The Skeptics Guide #1042 - Jun 28 2025
0 min
•Jun 28, 202510 months agoSummary
This episode covers Stephen Novella's retirement from medicine, vaccine coverage decline and RFK Jr.'s impact on global health, language acquisition in children vs. AI, the Vera Rubin Observatory's first light, a classical nova discovery, and a study on ChatGPT's effects on cognitive engagement during essay writing.
Insights
- RFK Jr.'s defunding of Gavi could prevent 8 million vaccine-preventable deaths by 2030, demonstrating how political decisions directly translate to mortality at scale
- Vaccine hesitancy is driven by information ecosystem failures, not individual laziness—parents are victims of misinformation while still responsible for outcomes
- Children acquire language 10,000x faster than current LLMs through active, adaptive, multimodal learning; embodied AI may be necessary for human-level language fluency
- The ChatGPT study's media coverage demonstrates science communication failure: headlines claim 'brain rot' while authors explicitly reject that framing
- Observable universe mapping (Vera Rubin) faces 56% NSF budget cuts, threatening multi-messenger astronomy and gravitational wave detection infrastructure
Trends
Vaccine coverage plateau despite proven ROI: 84% coverage unchanged for 10 years while population grows, creating absolute increase in unvaccinated childrenPolitical weaponization of scientific language: anti-vaccine advocates use 'science' and 'transparency' rhetoric to justify positions contradicting evidenceAI-assisted learning requires pedagogical redesign: calculator analogy suggests education must shift from task completion to critical thinking, not ban toolsGenerational science funding crisis: 56% NSF cuts threaten long-term research (LIGO 40% cut, one detector shutdown) with multi-year recovery lagObservable transient astronomy era: Vera Rubin will generate 10M alerts/night, requiring AI-driven filtering and image broker systems for researcher accessMarine biomass evolution: 500M year trend shows slow increase via ecosystem efficiency gains, not stability as previously theorizedLanguage development research convergence: four core constructivist components (active learning, multimodal input, structure building, developmental plasticity) emerging across theories
Topics
Vaccine Hesitancy and MisinformationRFK Jr. and Public Health PolicyGavi Funding and Global ImmunizationLanguage Acquisition in ChildrenAI Language Models vs. Human LearningLarge Language Models and Cognitive LoadChatGPT and Student Essay WritingScience Communication and Media CoverageVera Rubin Observatory TechnologyGravitational Wave Detection (LIGO)NSF Budget Cuts and Science FundingClassical Nova V462 LupusMarine Biomass EvolutionEmbodied AI and Multimodal LearningEducational Pedagogy and AI Tools
Companies
Gavi (Global Alliance for Vaccines and Immunisation)
RFK Jr. attempting to withdraw $1.2B US funding pledge, threatening vaccine coverage for 154M+ lives saved globally
World Health Organization
Referenced as guideline-setter for vaccine standards that RFK Jr. claims are being ignored by Gavi
OpenAI
ChatGPT discussed as tool for essay writing; study examines cognitive effects of LLM-assisted learning vs. brain-only...
National Science Foundation
Proposed 56% budget cut threatens Vera Rubin Observatory and LIGO gravitational wave detector funding
Department of Energy
Co-funded Vera Rubin Observatory alongside NSF; Office of Science involved in funding
ASASSN (All Sky Automated Survey for Supernova)
Discovered classical nova V462 Lupus on June 12, 2025, visible to naked eye in southern sky
People
Stephen Novella
Retiring from medical practice after 2 days; transitioning to full-time SGU work
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Attempting to withdraw US vaccine funding from Gavi; linked to 13% of vaccine misinformation on Twitter
Vera Rubin
Namesake of new observatory; first scientist to provide solid observational evidence for dark matter
Cara Santa Maria
Discussed language acquisition research and etymology of 'eco' prefix
Jay Novella
Covered vaccine coverage decline, marine biomass trends, and language acquisition in children
Bob Novella
Discussed Vera Rubin Observatory technology and classical nova discovery
Evan Bernstein
Covered nova discovery and made predictions for 2025
Werner Heisenberg
Quoted on observation and nature: 'What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method'
Quotes
"He's weaponizing the language of scientific medicine, right? The gold standard science... he's saying that they're just rubber stamping vaccines and they're not considering the side effects."
Stephen Novella•~15 min
"When we're talking about his death toll, it's in the millions. That's what we're talking about."
Jay Novella•~20 min
"This is the single most effective medical intervention ever created. And it's orders of magnitude more effective than anything else that we've ever done."
Jay Novella•~35 min
"What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning."
Werner Heisenberg•~120 min
"Knowing when, where and how to use AI is the key to long term success and skill development, but our educational system has to catch up."
Cara Santa Maria•~95 min
Full Transcript
You're listening to the Skeptics Guide to the Universe. Your escape to reality. Hello and welcome to the Skeptics Guide to the Universe. Today is Wednesday, June 25th, 2025 and this is your host, Stephen Novella. Joining me this week are Bob Novella, everybody, Cara Santa Maria, Howdy, Jane Novella, Hey guys and Evan Bernstein. Good evening everyone. What I just want to say is I record this two days. I have two days left. Two days. Oh wow. Basically, when people are listening to this, you'll be in bed. Yes. I want to know, Steve, what takes place in the last two days of work? I have two full days of patience. But do they know? They haven't transitioned yet to another doctor? No, a lot of my patients have transitioned, but I've scheduled patients to my last day, right? Yes. And they just stop scheduling patients for me. They're making use of my open slots. Let me put it that way. Wow. How sad that somebody you're doing coverage for, like the patient sees you and is like, you're amazing. Finally, I have this doctor. I'm so, and you're like, sorry. It happens every time. Steve, has anyone said yet? Well, will you still be my doctor after you retire? One or two people are sort of asked in that direction. I'm like, you know, you don't get it. I am fully retiring. I'm out of here. So Steve, are you going to tell your very last patient that they are your very last patient? I guess so. Cool. Are you going to like explode a streamer or something? No. The exam room. Kara, what I've come to realize after grilling Steve for the past couple of months is there is virtually zero drama coming from his office. There's no one to yell at or say something nasty to on the way out. He doesn't want to steal any stethoscopes. You're not going to defenestrate anything. Yeah. Like he doesn't like go out and tell any boss off. He's just going to like, okay, goodbye Steve. You're not going to burn any bridges. You think they'll have cake? I had my cake already. It's going to calm you down. Yeah, that's right. You can stuff your pockets with a bunch of medicine. I'm out of here. So long. I'm happy to have finally realized that Steve is like super, super happy about this. There is no like, I'm going to miss this or that. He's just happy he's done. I mean, I am going to miss aspects of my career. It's sad and it's to a certain extent, but I have something very exciting and moving into. Well, here's an interesting question. You're not going to play golf, right? Are you going to maintain your license? At least for the first year, because there's no reason not to. And I've met all my requirements, but it would take work for me to maintain my requirements going forward beyond that. And I probably won't. Yeah. It's a lot of work just for the... You mean definitely not. Yeah. I guess the ability to step in an emergency, which you can do anyway because of Good Samaritan. Oh yeah. Yeah. This is only about me working and getting paid. Like if I wanted to do low-com tenants, I would need a license. Yeah. And that would be fun. Yeah. But I want to be too busy. I'm going to be too busy doing... Too busy. ...SGU work. Busy looking good. All right. What movie is that from, Evan? No, I don't know it. Kara has no chance. I'm trying to... Yeah, I thought that was just Bob being clever. What is that, Bob? Now you're... Too busy looking good. That's from... And to the dragon. And to the dragon. Oh hell, why don't I know that? But we just saw with a childhood friend of ours that we saw it with like when it was in the theaters, you know? Yeah. Yeah. My best friend growing up, we were like Bruce Lee fanatics. So yeah, we of course watched Into the Dragon. And yeah, that's one of those quotes that you just... There's a hundred quotes of it. It's hardwired into our brains. Yeah, lasered into our brains. Anyway... I found the perfect time to use it. I'm so happy. You did. In context. I want to keep everyone updated on the shenanigans of RFK Jr. So very quickly, now he's withdrawing funding, the funding pledge from Gavi, which is an international organization that vaccinate poor kids. Is this surprising, everybody? Every four years, you know, they have to get their funding for the next cycle. And last time around, the Biden administration pledged $1.2 billion for this cycle. And RFK Jr. wants to claw that back. Oh, so they've probably already spent some of it. I think it's for the... It's 26 to 30 cycle is what the money is for. And guess how he's justifying it. He's saying vaccines don't work. They're not transparent or they're not, you know, they're in violation of some crap. Yeah, basically. Basically said that they quote unquote ignored the science. And so he's weaponizing. And we got a question about this too, but we've talked about it on the show. He's weaponizing the language of scientific medicine, right? The gold standard science. Yeah, we did a whole deep dive on this. I know. That's exactly what he's doing. So he's saying that they're just rubber stamping vaccines and they're not, they're ignoring the science and they're not considering the side effects and the... Who's ignoring science? Who is ignoring science? Exactly. Exactly. World vaccine experts, you know, who are following the guidelines of the World Health Organization. It's total nonsense. It's like, they don't believe my bullshit conspiracy theories. Therefore they're quote unquote ignoring the science. You wouldn't know science if it hit him in the ass, this guy. It's just, let him in the ass with it. Let's just do it. Yeah, we should. This is what he's doing. He's weaponizing this notion of scientific standards. He's using it as a weapon, not as a way of genuinely finding the truth, which has been his life. This is what he has done his whole life. To say it's predictable is an understatement. And again, we have loosely keeping track of how many millions of people he's going to kill in his career. This funding shortfall will probably, in the next cycle, the estimate is it will save eight million lives. So it's some big chunk of those eight million lives that should have been saved by 2030 will be lost because of RFK Junior. I hope some benefactor comes along and does the right thing and fills the gap that the United States is about to fill. Bill Gates funds this organization too. So I just want Karma to come along and do some justice. How about that? No, I get it. Karma, yeah, that would be satisfying. But also, you know, let's hope it doesn't become this possible worst case scenario and that he's thrown us all into. Yeah. But when we're talking about his death toll, it's in the millions. That's what we're talking about. How many millions of people? Yeah. It's crazy. It's already worst case scenario. It's just going to be worse, sir. Right. And then to play catch up later on after all this stuff is out there and people are, oh my gosh, this will last long beyond those four years. Yeah, this is generational horror. It's happening. Yeah. I mean, we'll probably do what we can to reverse as much of this as possible if we, you know, replace him, replace the current administration. But yeah, so much damage will have been done, right? Like, you can't go back and vaccinate those kids who weren't vaccinated and died, you know? Yeah. And it's whatever. It's hard. It's just a tiny little sliver of the horribleness. Okay. Right. Shame. Let's move on with the regular show. Kara, you're going to start us off with a What's The Word? Yeah, it's been a bit. I am going to dive into a word that was suggested by Adam from Louisiana. He said, hi, a word, etymology, research or discussion, possibility for the SGU. Eco as in ecosystem and economy. Thank you. Long time listener. Thanks, Adam. So yeah, those two words sound like they're pretty far apart. Ecosystem and economy. But they both start with eco. Maybe everyone but Steve. Any of you, do you see a similarity between the eco of economy and the eco of ecosystem or ecology? I have to do with systems. Okay. Systems. Like, how would you put it? I think what we might be looking at there, though, is the relationship between the suffixes, not the prefixes. So system oronomy orology. And those, yes, do have to do with schools of thought. But the prefix, eco. What is it? Eco. It's Greek, not Latin. Peace or something. It's like, what is it? It's Latin from the Greek. What? Not to hurt. Do no harm. Something like that. It actually means home. Yeah, home economics. Home economics. You remember home economics class decades ago? You still even have that? They do. It comes from the Greek oikos, which means home or house or habitation or dwelling. And really the first use of the word economy that I could find is from home economics, household management. So the word economy would not have been called home economics back then because that would have been redundant. Redundant. Just an economy back in the 1500s. So economy would have been household management back then. And then eventually it became used to kind of