear, actionable scores. By assessing fiber, sugars, and fats, these systems help consumers identify healthier options while challenging misconceptions about processed foods. This innovation makes grocery shopping smarter and more intuitive. What if you could rank food by 'healthiness' as you shopped? Nutrient profiling systems use algorithms to simplify picking healthy groceries.
+see also: What are macros? An exercise and nutrition scientist explains.
Life in Bloom
Modern life can feel monotonous, but philosopher Lorraine Besser offers three strategies to infuse daily routines with psychological richness. By embracing "Mindfulness 2.0," noticing without judgment, cultivating curiosity, and exploring creativity, individuals can transform mundane tasks into moments of engagement and wonder. Besser's approach underscores how curiosity and small creative acts—like altering a commute routine or trying something new—can make life more fulfilling by fostering cognitive engagement and novelty. Transform the daily grind to make life more interesting – a philosopher shares 3 strategies to help you attain the good life.
Clay Revival
Scientists have rediscovered Lemnian earth (LE), a medicinal clay with potential for modern gut health. This clay, combined with beneficial fungi, creates bioactive compounds that positively influence the gut microbiome, combat pathogens, and support intestinal health. Rooted in ancient Greek traditions, LE's antibacterial properties are being reimagined for 21st-century applications, offering a fascinating bridge between historical remedies and cutting-edge biomedical research. Ancient clay remedy may have potential to boost modern gut health.
Light vs. PFAS Pollutants
PFAS, the "forever chemicals," are infamous for their resistance to degradation and harmful health impacts. Researchers have developed a photocatalytic system using light to break down the carbon-fluorine bonds that make PFAS so persistent. This innovative technique could revolutionize efforts to eliminate these pollutants, transforming them into harmless byproducts. While promising, scalability remains a challenge, with ongoing research aimed at refining this sustainable solution. We developed a way to use light to dismantle PFAS 'forever chemicals' – long-lasting environmental pollutants.
Tattoos That Think
E-tattoos using polymer-based conductive inks offer a revolutionary approach to EEG monitoring. These tattoos can record brain activity through short hair without the discomfort of traditional caps. This technology developed by researchers could extend to mobile health monitoring, brain-computer interfaces, and organ-based diagnostics, making healthcare more accessible and adaptable. E-tattoos could make mobile EEGs a reality - Ars Technica.