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January 03 2012
The Suit That Makes You Feel 75 Years Old

And reeeach for the shredded wheat…
Pregnancy suit, meet age suit. Just as scientists in Japan made a suit full of balloons, warm water, and accelerometers to give men a sense of what pregnancy feels like, scientists at MIT have put together a suit that simulates being in one’s mid-70s. But it’s a little easier to see the applications with this one. By 2030, 20% of the American population will be over the age of 65, and if you think these folks are going to willingly weather a world designed by and for hyperactive 26-year-old yoga enthusiasts, well, you’ve got another think coming. By putting on this suit, architects, store designers, and other professionals preoccupied the how people interact with the physical world with can get a sense of old age is like, and design accordingly.
And what does old age feel like? According the folks at MIT’s Age Lab, where the suit was developed, like having giant rubber bands keeping your limbs from fully extending, braces that make your arms stiff, a helmet that makes your spine curve uncomfortably, and glasses that make small print hard to read, among other impairments. Just ...
April 07 2011
Scientists Say: Shop So You Don’t Drop. Discoblog Says: We Don’t Buy It
Sex. Dark chocolate. Nintendo’s Wii. It seems like most anything can be correlated with health and longevity nowadays. Now, some researchers want to add shopping to that list, after they saw a possible link between daily shopping and death age. Not everyone agrees, though, with this “shop so you don’t drop” mentality (surprise!).
In the study, published by the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health, the researchers followed nearly 2,000, independently living, Taiwanese citizens who were at least 65 years old. The researchers gathered their shopping habits by looking at a 1999-2000 survey that evaluated how often these Taiwanese geriatrics shopped, and then they used national death registries to keep track of the study groups’ deaths until 2008. After correcting for age, gender, health, ethnicity, financial status, and other factors, the researchers discovered that daily shoppers were 27% less likely to kick the bucket than their less shop-happy peers (aka those who shopped only once a week or less). Oddly enough, the best shopping-related survival record goes to the men, who reduced their chances of dying by 28% by shopping; women who shopped daily ...
December 09 2010
Aging Kazakhstan President Asks His Scientists to Find Fountain of Youth
After almost twenty years in office and 70 years on earth, Nursultan Nazarbayev, Kazakhstanian president, is hoping his country can come together to overcome one last hurdle. He needs the country’s scientists to find him the fountain of youth.
In a speech to students of the newly dedicated Nazarbayev University, a new education and research institution in the Kazakhstan capitol of Astana, the president made clear that he is looking to the researchers to provide him with eternal life, says The Guardian:
The 70-year-old leader stressed in a speech that a new scientific research institute in the capital Astana should study “rejuvenation of the organism,” as well as “the human genome, production of human tissue and creation of gene-based medicines”.
Of course, who wouldn’t want to live forever when they have a country that they rule–for life. He said back in October that he would be the country’s president until at least 2020 if his old bones can take it, says The Guardian:
“Maybe, then, you’ll offer me an elixir of youth and energy – maybe you have such potions in Korea … I’m willing to go on until 2020, just find me an elixir.”
It seems like aging is something the ruler has been worried about for a while. In October of 2009 The Guardian quotes him as saying:
“One important subject is anti-ageing, or the study of prolongation of life,” he told an audience at the Kazakh national university in Almaty. “However difficult such investigations are, these questions must be resolved sooner or later. Why shouldn’t our scientists take on this task? Would it not inspire our Kazakh youth who are now living through the great moments of passion?”
And The Guardian dug up yet another statement from a month earlier:
“Anti-ageing medicine, natural rejuvenation, immortality,” he mused to a government science committee in September last year. “That’s what people are studying these days.” He added: “Those who do are the most successful states in the world – those who don’t will get left on the sidelines.”
In fact, Harvard researchers were recently able to turn back the biological clock on prematurely aged mice. Maybe immortality is just around the corner… but probably not in this leader-for-life’s lifetime.
Related Content:
Discoblog: Kazakh Prez Brags That His Capital Is So Cold That It’s Germ-Free
Discoblog: Hugo Chavez: “Any Cloud That Crosses Me, I’ll Zap It So That It Rains”
Discoblog: S.O.S.: Global Warming Will Submerge My Country, President Says
Discoblog: Doctors Stumped by 16-Year-Old With Toddler’s Body, Brain
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Rapamycin – the Easter Island drug that extends lifespan of old mice
Not Exactly Rocket Science: Low-calorie diets improve memory in old age
Visual Science: Commuting Between Kazakhstan & the International Space Station
DISCOVER: Can We Cure Aging?
Image: Flickr/d. billy
November 11 2010
Your Next Sponge Bath May Come From a Robot Named Cody
A team at Georgia Tech is looking to replace your sponge bath nurse with this sexy beast to the right. No, not the girl. The sponge bath robot next to her, named Cody. He’s the one that wants to wipe you down with his delicate towel hands.
The robot was developed by researcher Charles Kemp’s team at the Healthcare Robotics Lab, and was described in a presentation and accompanying paper (pdf) at the International Conference on Intelligent Robots and Systems.
The robot uses cameras and lasers to evaluate the human’s body, identifying dirty spots, then gently wipes with its towel hands, making sure not to apply too much or too little pressure. It has flexible arm joints with low levels of stiffness to make sure that it doesn’t push too hard.