describe resource management and frugality. And then later it kind of evolved to become a larger system of political economy. That didn't actually happen until the mid 1600s, even into the 1700s. Apparently. The founders of the United States only used the word economy once in the Federalist. They actually used the word frugality over and over instead of the word economy. And then they described a political economy as a noun only once in those early recorded documents. So it's pretty interesting that it's a relatively new word to describe the economy of a nation. But really economy goes back to the home. And it's the same thing with eco being ecology or ecosystems. So when we talk about home, we're talking about our home, right? So the living things in their environment, that would be the ecology coming from that habitation, that dwelling place, that home. And then same thing with ecosystems. So the entire system or the organized whole of home. So it's interesting that we don't, we think of those things as being quite separate, quite far apart, but they do come from that same root. And I couldn't really find any other examples of the term eco, except for sort of branches of ecology or ecosystem, kind of that planetary usage, versus economy, that usage, all of the different kind of related words that I could find were just variations on that theme. Eco disaster, eco housing, econometrics. I couldn't find another kind of branched term there. So it seems like there was a bit of a fork in the road, but they both lead back to home. Interesting. Nice. Home. Yeah. All right. Thank you, Kara. I like that. Jay, you're also going to talk about vaccines. This has nothing to do with RFK Junior, but vaccinating the world is challenging. Steve, this has to do with him a little bit because he is the person that is. He's currently driving things in the US. Yeah, it's pretty, pretty grim things going on here, guys. Like so after 50 years of vaccine progress, you know, I'm talking about childhood vaccination coverage, it's now slowing. And in some cases, it's slipping backwards. So vaccines, of course, have prevented an estimated 154 million saved lives, basically over the past few decades. Their safety and efficacy are extremely well documented. And of course, none of this is up for debate. It is, it is that. And there is no information to the contrary. I mean, sure, there's edge cases, but the vast, vast majority of people have a net benefit for taking vaccines. So we made in the United States, we made pretty decent gains between the 1980s and the 2010s. But now we've hit a plateau and we are starting to really see the consequences of the progress stopping and slipping backwards. So from 1980 to 2023, vaccines against diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis, measles, polio, tuberculosis. These helped drive the global coverage from under 25% to over 80%. That's, you know, that's a huge increase in 1980. Nearly 59 children did not receive a single dose of a routine childhood vaccine. But by 2019, that number dropped to about 15 million. And many people, of course, consider this a public health victory. When you, when you really do understand and appreciate the power of vaccines, knowing that those numbers were increasing that dramatically, you know, not only can we track the success and see, you know, see the changes in people's quality of life, but, you know, the saved lives and the overall savings on medical costs and everything. You know, because if you go unvaccinated and you need to be hospitalized for a few weeks because of something, you know, that, that raises medical costs. So since 2010, though, all of that momentum has completely flatlined. Measle vaccine coverage fell in over 100 nations, even in 29 high income countries coverage for at least one vaccine decreased. And this is not a developing world problem alone. It's a global backslide. That's what the data is showing. When COVID hit routine vaccines, sadly, they were all disrupted and during lockdowns and resource reallocations, you know, millions of children missed their scheduled vaccines, including vaccines for measles, polio and DTP, which is diphtheria, you know, pertussis and tetanus. So it's all serious, you know, and, you know, the big hitting of the breaks happened during COVID. So in 2023, the number of zero-dose children, now these are kids who had not received even a single vaccine. So in 2023, the number of these zero-dose children had risen to 14.5 million. And that was up from 12.8 million in 2019. So, you know, that's a lot of kids not getting vaccinated. Also, the percentage of vaccinated kids has completely plateaued, like I said, staying the same way for 10 years. Now, if you consider that we've had, we've had the percentage roughly be 84 percent for the last 10 years. Now, the problem with that is population has gone up, which means if the percentage plateaus, that means more kids, because more kids are alive, more kids are actually going unvaccinated. The numbers are higher because the population increase. So about 53 percent of all zero-dose children live in sub-Saharan Africa. South Asia holds 13 percent. Nigeria leads the world in unvaccinated children with 2.5 million, followed by India. The Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Somalia and Sudan. And the problem that they're dealing with is they have fragile health systems and they're the programs are significantly under-invested. Now, the typical problem with vaccine levels staying at the same percentage is that the population increase means, like I said, that as the population increases, there's a lot of things going on. First off, with more people, it means more likely to spread because you have more vectors, which is definitely a problem. And then, of course, as the percentage stays the same, you're not going to have more people, you're going to have less people being vaccinated. Now we're seeing the consequences and they're pretty significant. So measles cases are spiking. We have over 100 countries reported with outbreaks last year. There was an estimated 35 million children that lack full measles protection. Polio, which we almost had completely eradicated. It resurfaced in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, and even in Europe, in the United States, vaccine preventable diseases are showing signs of returning. And this pattern is crystal clear. It's very easy to track and the numbers are going in the wrong direction. So what's causing all this? It's super complicated. You know, we could say things like vaccine confidence is a problem and misinformation and disinformation, particularly around COVID-19. You know, there has been an erosion of public trust in vaccines across the board. The disinformation is routine and it's significantly affecting childhood immunizations and we're seeing a growing number of parents who are delaying and refusing to vaccinate altogether. And this ties into RFK because he's all about, you know, you got to make your choice, you got to do your own research. You know, that's all patent bullshit. Another factor that came in was high income countries are not immune to this. Australia happens to rank sixth, worst among developed nations in routine childhood vaccine coverage. The United States, we have measles outbreaks and they've claimed the lives of people living in communities with declining vaccine or vaccination rates. UK funding for Gavi, the global vaccine alliance is being slashed by nearly 40%. And meanwhile, the political momentum for vaccines is faltering and it's failing, you know, like, you know, again, I can, I can point to one man in the US government who is, who is changing the out, the vaccine outcome in our country and it hasn't even really, you know, he's doing it, but we haven't even seen like direct results yet. It's going to take a while for it to play out, but we will see it. We will see kids die because of that man. I assembled a list of all the reasons that are going on here and it's a huge complicated list of reasons, but I'll just give you the headers, right? So we have the COVID-19 pandemic disruption, which disrupted the routine vaccines. You know, there was a health worker crisis, which is, which is a hugely huge problem, very difficult to deal with, lack of resources. Then we have rising vaccine misinformation and the public distrust. You know, we have false claims that are widely spread on social media. We have people who are, are, you know, a lot, a lot more people today who are, who are, you know, essentially fighting against vaccine and vaccine information. It's not just misinformation. Like, you know, we have a lot more people who are pushing hard against it because they have zero trust in any of it. We have political undermining of scientific institutions, right? We can go into this for, we could talk about this for hours, you know, but everything that's going on in the US with Kennedy Jr. You know, he removed the CDC recommendations, removed the panel of the advisory panel. You know, he's right now, he's linked to 13% of all vaccine mis, misinformation retweets on Twitter, more than any other individual source in the global, global health systems and funding cuts. You know, that's another big thing because governments are choosing to not put the money into it anymore, which I just don't understand. Now just look at it like this. This is the single most effective medical intervention ever created. And it's orders of magnitude more effective than anything else that we've ever done. This is, this is, if anything has, has proof behind it, if anything that we've ever done medically has, has been the massive success, it's vaccines, right? It's unequivocal. It's also very cost effective, extremely cost effective. It saves tons of money. Not only are you saving lives, not only are you improving people's quality of life, right? Cause you could get the measles and it can do bad things to you and it literally changed the rest of your life, right? So you're literally keeping people healthy and happy. We could see how much money it saves. It's easy to track that. And then, you know, we're talking about the, the amount of data. Cause think about the number of people who historically were getting vaccinated. We have the statistics and it's a massive body of statistics that shows the effectiveness. And if that's not good enough, nothing ever will be. And it isn't good enough. It, it, and that's the sad state that we're in, you know, so what do we have? We have a bunch of skeptics out there and critical thinkers who, who fully understand this, we have a strong medical community that understand this. And then we have, you know, people out there that are, that are reading misinformation, can't tell the difference between the truth and lies. You know, we have people being appointed to government positions who don't have the skill sets and they're being, they're being trusted over experts, right? They'll trust RFK over Fauci. You know, we actually, you know, the smear campaign against Fauci is, is another thing that we have to be aware of that happened, that's happening here. It's not just the misinformation. It's the disassembling of medical professionals who, who have been lifetime contributors to vaccines and to well, the well-being of a population. So it's really concerning. And this whole thing that I just said begs the question, what can we do? And unfortunately, we can't do any big brushstroke stuff as a community here. What we can do is try to be as common polite as you can with the people in your life that are buying some of this misinformation, you know, try to talk to them, try to find some common ground, you know, you could show them statistics, you could talk to them a little bit about that, but it's difficult because once people get that idea in their head that they can't trust it, they don't even trust the statistics and there's just no way to reach them. I'm not saying don't try, but it's, you know, that's what we're faced with. And unfortunately, there is no panacea for this. Yeah. I mean, obviously we need to spread critical thinking skills, scientific literacy for individuals, I think in forming yourself, it's, it's, you have to do more than just say, yeah, I'm pro vaccine, I'll vaccinate my kids. But also, you know, we need to arm ourselves so that we can deal with the spread of misinformation or disinformation. You know what I mean? Like being informed enough to promote vaccines, not just do the right thing for yourself. Part of the problem is, is like, if you are just a rational science based person, there's a thousand issues that we deal with. Whereas like the anti-vaxxers have one issue, right? Like they can dedicate their life to destroying vaccines. Whereas we're trying to defend a hundred things, you know, all at the same time. But that means, you know, we need everyone who's on the side of science and reason, et cetera, to be involved. You know, professionals, the public, you can't look the other way anymore. Yeah. And the scary thing is, as an example, I know this is an anecdote, but it happened. And it's worth repeating. For example, there was a family in Texas who whose child died from measles. And they were so anti-vaxx that they literally lost their child, could have easily prevented their child's death. And they said, even though we lost our child, we still don't want you to go out and get the vaccine. Like that's how deep in the woods they are. Well, that's that's complicated too, because otherwise they have to admit they killed their kid. Right. And like that may just be emotionally unattainable to them. So they kind of have to think that. Although not some people do like after a family death, because they opposed vaccines or opposed medicine, they will come around. But then usually they portray themselves as a victim. Right. So that's like, we have to get to one of those two places. Either I was victimized by misinformation, or I was right all along. Very few people can say I was wrong. It was my mistake and I killed somebody I love. You know, I mean, that's just a little bit too much for most people to bite off. Yeah, I agree. I mean, look, it's hard. It's