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Part of a brain organoid, in which stem cells (pink) are differentiating into neurons (purple).Credit: Steve Gschmeissner/Science Photo Library
Biocomputer recognizes voices
A computer that combines laboratory-grown human brain cells with conventional circuits can complete tasks such as voice recognition. Researchers trained the system on 240 recordings of eight people speaking. A machine-learning algorithm decoded the mini brain’s neural activity pattern to identify voices, with 78% accuracy. The technology could one day be integrated into artificial-intelligence systems or used to study neurological disorders.
Reference: Nature Electronics paper
Critics question ‘self-driving lab’
Last month, scientists demonstrated the A-Lab, an autonomous chemistry system that can synthesize new materials without human intervention. Critics have now raised concerns about its ability to analyse the results and have questioned whether it really made 41 new compounds. “To me, this doesn’t invalidate the A-Lab concept, but it shows that there is considerable work still to do on the autonomy aspects,” says chemist Andy Cooper. Two critics’ teams are now collaborating to check the paper’s claims in more detail.
How CRISPR could help treat Alzheimer’s
CRISPR gene editing could one day treat Alzheimer’s disease caused by genetic mutations. “CRISPR therapies could potentially be a one-and-done cure, which no other drug can match,” says neuroscientist Subhojit Roy. In a proof-of-concept experiment, cultured human cells were edited to cut out a faulty version of a gene that produces a toxic protein. For now, gene editing in the brain remains difficult and potentially risky. “Gene editing is not always perfect,” says neuroscientist Tara Spires-Jones. “There could be off-target effects including mutations in healthy genes or damage to entire chromosomes.”
Reference: Nature Neuroscience paper
Features & opinion
Is cannabis bad for teens?
Ten years after cannabis was first legalized for recreational use by adults, there’s still little concrete guidance about the drug’s risks to young people. “I am concerned that this will hit us like tobacco hit us,” says Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute on Drug Abuse. Research has uncovered links between cannabis use and schizophrenia, but it’s unclear whether the association is causal. There are now large-scale efforts to understand how prolonged cannabis use, especially of high-potency products, can affect mental health or cognitive function. “I would just like to have information for the teens and for the adults to make better decisions for themselves,” says Krista Lisdahl, co-leader of a project investigating the cognitive development of some 10,000 young people that began in 2015.
The unsung pioneers of sleep and dreaming
For a long time, we understood little about sleep and dreaming — until a tight-knit band of researchers changed things. In Mapping the Darkness, journalist Kenneth Miller recounts how the field started with a seemingly simple question: why do humans need to sleep, at the expense of other, more obviously productive activities? Trying to answer this and other questions, sometimes against considerable odds, eventually led to treatments for sleep apnoea, narcolepsy and insomnia. “Although this book is about sleep science, it also pays tribute to the pioneers who were first unafraid to ask what lies in the darkness,” says reviewer and sleep researcher Jennifer Martin.
‘I thought, what the heck is this?’
For chemist Louis Brus, a winner of this year’s Nobel Prize in Chemistry, the path to the award started with an unexpected signal in the absorption spectra of cadmium sulfide crystals. “There was this bump on the edge of the band gap that was not present in the large crystal, in the bulk material. And I thought, what the heck is this?” Eventually, the theory was the easy part, says Brus — but synthesizing nanoparticles was fiendishly difficult. “We didn’t quite understand why it worked some days and not others,” he says.
Nature Nanotechnology | 11 min read
Where I work

Sthabile Kolwa is an astronomer at the University of Johannesburg in South Africa.Credit: Chris de Beer-Procter for Nature
“When I was 12, I became intrigued by the mystery of black holes,” says astronomer Sthabile Kolwa. “I wondered whether one day I could develop theories or make observations with powerful telescopes that would help to explain what black holes are and what happens inside them.” They have come some way towards fulfilling their childhood dream: Kolwa is now researching black holes and star formation using South Africa’s MeerKAT radio telescope. (Nature | 3 min read)