Study coauthor Chih-Hung (Aaron) King put himself in the tester’s spot for the robot’s first rubs. He relived the experience for Hizook:
“As the sole subject in this initial experiment, I’d like to share my impressions of the interaction. In the beginning I felt a bit tense, but never scared. As the experiment progressed, my trust in the robot grew and my tension waned. Throughout the experiment, I suffered little-to-no discomfort.”
Hit the jump for a video of the bot rubbing on King:
An interesting note about robots performing this kind of task: They are the ones that initiate human-robot contact. It may not seem like a big deal, but being in the receiving position of a robot-induced sponge bath might be a little unnerving, King explained to Hizook:
“The tasks performed in this experiment involved the robot initiating and actively making contact with a human. This differs from most (current) research on human-robot contact, which is initiated by humans rather than robots. It would be interesting to study how the general population, specifically patients, would react to such robot-initiated contact. Indeed, the psychological impact of robot-initiated contact may become important for future human-robot interaction (HRI) research.”
Meanwhile, we can’t make up our minds: Would it be more unnerving having Cody wipe you down than it would be embarrassing to have a human nurse or loved one do it?
Related content:
Discoblog: Robot, Build Thyself: Machine Made of Lego Builds Models Made of Lego
Discoblog: Helpful Robot Can Play With Your Socks
Discoblog: Origami Robot: Don’t Bother, I’ll Fold Myself
Discoblog: Punching Robot Totally Breaks Asimov’s First Rule
80Beats: A Robot With Beanbag Hands Learns the Gentle Touch
DISCOVER: The Robot Invasion Is Coming—and That’s a Good Thing
Image: Travis Deyle/Hizook Video: Georgia Tech Health Robotics Lab
October 25 2010
Einstein & Air Miles: Do Frequent Fliers Age at a Different Rate?
You’re squeezed into a middle seat, two rows from the back of the plane. It’s barely two hours into your cross-country flight, though you’d swear it’s been longer. Does it just seem like the minutes of your trip are crawling by — or does time actually pass more slowly for people who are mid-flight than for people on the ground?
Many of us have heard the idea that time doesn’t pass at the same rate for everyone. It’s a common narrative in science fiction, one that has its roots in Einstein’s theory of relativity. The story starts, let’s say, with two twins, one of whom stays on Earth while the other clambers aboard a rocket that’s making a round-trip journey, at a substantial fraction of the speed of light, to a planet in a not-too-distant solar system. When the traveling twin returns to earth, he’s aged more slowly, and now he’s younger than the twin who stayed behind.
This familiar — and paradoxical — plotline comes from a particular tenet of relativity theory known as time dilation. It predicts that a fast-moving clock will tick at a slower rate than a stationary one — or, a man on an interstellar voyage will age more slowly than his twin back on Earth. But time dilation also says that velocity isn’t the only thing that affects the rate at which clocks tick, or people age; gravity does, too. A clock in a stronger gravitational field (the Earth’s surface, let’s say) will have a slower tick rate than a clock subject to weaker gravity (such as a few miles up into the atmosphere).
Scientists have shown that time dilation doesn’t just happen on near-speed-of-light journeys. Physicist Chin-Wen Chou and his colleagues at the National Institute of Standards and Technology lab in Boulder, Colorado, have used super-accurate optical clocks to show that tick rates change at speeds as slow as 25 miles per hour and height differences as small as a foot.
So if time dilation occurs under these everyday conditions, is the slowed-down aging experienced by the space-faring twin also experienced — in a much subtler way — by that more familiar airborne traveler, the frequent flier? A cross-country flight is a slow-moving, brief trip compared to the odyssey of flying off to another planet, sure, but you’re still going a lot faster than someone who’s not traveling at all.
People on commercial flights are subject to both predictions of time dilation, Chou points out. They’re going fast, at speeds of around 500 miles an hour, and because they’re about six miles from the ground, they’re also feeling a weaker gravitational pull. So do airline passengers age more slowly, since they’re traveling at high speeds? Or do they age more quickly, since they’re subject to less gravity?
Chou did the math, and it turns out that frequent fliers actually age the tiniest bit more quickly than those of us with both feet on the ground. Planes travel at high enough altitudes that the weak gravitational field speeds up the tick rate of a clock on board more than the high speeds slow it down.
The difference is so small, however, that even the most tireless jet setters don’t have to worry about extra wrinkles. Consider an extreme case of the commercial air passenger: Ryan Bingham, the constantly traveling businessman played by George Clooney in the movie Up in the Air. By the time Bingham racked up those 10 million frequent flier miles, Chou calculated, he’d aged only 59 microseconds more than his colleagues back in Omaha.
By Valerie Ross. This article is provided by Scienceline, a project of New York University’s Science, Health and Environmental Reporting Program.
Related Content:
80beats: Physicists Show Einstein’s Relativity Bending Time Over the Span of Just 1 Foot
Discoblog: This Is What Happens When a Physicist Reads “Goodnight Moon”
DISCOVER: 20 Things You Didn’t Know About… Time
DISCOVER: 20 Things You Didn’t Know About… Relativity
Cosmic Variance: Time Dilation in Your Living Room
Image: iStockphoto
April 27 2010
Stem Cell-Powered Worm Doesn’t Age, Can Grow a New Head
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