it's a hard thing to look at a family that could have easily prevented the death of of another family member by giving them something that was incredibly inexpensive and easy. You know, we're not talking about surgery here. We're talking about a shot that takes two minutes. I can see it. Yeah, I don't want to come out swinging and go, you know, I want those parents to have a horrible rest of their life. They'll have that anyway. But the point being, you know, we have to hold them accountable, but we also have to give them it out because it's a terrible situation. They are thinking that they're choosing what's best for their children. You know, they're not trying to neglect their children and they're not being neglectful in that way. It's not laziness with a lot of these people. It's more they're just in the wrong information bubble and there's no way to get them out. It's always complicated, you know, to some extent they failed, right? They came to a bad decision. But at the same time, they're also victims because again, as you say, they are living in an information ecosystem that sort of led them down that road. It's not as if our society, our government, our medical establishment, whatever, that we're doing such a good job of educating the public that they have no one to blame but themselves. We can't say that. They it's tough. It is a tough information environment to live in to raise kids in. It's very hard on individuals. So it's not surprising when they fail individually, but they did fail at the same time. So it's a combination. It's a triple failure. I mean, they could they and I understand the psychology to an extent behind this, but they they are in an amazing position, a horrible position, but also there's an opportunity. They could prevent other kids from dying. If they just picked up that mantle and said, yeah, we screwed up big. Of course we did. But maybe we can save at least one kid that imagine the power of that voice. And some people do go there, too. That is one of the psychological mechanisms is that it turned into something. Yeah. All right. Let's move on. This is an interesting, it's a bit complicated, but this is an interesting, it's not really a study. It is a proposal in a way. Talking about how researchers can move forward, trying to answer the question of how children acquire language. It is an amazing feat when you think about it is that toddlers go from no language, essentially, not that they're a blank slate. They definitely are not. They have a brain prepared to learn language, but they don't really have any language. And they go from that to being fluent, like fully fluent by the time they're seven or eight years old. And it really is an amazing acquisition of knowledge, skill and information. Yeah, it's a hell of a window, man. Yeah. So and so researchers have been trying to understand that process in detail. And the last 10 years has seen an explosion in research in this area because we have a lot of tools at our disposal now that we didn't have in the past, like infant EEG had mounted eye tracking and other things, other technologies have really accelerated this research. Now, the one other thing that caught my interest with this paper is the comparison that sort of strewn throughout between how babies acquire language versus how AI large language models acquire language. And they're very different. I do. I do want to say that makes sense. One of the things that caught my eye, which as far as I could tell, I cannot source this claim. It's not in the article. It's only in the press release, but the press release says that quote unquote, if a human learned language at the same rate as chat GPT, it would take them 92,000 years. So that means that they're basically saying that people acquire language 10,000 times the speed is chat GPT. I have no idea how they quantify that. And I have no idea where that number comes from. And I couldn't find it. All references point to that press release. And it's not in the study. So I have no idea where they came up with that. Is there something in the study that could give you the data to at least calculate that? No. Did you ask an LLM? I did. They all point to this study. That's really circular. Everything points to this press release. So but it's funny. Anyway, I don't think it's true. Again, I can't even source it. Yeah. But again, I'm not really, you know, there's no even explanation for how they would quantify it. But the core idea here is that the point is valid. Again, just that I don't know where that number is coming from. But the point is that humans are way more efficient at acquiring language fluency than LLMs are at the moment. At the moment. Wait, wait, wait. When does the clock start for an LLM to acquire language? Are they talking about what the beginning of research decades ago? What are they talking about? What's the start? No, just training. Training an LLM to acquire language. We're talking about an individual one. Yeah. Well, my best guess is that they're talking about processing power. Training an LLM uses orders of magnitude more processing power than the human brain uses. So I guess one way to interpret it is if you trained an LLM on the processing power of a single human brain, it would take 90,000 years. So that that is probably it. But I just they didn't show me their work. Is it too much comparing apples to oranges? Yes. But that aside, that's just it. I wanted to point it out because it's like this press science press release thing. I don't know where they pulled that product. But anyway, and Kara, I don't know how much you've ever delved into this research as a psychologist as well. It's very fascinating. Yeah, because I think not only is it fascinating from evolutionary, developmental, genetic, psychological, neurological perspective, there are like huge camps within many of these fields who like wildly disagree with each other. And with this opinion piece really is trying to do is to pull it all together. Because what they said was there's many different theories. They're basically each looking at a piece of language and they're not. There's really no way to compare them. And they're trying to bring it all together. So what they said is that if you just look at all of the theories of language development that are constructivist and by that, what they mean is that children construct language. That's pretty much all that that means. Language is not just representational, for example. Right. So it's not just this word represents that the true fluency requires that you construct language to have abstract meaning. Yeah. And and you use grammar. Yes. Yeah, exactly. Little kids do interesting things. Yeah, with their grammar. Complicated process for constructing language. But they said that all of the theories, the constructivist theories of language have the same four components. They don't all have all four components, but these four components are part of every constructivist theory. So they said looking at all of that, they think that these four are the core ideas of how we learn language. So one is that children, this is they focus on this as the key difference between kids and AI. Kids engage in active, adaptive learning. They are not passive learners. Right. So what the what the research shows is that children are engaging with people. They're engaging with their parents. They're engaging with other people in their environment. They're engaging with their environment, not just the people in that environment. They will point at things they find interesting, for example, just to give a simple example. They're actually actively seeking data and there's evidence to show that they optimize their data acquisition efficiency. So they will seek out data that is at the perfect level of complexity for their current learning needs. Right. That makes sense. So they are attracted to things that are not so simple that they're not going to learn anything and not so complicated that will overwhelm them. They're kind of seeking out things that are just beyond their conceptual grasp and then adding that to their knowledge. Oh, cool, man. Yeah, it's neat. Yeah. And you think about all comes in handy. It's like baby steps just taking the appropriate baby steps over and over and over. And it's meant to humans evolve this really adaptive process for learning in general and learning language specifically. There are a guess there was a bunch of language papers coming out at the same time because I saw a couple of other papers as well that relate to this. One was had to do with the fact that humans engage in baby talk with babies. And most of our primate relatives do not like baby talk is a fairly unique human thing. And what is baby talk? It's humans, adults adapting their vocal interaction with infants to the infants level to optimize their learning. Right. Yeah. We kind of instinctively will talk at the level that the child needs to learn. And if you're a parent for those of us who have been parents, which is basically everybody by care, when you really obviously live every day with your child, you become. Care has got killer. Intimately. I do talk to him differently. That you do become intimately familiar with their precise level of ability, linguistic ability and cognitive ability, like even day to day. And if somebody else like tries to interact with your child, they never get it exactly right out of the gate. You know what I mean? You've we've all had this experience. How could they? They either undershoot or overshoot. And same thing. You do that with other people's kids. You don't feel as comfortable with them because you don't know exactly where their level is. But with your own kids, you kind of know exactly what they need. Again, so the adaptation goes both ways, not just with the kids, but with the adults in their environment as well. And that's just a function, right? Of just like constant exposure. Yeah. But the thing is we somehow, again, we instinctively do this and other species don't do this. So this is, I think, part of the brains prepared to learn language thing, but also to teach language. All right. Another one is we, the children engage in this is very different than AI in multimodal input. So they are physically interacting with their environment. They're touching, smelling, tasting, malving, you know, kids mouth everything at a certain stage. They are they are exploring their environment and and they are using all of that information visual as it's not just written. So LLMs are trained on written words. Kids don't even, yeah, kids don't even use written language. Yeah, that's right. Can you imagine trying to teach a kid their colors without having access to physical colors? Colors, yeah. Exactly. They learn words through doing, through interacting, through context, through, you know, how if being in the world and using all of their senses to acquire this information. So again, that's very different than how LLMs operate. The third one is structure building. Again, they use this information to construct, to build language structures that get increasingly complicated as they learn. And the fourth thing is that the children themselves are developmentally dynamic. Their brain is not done maturing. So it would be as if the neural network on which an LLM is being is training, right, is actually adding new nodes and new connections and adapting its physical structure to the learning process. As we learn, our brains are physically adapting to our needs and our products. Like their brains are like literally wrapping around the language. Yes. Right. And not only are they physically adapting, like are they highly plastic? Because maybe you could sort of model that with an LLM, but they're physically growing. Like they are metabolizing, you know, and increasing like their glucose consumption. Like that's a huge difference. The LLMs aren't getting older and larger. Right. Exactly. So what they're suggesting is that we recognize that these four components seem to be core to any constructivist model of how kids acquire language. And but also this can really help model language acquisition in computers. And maybe we want to completely rethink how we develop large language models in order to incorporate this constructivist framework, because it seems to be way more efficient again. I don't know that it's 93, whatever, 1000 times efficient, but it seems to be way more powerful and efficient than the current method that we're using, which is really just brute. I hate to use the term brute force. I know that programmers don't like when I do that. But we're training. We're training it in a limited way on a massive amount of data. True. But also it's it's easier said than done that these researchers are like, you know, just kind of do it the way we do. It's like, we don't even understand how we do. Yeah, I hear you. I hear you. But but we talked about this, this one aspect of it before, the fact that AI, in order to really get to like human level functionality may need to be embodied. You know. Yeah. Oh, yeah. There's no conception of interacting with a physical world. That's why I like the idea of training models in a computer, in in silico, if you will. And so to mimic a like a 3D environment that people could then log on and interact. I mean, that I think that's going to be a critical component. Otherwise, how could it even relate, you know, to a fizz interacting with a physical world? Maybe it's okay that they just stay in the digital. Maybe that's not the worst thing in the world that we don't embody the AI. I was wondering. I was wondering. When languages emerging in humanity, how much selective pressure do you think there was? Like, were there bands of people? I mean, but were there bands of people that just were not hardwired for language at all? And they just died out because they just could not even remotely. All our brains are the same. Like there weren't like whole sections of people that had none of the architecture necessary to. I think Bob is talking about like, homo habilis versus Australopithecus or whatever. Yeah, but we've got to get like, who were contemporaries, right? Yeah. I think if you're talking about actual selection pressure temporarily, of course there's going to be. If you have different groups of, let's say, early homo sapiens spread out across the globe, and some groups are able to communicate verbally, they have way more efficient capability to stay alive. Totally. Cooperation and hunter gathering, I mean, just for one, just in one thing. There's going to be way better at reproducing and maintaining fitness of the species than those who don't have language. I mean, when did language emerge in terms of dispersal of humanity? I'm trying to remember, like so there was, that's a hard question to answer. Yeah, how do we even know? Well, I know there's one piece of evidence is when did the hyoid bone move into the modern location? Right, right. And I'm trying to remember what species that was. It was in the homo line, genus, whether it was habilis or erectus, I don't remember which one. But at some point we could say, oh yeah, this is like now a modern vocal cord where they had probably a labyrinth speech like humans do. So somewhere along that line. But it's hard to know how language doesn't fossilize. According to National Institutes of Health, they say homo sapiens around 150 to 200,000 years ago, that's when the anatomically modern features came. But then you don't know what follows what. Yeah, but we know what language predates humans, modern humans. And there's different, you know, pretty inferential lines of evidence in terms of like when and in what group, you know, language really took off to like modern human levels. So. And also it's also a fuzzy delineation like what is language? Yeah, right. You know, grunting and pointing or using like higher level or lower level inflections, question versus. Proto languages may have been earlier with homo habilis. Well, my assumption is that it was proto language, then the and then the kind of more dialed in anatomy necessary for for oral language to fully evolve. But they're going to be happening in lockstep. You can't have the words without the architecture and you can't really, you don't really have the pressure to develop the architecture without trying to make the words. And the architecture is there. I mean, did you know that children can distinguish even infants who only babble? They will pay attention to forward speech, more than backward speech, speech versus non speech. And they will pay more attention to sign language than non language gestures of how do they know? See, how do they know? This is the eye tracking. Intuitive. Yeah, this is the really interesting like this is the Noam Chomsky of it all right. Like what is intuitive there? I love. Have you guys seen the really like lovely videos of I think there's one in particular I'm thinking of it's a dad and his. Baby and the baby is babbling and the dad just kind of responds and he says something and then the baby looks at him and then they babble back and it looks like they're having a fluid conversation. Absolutely. Love it. And I love it so much. It's like all kids went through that phase where they're babbling. I remember like Olivia, Jay's younger daughter really did this a lot when she was 100% babbling, but she was having a conversation. Oh my God. Everything other aspect of the physicals, physicality of speech was there and the kids also kids will take turns even when they're just babbling. It's like they're asking you a question and you're like, yeah, totally. Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And then they add to it. It's so good. Mommy and dad make those noises and I can do it too. Absolutely. That's part of the dynamic process. Okay, let's move on. Bob, tell us about the Vera Rubin Observatory. Yes, the new observatory hearing about it all over the news, all over as ubiquitous. The Vera Rubin Observatory has finally seen its first light, published astonishing images online for us astrogeeks to drool over. So pause the show right now if you haven't. Check them out. Check them out. The images come back. I'll wait. Okay, ready? Okay, let's drill down to the juicy details. First, of course, we need to describe the observatories namesake, Vericy Rubin, who I talked about way back in episode 520. I remember that. In 2015. So, yeah, 10 years ago, what is happening right now? Rubin was the first scientist to provide solid enough observational dark matter evidence for the scientific community to take it seriously. Look her up. She is a superhero of science. Okay, the observatory itself is located in Cerro Patron, a mountain in Chile. It was funded primarily by the National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy, Department of Energy's Office of Science. The instrument is incredible. Wow, I was so... It's just really taken aback by how wonderful this is. It's a tour de force of astronomer. Astronomer? Tour de force. It's a tour de force of astronomical observation. As Douglas Adams might have called it, it is a ballet of technology. It's camera, the LST CAM Imager is the largest digital camera in the world. Steve, what did your digital camera cost? My most recent one I just purchased was... Yes. Like $800? $800. That's nice. That's nice. But what could 168 million USD do? The LST CAM weighs three tons and captures images that are, get this, 3,200 megapixels. 3,200 megapixels. If you're interested, that's 3.2 gigapixels or .003 terapixels, which I think I've never said before. Steve, how many terapixels is your camera? Never mind, I'm only kidding. Each full-size image would fill this blue me way 378 4K screens. This is one image. That's amazing. The full-sized image. Now uncompressed, bam, 374K screens. Incredible. I hope they have a big display there so you can look at their images that way. Yeah, right. That would be amazing. Each exposure, each of these exposures covers 45 full moons worth of the sky. That's 9.6 square degree field of view. Astonishing. That's just immense. All right. So what's cool is, as that is, we're really just still getting started. These huge images can be taken fast. Essentially every 30 seconds, then it moves to the next location in a couple of seconds and bam, it's ready for the next image. So like basically 32 seconds and it's taken an image and it's ready for the next one. In this way, Ruben can image the entire southern night sky in three nights. Three nights to do the entire sky. That's pretty slick. So now researchers say that they describe this observatory as being built for the era of big data and automation. And so why do they say that? They say that because each of these huge images are sent over fiber optics to supercomputers in California, where the systems use AI to compare the images to previous images. And if anything's changed, like, for example, brightness or position, those are the two big ones, right? If that changes, an alert is then sent out to the interested parties. They're actually going to have these, what do they call them, like image brokers, where people will sign up for different types of these alerts that they're going to get. Hey, this thing changed. This thing that you're interested in the night sky, it has changed. Here's your alert. So give me a guess. How many alerts do you think that they anticipate every night? I mean, it doesn't depend on the threshold. No, they have, no, they don't mention anything about what the threshold is. But I mean, hard to say, but whatever, just throw out a number. How many each night? Thousand and one. One thousand. Oh, that's one more than I said. Ten million. Ten million. That's their anticipation. Ten million alerts are going to be sent out to these. Kind of makes the alerts pointless. Image. No, no, not at all. Because the thing is, nobody's going to subscribe to every alert. You know, they're going to say, this area of the sky or this galaxy, I want alerts that apply to this. So that it's going to be fantastic for those people that can be granular enough. And there are how many, most of them are going to be interested in specific areas or specific things. Like, like send me all alerts about supernovae. I assume that that's what you'll be able to do. So yeah, no one's going to get drowned in every and every damn alert. Because yeah, what's the point? So now all of this is amazing as all this is, of course, this is, this allows the observatory to fulfill its primary mission. Right. And this mission is called the Legacy Survey of Space and Time. For 10 years, this observatory will be taking an evolving time lapse of the cosmos. And this has never been possible before because they never, we've never been able to have us, you know, an observatory, a telescope that can take such high resolution pictures so fast and then move to the next one, then move to the next one. And then send those incredible files over to be analyzed and then have all those alerts sent. That infrastructure was just not in place. So and then to do that so fast that you could actually string together these movies. So you're going to be seeing movies of the evolution of like anything you could imagine in the universe that and how it has changed over time. I mean, I would love to go. If I had, you know, if I could get some relativistic time dilation going on, go 10, 10 years in the future. One of the top 10 or maybe top 20 things I would do is look at these videos because it's that is going to be amazing. Never been done before. This is the first time we've ever been able to really do this type of thing. Now, what are they going to detect? They're expected to detect over the course of 10 years, 20 million supernovas. And that, of course, includes the supernovae, supernovae 1A, the ones that we use as the standard candles that basically showed us the the expansion of the universe is accelerating. So those, of course, as well, plus all the other types of supernovae, the core collapse, my favorite, the core collapse supernovas and every flavor. Also 20 billion galaxies and so much more. I like also that Vera Rubin Observatory is going to essentially be taking an inventory of our solar system. It's going to catalog essentially every planet, every dwarf planet, every moon, every asteroid, every comet in the vicinity over and over until it has basically just filled up. Here's the contents. Here's the latest and greatest. Will it find rogue planets? Yeah, I did see some mention of rogue planets. But that's what I'm talking mainly right now about our solar system. But yeah, rogue planets that also can be identified. They said that they're going to identify 90 percent of the possibly hazardous asteroids over 140 meters. So that's encouraging. Although 90 percent was kind of a bomber to me. I mean, I'm thinking, oh, with this with this new observatory, you can't get that a little bit higher, maybe 95 percent, whatever, whatever. I'll be happy with 90 percent if that's the best they can do because it's that last 10 percent. That's a little scary. And of course, this is the the the Verreroobin Observatory. So they've got to honor her legacy. So they're also, of course, going to be mapping dark matter and also poking at dark energy while they're at it as two, of course. So please check out the images online. They're a real treat. I was just mesmerized looking at these immense images that they've already taken, zooming in, zooming out, just finding these awesome, awesome pinwheel galaxies. It's just amazing. So and I've only also scratched the surface of the technology here. There's so much going on here. I just it would have taken me a half hour to even to really cover it. So I go to rubinobservatory.org. There's a huge website ready to go, ready for you to go into any little nook and cranny of this of this technology that you'd be interested in. It looks it looks like a really cool site. I want to dig in deeper later on. But one other thing I wanted to cover. I'm sure many of you are wondering about the funding for the Verreroobin Observatory, given the current decimation we're seeing in science funding. So here's what I found out. The current administration's proposed budget for 2026 cuts the overall NSF budget by a ridiculous 56%. So I'm going to say that again. The proposal is to cut our National Science Foundation's budget by 56 F in percent. That's just 56% the National Science Foundation. All right, the little sliver of good news, I think from what I could tell right now, it seems that that rubin might not have a huge budget cut specifically for it in 2026. At least for that for next year, it might not have a huge cut, although it'll probably see a little sum of it. But many projects are going to be absolutely destroyed. And I got so mad. I just found out that LIGO, the gravitational wave detectors, they could see in the United States, because we have two LIGO detectors, I believe at this point, we could see 40% cut, a 40% cut. And the NSF has already said that one of our two LIGO observatories will have to be shut down, shutting down. I was just so livid when I read that. These machines are our only way to look into the cosmos that doesn't involve some type of electromagnetic radiation. You know, this is this is part of multi-messenger astronomy. It's revolutionary. It's already won Nobel Prizes. And no, let's just shut it down. OK, let's just do that. And and this is just this is just one. I haven't talked about it that much, but this is just one of the many disasters that's happening right now for science research in this country. And I'm just talking about science research. I'm not even talking about anything else. So that's where we are, people. This is awesome, right? So let's just just go to the next news item. I think I'm just going to get some coffee right now. All right, that's crap. All right, Evan, tell us about this new star in the sky. Now, we reserve our predictions that we made early in the year back in January. We save that until December every year. But however, one of my 100 percent money back guaranteed predictions has to do with my news item this week. And as Steve said, a new star has exploded into the night sky. Wait, what? Who? What? Where? When? Details. Oh, yeah. That's what he's about to give you. I'm about to give you. But before I give you the details, I want to know if anyone knows what the word for new star is, what do we call a new star? Nova. Nova. Very good, Bob. And this one. And Cara. And Cara. Very good. Thank you. Nova Loopy 2025 designated V462 Loopy located in the constellation Lupus. And here's the story. About two weeks ago, astronomers with the All Sky Automated Survey for Supernova, also known as the ASASSN Survey, spotted something strange. It was a faint star in the southern sky that suddenly started to get brighter. Hmm. So fast forward a few days and boom, you've got yourself a classic Nova. This happened on June 12th. That's when it was that's when the star was so faint, you could not see it with the naked eye. It was faint. But within about six days, June 18th, its intensity rose to the point of becoming visible, barely visible, but still visible. And since then, in these last few days, boom, it is now peaking at about four million times its original brightness. Whoa. That is turning the dial way up. If you ask me. Where is it exactly? It is in the constellation Lupus, which is in the southern sky, but is still visible from the northern hemisphere. If you're in a, you know, if you're if you're at the right part of the northern hemisphere and looking to the south and a couple of degrees above horizon at sunset, you can see it, but people in the southern hemisphere. How far away, Bob? Excellent question. I was going to say that to the end, but since you asked, let's ask, let's talk about it. They don't know. They do not know how far this is away. They're guessing right now and guesses range from 1500 light years away to almost 3000 light years away. And I don't know why they can't pinpoint it. That I didn't get that deep into the research. This is big, though, for one main reason, of course, is that this is in our galaxy. That is that's kind of huge because, you know, we've been experiencing for quite a long time a dearth of supernovae. They estimate that that each galaxy sees about one supernova a century. OK, so what they're saying is that Nova, OK, so different. And we're going to talk about this too. Nova appear roughly once a year or like once every 14 months. But a supernova is much more rare. In fact, the most recent visible eye Nova was 2013 going back. But the most recent supernova supernova visible 1987. You have to go back there. So it's quite a big difference. And what is the difference between Nova and supernova? Bob, you probably know Steve, you know, or Jay, Kara and size brightness. I'm sure there's threshold. Well, there's the classic is the core collapse supernova. So you got a giant star. But then there's also many different types of calcifications like supernovae like one A. That's the you know, the the the white dwarf that that collects matter from an like an orbiting star reaches critical mass. And then that's so that's recurring. You know, because because they don't. It can recur. Yes. But you can recur. But there are lots of different types. So how are they? Did they have a specific classification? So this particular Nova, Bob, this one is a white dwarf in a binary system. OK, that accumulates its hydrogen from its companion star. This is a super. This is a one A. Yeah, one A. Yep. Classic. They said classic Nova. So what happens is the white dwarf star is in this is described as in a tight cosmic tango with its companion star, the white dwarf, the white dwarf siphons off gas from its partner until it reaches a tipping point and then kaboom. A thermonuclear explosion erupts on its surface, blasting out energy and light. And that is the Nova that we can see. So to clarify, this is not a one A supernova. This is a classical Nova. They both involve a white dwarf, which is why they're confusion. But in a classical Nova, a white dwarf accumulates hydrogen on its surface. And then the hydrogen experiences runaway fusion causing the Nova. For one A supernova, it's different. The white dwarf accumulates enough matter to reach this the Chandra-Sekker limit. And then you get a core collapse. You get oxygen carbon fusion at the core. And in the one A supernova, the white dwarf is destroyed with no remnant. In a classical Nova, it's just the surface hydrogen that explodes. It's much less bright and it's not destructive and these things can happen over and over again. So this is a classical Nova, not a one A supernova, which is why they don't know how far away it is. Yeah, so I suppose they're still going to analyze it more and try to make a better determination. The range is pretty wide, right, you know, too wide right now to make a definitive statement on the on the distance. The star does not explode, though. Right. They said a Nova is like a stellar burp, violent, but not fatal. So it just burp, you know, basically outsourced its gas, its energy and its light does not destroy the star. But the supernova, Bob, on the other hand, that's the death of the star. And that's an enormous release of energy. Yeah, the core collapses. Yeah, core collapses. Life changing. It's the end of the life. You got you end up with a neutron star or a black hole or a magnet, you know, some flavor of neutron star. Like a magnetar would be very cool, but they're relatively kind of rare, but they're deadly 600 miles away. It wasn't 600 miles away. A magnetar would kill you. The magnetic field is so strong. Don't get too starved. Yeah, so don't get don't get too close to one of those if you can help it. Please don't. Plenty of plenty of cameras capturing the action. Telescopes as well. The G.O.T.O. Observatory or telescope. Mm hmm. Yep. Caught it has caught the entire process in the act. They're still watching it and it's like watching a magic night in slow motion in space. Very, very cool. It's most visible in the Southern Hemisphere. It can be seen in the Northern Hemisphere if you're at the right place. I can't see it from my house. I think I'm too far north. But they're saying Arizona, California, other places like that will have a much better opportunity to see it because it's going to be around for a little little while longer. The rest of this week, they say probably next week as well, but then it will start to to disappear from our visual view and go back to the way it was. So yeah, very cool. And they're hoping, you know, so again, this is remarkable, they say, for three reasons, it's visible to the unaided eye. And that's a occurrence that is rare and unpredictable. Second, they say it came with little or no warning showcasing the volatile nature of binary systems. And third, it adds to a growing catalog of transient sky events so we can undersk that underscore how dynamic the night sky really is. And I wonder what the Vera Rubin Observatory might have seen in all of this as well. To be continued, but very cool. And part of my prediction again for the year has already come true. Oh, yeah. So yeah, me. Didn't you say three or something? I did say three. Yeah, I did say three. One down, two to go. Exactly. I know, I'm very excited. I was I was I was really hoping I wouldn't be a total washout this year and be zero. So I at least have one under my thumb. That's true. Partially. I also have what is it? Is it Beetlejuice? Beetlejuice, yeah, but they're still keeping an eye on that. It'll be awesome. There are also a few others they say that have that are, quote, any day now, which mean, right, which means 10,000 years. It would prove my psychic powers are awesome. And I'll be able to charge a lot of money per hour. Prove something. All right. Tara is chat GPT riding our brains. Oh, I'm glad you asked. Let me ask you that. Just like that. So I want to talk about three things for this news item. The first one is the actual study, which was recently, I don't even want to say published, it was published in the archive, but it is not peer reviewed yet. So we have to keep that in mind. The second thing is, you know, well, the first thing is what the study found. The second thing is what the authors of the study are projecting. I guess there's a good way to put it are preliminarily claiming. And then the third thing is how the media is covering this because those are very very different things. So here is the actual paper. It is called Your Brain on Chat GPT, Accumulation of Cognitive Debt When Using an AI Assistant for Essay Writing Task. This was submitted June 10th, 2025 to the archive under Computer Science. And it is not yet peer reviewed as of a write up by the study authors on their website. One thing that was like, I got to say, like, I don't like this. And this is just me personally. I don't know how you guys feel about it, but they have a website dedicated to this study. It's getting a lot of buzz. And the website is it's kind of clean, easy. You know, it's not over the top or anything. But underneath one of the images from the article, it literally says as seen on salon New York Times Time, the New Yorkers, you know, like, like it's a product on Shark Tank or something. I do an advertisement for it. I don't like that. But yeah, it is getting a lot of write ups. So let's let's talk about because you're probably going to read about this. It's quite a trending topic right now. But some of those write ups do say things like chat. Each PT is rotting your brain, which in no way is what the authors say. So what did they actually do? Well, they took participants, not that many, 54 participants. And they did a study utilizing EEG where they divided the participants into three different groups and over the course of four months, they had them write an essay like an SAT style essay in one group. They were able to use chat GPT. They called that the LLM or large language model group. In another group, they were able to use a regular search engine like Google. And in the last group, they could only use their brains. They called that the brain only group. So they were given a tool, chat GPT, a search engine or no tool, their brain only to write this essay. And then they did three different sessions over the course of three months. In the fourth month, they took some of the brain only people, some of the LLM people, 18 in total, and they had them switch. So the brain only people wrote an essay using an LLM and the LLM people wrote an essay using only their brains. But Karen, did they write their essay? They did. South Park reference. I definitely remember that one. And so during the experience, they used EG, Electroencephalography, to look at brain activity. They describe this as an assessment of their cognitive engagement and their cognitive load. We have to remember that these are constructs, right? They can use the term cognitive engagement. They can use the term cognitive load, what they're actually looking at our brainwaves. And they they analyzed it to sort of see neural connectivity. They also asked them questions after they wrote the essays and they had both a human teacher and an AI judge, which was like a specially built AI agent, score their essays. And so collecting all of that data, let's see what they found, what they actually found. They found that the brain only group exhibited what they're calling the strongest brain connectivity with the widest ranging networks. So they were finding that more disparate parts of the brain were active together during the brain only group. Whereas the brain was less connected with less wide ranging networks in the LLM group. So they had what they called the weakest overall coupling. And in the middle, the search engine group kind of was like intermediate to that. They also found a couple of other interesting findings. They found that when they asked how well they felt like they owned the essay, like was that my work? Did I feel good about that? Did I feel strong about that? Obviously, the ownership was low in the LLM group. They found that both the search engine group and the brain only group had high senses of ownership over their essays. They also found that in just minutes after they completed their essays, when they asked them to quote things that they had written, the LLM group was significantly worse at that. But that all makes sense, right? Yeah. Yes. OK. So they then, oh, and then, of course, as I mentioned, that was across three months doing the same essay three different times. On the fourth month, they took 18, so a very small sample. And they did a swip swap and the brain only group used the LLM. The LLM group used only their brain. They found that the LLM to brain. So the ones that started by doing three essays using chat GPT and then they could only rely on the brain for the fourth essay, they showed, as they said, weaker neural connectivity and under engagement of alpha and beta networks. Whereas on the flip side, the brain to LLM participants had higher memory recall and re-engagement of large groups of the brain like across kind of a lot of architecture. So it looked more similar to the search engine group. These were their kind of findings. But they also draw some conclusions and to be fair to the authors. OK, first of all, if you guys have lots of questions, I would love to field them. I may direct you to the 206 page study because I can promise you I did not read it in full, but there is one section on page 141 where the authors talk about a finding that they consider preliminary, but a lot of people are citing it. They say, perhaps one of the more concerning finding is that participants in the LLM to brain group repeatedly focused on a narrower set of ideas, as evidenced by blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. This repetition suggests that many participants may not have engaged deeply with the topics or critically examine the material provided by the LLM. OK, to be expected. Then they said, when individuals fail to critically engage with a subject, their writing might become biased and superficial. This pattern reflects the accumulation of cognitive debt, a condition in which repeated reliance on external systems like LLMs replaces the effortful cognitive process is required for independent thinking. And then they talk more about cognitive debt, saying that it defers mental effort in the short term, but results in long term costs like diminished critical inquiry and increased vulnerability to manipulation, decreased creativity, all things that we in the skeptic community do not want to see. Right. The problem is their study doesn't show that. Yeah. But a lot of people wrote that their study shows that. And that's really disconcerting. If you do like a cursory search for MIT chat GPT study, you will find headlight headlines like MIT researchers say using chat GPT can rot your brain. MIT study finds chat GPT can harm critical thinking over time. Chat GPT use linked to cognitive decline. Researchers scan the brains of chat GPT users and found something deeply alarming. Is chat GPT making us dumb? But when you look at the actual press release that they put out, there's an FF and FAQ section and literally the first thing in the FAQ says, is it safe to say that LLMs are in essence making us dumber? And then the authors wrote, no, please do not use words like stupid, dumb, brain rot, harm, damage, passivity, trimming and so on. It does a huge disservice to this work as we did not use this vocabulary in the paper, especially if you are a journalist reporting on it. They specifically ask journalists not to do that. And there's so many write ups that do just that. So there is a good, but it actually bumps me out because they put brain rot in the title. But there is an interesting kind of hot take in the conversation written by some researchers from South Australia. Unfortunately, yeah, their headline is MIT researchers say using chat GPT can rot your brain. They did not say that. The truth is a little more complicated. And they argue that, of course, there's going to be limited engagement when using chat GPT compared to when only using your own brain. But they were saying that's not how you should use chat GPT. And they sort of use a an analogy to when calculators first came on the scene. They were saying early on when calculators first came on the scene, pedagogy had to change, right? And the way that we tested had to change because math teachers were like, if I want to test somebody's calculation abilities and they have a calculator, I'm not going to know if they're doing it themselves or if the machine is doing it for them. But what they started to learn is that we can just ask more complex questions that require the ability to use a calculator. Right. And so what they're saying is that this study basically asked people a basic calculation question and then said, how do you do it with and without a calculator instead of asking a more complex question and saying, how do you do that with and without a calculator? And that's really the difference. And that's really their argument here. And I think it's one that we all kind of echo. They say, current and future generations need to be able to think critically and creatively to solve problems. And AI is changing what these things mean, but producing essays with pen and paper is no longer a demonstration of critical thinking ability. Just as doing long division is no longer a demonstration of numeracy. Knowing when, where and how to use AI is the key to long term success and skill development, but they argue our educational system has to catch up and it's not. So right now it's a hack that a lot of students are using to offload the cognitive effort that is required to do a lot of the tasks that they've been given. But when used correctly, I do think that that chat GPT could be beneficial, but we do have to be careful because the one thing that's different here is that where their analogy breaks down is that graphing calculators always give you the right answer if you use them correctly. Whereas like chat GPT, you can't always trust what it's telling you is true. And so I think we have to think about that as well. Well, that's why you have to use them correctly as well. True, true. But the problem is nations are a thing, man. You got to be aware of that. But the problem is even the best computer scientists out there are probably not in agreement about how to use chat GPT correctly. Right. I mean, a lot of people are saying use your brain first and use chat GP as like a validation tool, but don't go in first saying answer me this or write me this paper and then go from there. But I can see the concern, right? I think I'm really sitting on both sides of this conversation that's happening online right now. I don't like how over the top a lot of the coverage is. But I do understand the alarm bells ringing. I didn't have this when I was in school. But Jay, for example, your kids are right at that age. This is going to be the tool that they use in school. How are they going to be able to use it appropriately? And how will it affect their cognitive development? Yeah, that's an important question to be asking. And we need a lot more research into that. And I think this is one of the early studies to tell us how thinking is affected when we have tools like this at our disposal. Yeah, it is interesting. I mean, clearly, people are lazy, but from an evolutionary point of view, meaning that we have a huge motivation for efficiency. Yeah, I was going to say, let's say efficient, not lazy. No, I mean, we're lazy in that evolutionary in a good way, I guess, in that we do crave efficiency. We will try to get things done with the least amount of effort. Short cuts. And we have a desire for simplicity, all these things. These are adaptive. They don't really work perfectly well in a complicated civilization that we have. And so you almost have to consciously do things the hard way just to do it, just to keep your skills up. You know what I mean? We could you could spend your entire life sitting on a couch, letting machines do everything for you. You know what I mean? But we do things like exercise, which is I mean, when you think about it, that's a hundred percent inefficient in terms of getting something accomplished. It's just for the physical activity. So we have to do like we do puzzles. We have chat, gpt to your homework and then do puzzles and play video games. But you know what I mean? It's like, yeah. And what is that? And I think that's really the main question is like, what is that balance? Because I see the sort of OK boomer argument on the other side too. I see it with my parents where they're like never using a GPS. Right. And they're like, I don't want to forget how to get there. And I'm like, you are describing. Yeah, I'm like, you are describing a skill you will need in a zombie apocalypse. I get it. If there is a big outage of all GPS, you will be ahead of the curve. That's great. But all of my adult life that has never applied. All right. I'm more than happy to rely on the GPS. I want to push back a little bit on that. Oh, interesting. Now, because like occasionally I will drive somewhere and deliberately not use GPS because it's not just that you need to be able to do it when you don't have GPS like a zombie apocalypse. It's also I just want to exercise my understanding of the terrain of the of the location of the streets. I don't want to be completely dependent on GPS and have like no idea where things are in relation to each other, which is what happens when all you do is just completely follow GPS and are not involved in the process. That's also I think kind of those are extremes. I often have my GPS up because I want to know if there's traffic and I want to know if there's a better route. But that doesn't mean I'm staring at my GPS the whole time I'm driving. When I'm going to work, my GPS is always up. I know how to get to work. You know what I mean? I'm not looking at my GPS. You're using it for other reasons. Exactly. There used to be a time though when we would say, you know, how do I get from here to there? Oh, you go down, go to the main road past the red brick house. And it's three buildings beyond that. Right. And that was good enough. You could navigate using that. That that that could never happen. Right. But then the argument here is. Am I somehow less capable of navigating my world and am I cognitively dulled or slowed because of my dependence on GPS? Or as you said, Steve, am I offloading that cognitive task so that I can focus on other cognitive tasks? And I think for a lot of people, that's the question. The problem with talking about chat GPT in an academic setting is that that's where we're learning how to learn. Right. Right. That's totally different than navigating the world after we've learned those like going to the gym and having a robot exercise for you. Exactly. So how do we then go to the gym and use the nice machine so that we can do the exercise we wouldn't have been able to do with just free weights? We use the free weights when they're appropriate. Use the machine so that we can get to even better muscle groups where we couldn't maybe do that specific thing without the with the free weights so that we're doing both. And that's going to be something that our our teachers, our professors, our researchers really need to prioritize for this next generation of children. But hey, if the end result of this is that education focuses on critical thinking rather than memorizing facts, I'm all for it. Me too. 100% And Steve, I'll just throw out there that you can do fitness that's not essentially not getting anything done. It's rare. I know it. Like I hear you. Yesterday. There's no. It's not like yesterday. You know, you know, the law and you doing I mowed the lawn with a 16 pound pound weight vest on and it was a hell of a workout, especially in this heat. Man, it was rough, but man, it felt good after when that was done. So if you can do that, that's great. But does not do any opportunities. I do yard work as my exercise often. You know, like in the summers. But you're right. Yeah, we are efficiency machines. So we've just got to make sure that we're not becoming so efficient that we're forgetting how to do the things that are actually foundational skills for all the other things we need to do in life. Right. Got to go analog sometimes. All right, Jay, it's who's that noisy time? All right, guys. Hello. Yeah. You guys want to hear last week's noisy? Yeah, let's hear it, please. Here it is. What do you think, guys? So I know exactly what that is. Is there a little layer to this that we're supposed to get or is it just the thing that it obviously is? I'm not telling you. Yeah, I don't know what that game space invaders. The arc it is. I mean, this one I did this one to make people of our generation smile because it's such a cool, like the the soundscape of that game was genius. It is genius because it has like a heartbeat and it gets faster. Yeah. And it causes tension. And, you know, it's so funny, like when in the beginning it's like, oh, this is so easy. And then like 30 seconds later, you're like, oh, my God. So I had some fun guesses. I mean, lots of people knew this. I got this is one of those times where I got a tsunami of emails. I finally know it. So Brad Beam wrote in and said, what's up, Jay? Oh, my God, is this noisy from math blaster zapping the trash to fill up the spaceship gas tank to catch the bad guy that hates math or something. So I had to look it up because math blaster rang a bell and math blaster is a 1983 educational video game and it was put out by a company called Learning Systems and created by Davidson and Associates. Very cool. I did check the game out. I absolutely played it, I think, because it looked very familiar to me. But it is not that, of course, you know, we did a reveal early, but it doesn't matter because everybody knows what it is. Another listener named Russell Moverly said, Yodel, J.E.O. Yodel, J.E.O. OK, I see what he did there. This week's noise, I can only be one of two things. Either it is the original sound effects for the demo version of Frogger or one of the stems from a new Skrillex song. Yeah, so this this has there is a little bit of a Frogger sound in here. If you know the game, like, yeah, has a little maybe a little bit of that. I mean, to me, it's so crystal clear what it is. But what I found was I got a lot of emails from people who were just referencing other games of that era, which is funny, because, you know, your memory is very faulty and the wires can get crossed. So another listener named Tom, Tom Howard wrote in, I'm pretty sure this week's noise is the old Tron game where they throw discs, the arcade cabinet makes you stand up at weird angles and it's very fun. It is not Tron, the two Drons to Tron games, the first one and discs of Tron were two of my favorite video games as a kid, by the way. But anyway, this is all of courses leading to the winner, the winner, Joe Lanandria. And Joe said, is this week's noisy? Not just space invaders. And I said, well, look, he guessed it. It was space invaders. I think he did what you did, Steve. Is it just, you know, we just got to guess space invaders. It was funny because a lot of people guessed like right when the show dropped. So Joe got on the jump there. So let me tell you about space invaders, guys. Back in the late 70s and early 80s, we had a unbelievably awesome thing happened. Cabinet video games with game rooms like took over, particularly here in the United States. There was so many games to play and they all cost a quarter. And you, you know, you begged money off your parents and you went and you basically got to play video games for a half hour or an hour until your money ran out, but man, was it fun. So space invaders was released in anybody want to guess the year? 1977, 78. I think it was created in 1977. Star Wars. It was released in 78 in Japan, published by a company called Tato, T-A-I-T-O. And then it was released overseas later that year by Midway, right? Midway is a name that a lot of people recognize. That game was huge. Midway was an enormous arcade company. Yeah, but it was an arcade company. I'm not going to pretend like I knew this. I'm just going to ask a question that after doing some reading, do you guys know what space invaders did that was unique and formative for video games? A joystick? That's a great guess, Kara. Space invaders. Ready? It was the first video game. Multi-colored. That's very... In terms of like money, how much money it made? It was a blockbuster video game. All good guesses. Well, it was a blockbuster video game, meaning it was highly loved and it was everywhere. It was here. It transformed the arcade video game, console video game. It was the beginning of it pretty much. It was the first. The first cabinet video game was Computer Space in 1971. But how many people? No, but Space Invaders was the first popular. Space Invaders was the first massively populated. Yeah. I think it was the first video game I played like arcade style. I probably say it for me. So wait, wait, I'm on pins and needles. What is it, Jen? All right, this is... I'm gonna... I really want you to understand this. It was the first game that had endless gameplay and it was the first fixed shooter. So the endless gameplay idea is that the game will continue to let you play forever if your skill can get that high. Does that go through with Space Invaders? Because there were limits on other games. Yeah, there was a limit on Tetris, I remember. The 255th screen, right? All that stuff. Let me take a look. This is what the Wikipedia page said. I'm trusting it. Let me tell you that I never got past the third freaking screen ever. You know what I mean? I love it. And they said it was the first fixed shooter and I wasn't 100 percent sure what that is. I can actually click this link here and see. Wikipedia says shoot them ups, also known as schmups. Oh, my God. Are a subgenre of action games. There is no consensus as to which design elements compose a shoot them up. Some restrict the definition to games featuring spacecraft and certain types of character movement. OK, so I get it. Oh, yeah, it's it's the screen is usually fixed. It doesn't scroll. OK, yeah. The screen is the screen. It's yeah, right. It doesn't ever change. It's just a new group of bad guys shows up on the screen. Galaga. Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah, Jay, according to what I'm seeing here, the game does not have a quote kill screen. In other words, where some other arcade games do have an end, even though they do generally, you can't usually get play to the end. But apparently Space Invaders doesn't have it. You can go infinitely with it. If you're still there, there are actually console games that you can win. You could actually the game will say you won. You know, there's a lot like that. Yeah. So I'm going to say something to the people out there. If you are of my generation or not, find a local, find a local retro arcade near you. And very likely that there's one within an hour of your house and go spend a few hours at the arcade because the smell of those machines and that just a whole ergonomic experience to me is just freaking amazing. As to this day, whenever I get behind one of the old arcade machines and I get to play, I'm like riveted, you know, we got to do that in Arizona. You guys remember? Yes, of course. That bar was awesome. Yeah, super fun. All right, I have a new noisy for you guys. Good job, everybody. And I mean everybody. My God, so many people. I got to the point where I just had to stop looking at the emails. OK, I got a new noisy for you guys. Well, how about that? That's what you get, man. You knew you knew you'd be inundated with that one. I got to throw one of those out there every once in a while. I want people to feel like, you know, that they're not listening. Everybody. Man. My God, damn, Steve. Holy Christ. OK, here we go, guys. This noisy was sent in by a listener named Bradford West and check this out. I will tell you that the the noises that start and end the video, you should pay attention to those as well. If you guys think you you know what that noisy is or you heard something cool, email me at WTN at the skeptics guide.org. Also, guys, if you if you enjoy the work that we do and you want to support us going forward, you know, we have our new projects and we plan to increase the size of the S to use footprint and it's a great time to become a patron and to give us some support, even a tiny bit can help. Go to patreon.com forward slash skeptics guide. You can also join our mailing list. We have consistently been sending out a weekly mail or lots of fun. We. Yes, absolutely. We spike out the things that we did here at the SGU over the last week. There's other fun things going on in there. Ian and I might be working on a secret project that I'll tell you all about because it's not a secret. Basically, I'm trying to create a weekly SGU puzzle game that is going to go in the email. So I'm coming up with ideas. If you have any ideas, you can email me at info at the skeptics guide.org. I do have a couple of things I'm narrowing down to, but I'm still completely open. You know, if you have any cool ideas, just email me and if you if we use your idea, I'll give you credit. And also we will be in Kansas on September 20th of this year. And during that day, we will be doing two shows. We'll be doing a live SGU recording, probably some time around noon, and we will be doing a skeptical extravaganza of special significance. This is our stage show. Both of those shows will include George Robb. The stage show is an hour and a half to an hour and 45 minutes of lots of different things we talk about. Essentially, it has a science backbone to it. The entire show does. We talk about how your brain can fool you. And then everything else is improv by the SGU. We have all these different things that we do. And it's a ton of fun. We get amazing feedback on the show and we deserve it because we've been we've been shaping the show for over a decade. So we've refined the hell out of it. We know exactly what we're doing and it's a ton of fun. If you want to come check us out, you can go to the skeptics guide.org and there will be buttons on the homepage. All right, thank you, Jay. We're going to do a name that logical fallacy. Haven't done one of those in a while. This comes from a question come from Alex Smith and Alex writes, I'm currently attempting a through hike of the Pacific Crest Trail. And I'm in the Sierra's currently and it is recommended that people can try and ice axe for the snowy areas so people can self arrest if they fall. I have heard a lot of people say they won't bring an ice axe into the Sierra's because they don't know how to use it anyways. This feels like they are mostly trying to give in themselves that they don't need to spend the money on an ice axe and they don't need to carry the extra weight. But this argument of I don't want to bring it because I don't know how to use it feels like a logical fallacy to me. Though it is true that there are more effective ways to use an ice axe than others. It does feel like its main use is relatively simple in its design. Then it comes up with an analogy about a personal flotation device and people are not trained how to use it. They would rather not use it at all if they can't use it perfectly. And he wants to know what logical fallacy this is. So I definitely think there's a logical fallacy in there. Although remember these are informal logical fallacies. They're totally context dependent and you can come up with examples where it's reasonable to say that you don't want to use something because you don't know how to use it and there are situations where it is a logical fallacy. So if this is a logical fallacy, which one do you think it is? I don't want to go because I haven't learned how to use the thing or I don't want to bring the things I haven't learned how to use the thing. Yeah. Well, like I can't use this perfectly, so I'm not going to use it at all. The perfect, the enemy of the good, whatever that's called. Yeah, yeah, that kind of sets it up a little bit easier. So that's the nirvana fallacy. Yes. Yeah, which is the perfect is the enemy of the good or the good enough. The idea that why can't use this perfectly. So why should I use it at all? And I think he may be right in that. OK, sure. You may not know how to use an ice axe. I guess the idea is that if you're slipping on the ice, you can use it to slow your fall, right? You jam it into the ice and it slows your fall. It does seem pretty straightforward. But I would I would point out that this can be a legitimate argument in certain contexts because sometimes not knowing how to use a device might mean that you're actually will hurt yourself if you use it. You're more likely. Yeah, like yeah, to cause a bazooka. Right. Like being armed in a school. So what we actually there was a study we talked about on this show where people who confronted a brown bear with a gun were more likely to be killed than people who didn't have a gun. And again, not that there aren't some people who are like our hunters and have the right kind of gun and know what they're doing. False sense of security. For a lot of people, if you don't know how to use a gun or you don't have the right kind of gun, having it actually increases your chance of getting killed because you're just going to piss it off. Well, it's two things there. Evan, I think you're right, too. It can give you a false sense of security and you may engage in riskier behavior. There's that too. You may get closer to the bear than you should because you're like, I have a gun. I'll be fine. Yeah. Right. So I don't know. I mean, I would need to talk to an expert. You need topic expertise to know what using an ISACs without training. Does that have come with the risk of hurting yourself or making the situation worse? Or will people be engaged in more risky behaviors? Because, hey, I got the ISACs. If I do fall, it doesn't seem totally implausible that that might be the case. But you would need either some topic expertise or we would need specific evidence to really know. But if you are saying this isn't perfect, so I'm not going to do it at all, even when that's not the correct formulation of risk versus benefit, that is the nirvana fallacy. Or this is useless because it's not perfect. You know, like vaccines don't save 100% of people, so they're worthless. Why get that? Yeah. That's the nirvana fallacy. Yeah. All right, guys, let's go on with science or fiction. It's time for science or fiction. Each week I come up with three science news items or facts, two real, one fake. And I challenge my panel of skeptics to tell me which one is the fake. We just got three regular news items this week. Are you guys ready? Yep. All right. Item number one, scientists have discovered a new organelle inside human cells. They are calling the hemifusome. I number two, researchers have been able to genetically engineer immune cells to produce a protein that induces long term dormancy in HIV. And I number three, a recent graph of marine biomass over time shows that total biomass is mostly stable over geological time punctuated by mass extinctions and later return to the longer term baseline. Bob, go first. New organelle, that's a fascinating possibility. And I would think quite rare at this day and age, but just too cool. I hope it's true and I hope it's amazing. Number two, let's see, genetic engineer immune cells to produce a protein that induces long term dormancy in HIV. I mean, it seems reasonable to think that we would be, that would be doable at this point. They made so many amazing advances with drugs for HIV. I mean, and now with genetic engineering, we're just becoming so good at it. So this is, it seems reasonable. So let's look at this last one here. Marine biomass, total biomass is stable. Interesting. Over geological time and then mass extinctions and later return to, I mean, so this is a little bit worthy. So I'll explain what do you want to say? So they looked at 500 million years, right? So basically over the last 500 million years, if not the number of species or the number of whatever, just the total biomass of things in the ocean, right? The marine biomass has been roughly stable and not punctuated by the mass extinctions. I mean, superficially, that sounds reasonable, that all the niches would were basically filled without dramatic changes. I mean, it sounds reasonable, but they all sound pretty decent. Something's rubbing me wrong, though, about this biomass one, though. I could kind of see that this is just like, oh, no, this is all baloney. It's not stable over geologic time and change. So I'm just going to say that that one's fiction. OK, Kara. Biomass fiction. Yeah, I mean, I think that the New Organelle, I mean, it's really interesting that in, I mean, I don't know if it was this year or last year, but that we have to like make new models for all the classrooms. Oh, yeah. The same since like the 70s. So I mean, it's pretty cool. I don't know what a hemifusome would do. Something about half. A flood? Yeah, I like it. I don't know. But we'll see. So that's cool. Then so it's kind of between the HIV long term dormancy, which I guess I think that there are dormancy proteins and I mean, part of me is like, why would they? Of course, they would engineer them for people because like most of our treatments aren't really like most of the research it looks like right now is about prevention. You know, I think that there was just a twice annual shot that was released. Like how cool is that? Yeah, that's great. Prevent contracting HIV. But of course, a lot of people already have HIV. And so how can we ensure longer, healthier lives? That would make sense. That's pretty cool. And then the marine biomass mostly staying stable. That's such a hard one. Like was there a time when it exploded because of like the Cambrian explosion or something, I mean, 500 million is not that long ago, though. Or was there a time? Well, I guess mass extinctions don't count here because you're saying it's punctuated by mass or like has it been getting has it been dwindling because of overfishing lately? I don't know. I feel like there's probably some sort of trend that I don't know about. So yeah, it just seems the least likely to me or the other two seem more likely. So I'll go with Bob. Go with Bob. OK, Jay. Yeah, it's funny. You guys are in referencing the biomass one in the ocean. That one seems like science to me. I mean, Bob, you said it, like once all of those nooks and crannies in the ocean have been filled, you know, I look at the ocean almost like it's a singular living organism, right? And there's just a certain amount of creatures that live there. The ocean has a robust ecosystem and food chain. And also like, you know, crazy stuff, in my opinion, doesn't happen in the ocean like it happens on land. I just think it's more stable. I don't know. For some reason, I want to take a walk out on a ledge here, guys, and say that one is science. The New Organel, to me, I agreed with what Bob said, like, you know, really, like today they found that I would more think that if they if they they discovered a New Organel, it might mean that they figured out how the system works better inside the cell. And they're like, oh, actually, these three things are should be considered one organ, maybe, you know what I mean? I'm just throwing that idea out there as what that could be. Being able to genetically engineer the immune cells to produce the protein that pretty much puts HIV to sleep. That seems legit. I mean, we have CRISPR guys, you know? So I think that's science. And I think the ocean one is science. I'm going to go with the organelle as the fiction. OK, and Devin. Oh, the organelle. I don't know what I thought maybe is that it's not so much that maybe they discovered a New Organelle, but rather they've identified something in a cell that they used to think was part of something else. But it actually turns out it's its own thing. A redefinition. You know, they all of a sudden, hey, we didn't notice this before and all of a sudden this is here. So maybe a kind of a reclassification is that considered a discovery of a New Organelle that might technically qualify for that. The one about the HIV, I agree with everyone that that one is going to be science. Sure, genetically engineering immune cells. Why not? That tends to be science more often than not when we talk about that. Incredible. And the last one about the biomass, no idea, right? How do you quantify it? Do you have who? How do you really know? And yeah, geez, that's a specialty unto itself. That one gives me the least bit of confidence. I'll join Kara and Bob and say that that one's the fiction. OK, so you guys all agree on the middle one. So we'll start there. Researchers have been able to genetically engineer immune cells to produce a protein that induces long term dormancy in HIV. You all think this one is science and this one is science. All right. Cool. So far. Good. Why would they want to do this? Didn't we just talk about the fact that we're trying to bring HIV out of dormancy so that we could then target it with anti HIV, like anti retroviral drugs? Well, they try all sorts of things, Steve. You know, it's like a permanent dormancy. Then hey, man, then if it's not going to affect you, it's not going to affect you. Yeah, yeah, kind of works both ways. Right. Yeah. So and that's the idea. But it would have to like really put it into it like it's out of commission now for the rest of your life sort of thing would be very effective. Because when it's dormant, it's not reproducing. It's not transmissible. Right. So it's basically who cares. But the only thing is it could be reactivated at some point in the future. And the advantage here is that because they're basically engineering the host's immune cells to make the protein, it's not like you have to take drugs for the rest of your life as long as the guess it would survive for as long as those immune cells survive. But if you can get this or the CD for positive cells, or if you could, I guess, get, you know, make these changes into the stem cells so that from that point forward, you're going to be producing cells that make the protein. This is a proof of concept. Obviously, this is not like a treatment. They just wanted to say, hey, you know, would this work? If we made this specific protein, which is, you know, which they know has been associated with dormancy and HIV, it's actually made by the HIV itself. It's the AST is the name of the protein HIV anti-sense transcript. But what if we make it ectopically, like make it outside, let the HIV isn't producing it, just the immune cells that the HIV is infecting or are making it with that work and they show that it does work. That's interesting. I feel like that could be another different approach to shingles, too. Because isn't that what happens with chicken pox? Is it's like dormant? It's dormant, then it becomes activated. And then it becomes activated. So again, basic science, interesting. See if it leads to anything, but it seems very plausible that it could. All right, let's go to number three. A recent graph of marine biomass over time shows that total biomass is mostly stable over geological time punctuated by mass extinctions and later return to the longer term baseline. Bob, Kara and Evan, you think this one is fiction? Jay, you think this one is science? So this is a very interesting question, isn't it? You know, you could kind of make sense of it both ways. And Jay, I think, had some really good points. Once you fill up the oceans, that's it, right? Why would it change except something big happening like a mass extinction? And this is interesting that this is the first time we've really been able to do this because this was a Herculean study to do. You have to think about it. You have to find some way to quantitatively estimate the total biomass, marine biomass over different points of geological history. They basically had to count shells and stuff in different strata and try to estimate the biomass based upon that. Well, this one is the fiction and is a fiction. What do you think the study did find? There was a change or more. Yeah, obviously. What was the trend? What was the trend over 500 million years? Yeah, a slow increase over time. Yeah, I would say if it's slow increase, if it was fast decrease, if it was only like within the last 500 million years, it's basically since multi-cellular life was established. Yeah, it was probably an increase. If there's a huge change in the last 500 years, I would say it was a decrease. It's been steadily increasing over geological time, which is really interesting. And they think that's why do you think that's happening? They don't know from the study. This is just showing that that's what was happening. But what would they more some sort of gas, more food available? Yeah, or gas like oxygen or something in the water. They think it's because of evolution that life is just becoming more efficient. Right. As it's evolving, it's getting it's able to fill up the the the resources, the space more effectively, more efficiently. Right. The ecosystems are getting more complex. And that's cool. Yeah, that's just it. They think it's just an epiphenomenon of evolution. It's a greater sort of overall efficiency in the ecosystem. Yeah, which is really fascinating, which means that scientists have discovered a new organelle inside human cells. They are calling the Hemi-Fusome is science. Cool, man. What was it? Was it like a group of things or like? We're going to call it metachlorians, but that was taken away. Yes. Well, no. Only by a bad movie. So it fuses things. It does. Yeah, if uses half of things. But the first one they say that the reason that this was recently discovered is because when you think about it, we're looking at cells. We're using mainly electron microscopy. We're seeing slices of cells that are static. We're not seeing them necessarily in life. There are other forms of microscopy where you can do that, but not in as much detail. And so they were just missing stuff that was happening like the activity of these Hemi-Fusomes, so it was really they were identified by their activity, right? Which it's hard to see. Then they were able to find them. Yeah, but they were able that they were able to see enough of them that they were able to identify them and what they do. So basically what they do is they're the recycling center in the cell. They are involved in sorting, recycling and disposing of debris, of like protein debris. Are they free floating? Yeah, they attach to another organelle. No, I think they're just in the cytoplasm there. So whereas like a what's it called like a lysosome would like take in stuff and just get rid of it. These reuse the stuff. So they're like, this protein got to get rid of it. This one over here, we need to recycle it. Put it back into the cycle there. And this one needs to go over there to do whatever it's going to do. So it's basically just this recycling center inside the cell where it's just sorting through the different bits of debris and figuring out what to do with them. That's interesting. So it connects to a lot of other parts of the cell. It's like this transfer station. Oh, and now it makes that I'm just googling it too. It's characterized by the Hemi-Fusion of two different vesicles. Yes. Right. So it forms a structure with a membrane between that's cool. Yeah, I guess I was like, why would you need to know this step was necessary? Right. So they felt that just things just went to where they were supposed to go to that realize it was like all being managed by this organelle. Yeah, that's interesting because we've we've known about lysosomes for a long time. That's just like that's like throwing it away. So the other thing is that this may be the cause of some diseases. Right. And so if you don't know something exists, you can't possibly know that it's the cause of a disease. And so now we can say ask this question of is this disease of which we know is a protein problem in cells? Is this a problem with the Hemi-Fusomes? Is this something that we could now figure out and treat? So obviously this is very basic science, but this is what creates the potential for translation into some kind of a treatment. And there's already diseases on the short list that the thing this might be playing a role in. So pretty cool. Yeah, that caught my eye and caught my eye. Like really, we're discovering organelle now. Like those things that happen much later than you think. You haven't discovered all these already. It's like, yeah, we discovered a new planet within our solar system, you know, within the Kuiper Belt. That would be surprising. All right, well, good job, guys. Hey, Steve. Yeah, I just played a game of Space Invaders. Yeah, how'd you do? I am worse now than I was when I was a kid. Sure. Oh, yeah. It's not like right. You're playing on like an emulator? Yeah, I just found one. I just thought, hey, why don't I check it out? And it's I'm like, I'm telling you, like, what the hell happened to my reflexes? I actually think sometimes and maybe I'm maybe I'm wrong here, but I have an emulator for NES and I play NES games a lot. And I wonder if the reason it feels like I'm off sometimes when I'm playing Tetris or Dr. Mario is actually because we've gotten better at matching our emotions to our eyes and back then there was a lag, but we were so used to the lag that that felt normal to us. Does that make sense? Video games now are faster than video games were back then. They're also three dimensional. That's true. Yes. But I am I am curious if that's the case even with an emulator. Like, is the reason that it feels like, wait, I why isn't it working? Is because we're actually ahead instead of the behind that we were used to being in the 80s and 90s. Yeah, I mean, you're still a little bit young, Kara, at 60. Yeah, our reflexes are objectively slower than they were when we were 20. I mean, that's just a fact of life. Yeah. Well, and also, Jay, you haven't played it in a while. Yeah. Yeah. But again, I wasn't good then either. Good call. Cost you a quarter then. But I still feel like I could play a video game extremely well and keep up with kids. So though it's always hard to know because like we were talking about this this past weekend, like I play a game called Overwatch, which is player on player, right? And it's 100 percent skill. Like there's every body could play the same characters. But there's inside the game, everyone is a level playing field. So the only difference is the player skill. There are some players who are so much better than I am. It's amazing. Professional over but is that because they're putting they're sinking thousands of hours into this game? Yes, it's everything, Steve. It's kids, thousands of hours. It's Steve, don't forget people cheat at these games too. Maybe they also have really good gear. I'm just using my optimized. But at the same time, I can hold my own. I could totally hold my own with most players. You know, anyway. But unfortunately, if you look at the research, our nerves are literally slower. Good news, though, Steve. In two days, you will have so much time to get better at that game. Oh, my gosh, you'll have Overwatch all day, all night. You know that Steve's fully in when he starts wearing Overwatch t-shirts. All right, Evan, give us a quote. What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning. Oh, yes, love that quote. Werner Heisenberg. Yeah, I said, yes, the best person to come out with that quote. I mean, right, is that not Heisenberg in a sentence? Right there. You know, is it a particle or is it a wave? What depends how you interact with it, my friend. I'm tired of hearing that. It's a good reminder, though. I'm so sick of quantum mechanics. That's right. Oh, that quote was from Einstein. I'm so sick of this stuff. Come on, now. Can we talk about Space Invaders or something? Not that Heisenberg guy. Well, Steve, congratulations, man. Congratulations, dude. I'm so proud of you. Finish line. SGU version two, man. Yeah, I'm looking forward to it. And guys, especially those of us on the east coast, stay cool out there. We're in the middle of an epic heat wave. Yeah, it's supposed to break soon. Yeah, definitely. Well, you don't get triple digits in Connecticut. Yeah, it's unusual. It's trending up, you know, I mean, we're just waiting for the world to end and nobody's doing anything. Summer is only a couple days old. All right. Well, thank you all for joining me this week. You two, brother, thank you. And until next week, this is your Skeptics Guide to the Universe. And consider becoming a patron and becoming part of the SGU community. Our listeners and supporters are what make SGU possible.