Improving the science in science fiction.

There is an interesting story in New Scientist about The Science & Entertainment Exchange, a program initiated by the National Academy of Sciences to improve the science in movies and TV [New project aims to unite science and Hollywood]. It would be hard to make it worse, so this strikes me as a very positive development!

The project is described thus:

The Science & Entertainment Exchange is a program of the National Academy of Sciences that provides entertainment industry professionals with access to top scientists and engineers to help bring the reality of cutting-edge science to creative and engaging storylines.

The portrayal of science – its practitioners, its methods, its effects – has often posed a challenge to the entertainment community. Though it has inspired some of the most intelligent and compelling storylines, science’s many complexities have confounded even the most talented writer, director, or producer, time and again pitting creative license against scientific authenticity and clarity.

Likewise, the scientific community has struggled to find an effective conduit through which it can communicate its story accurately and effectively. Though many of the world’s biggest problems require scientific solutions, finding a way to translate and depict scientific findings so that reach a wide audience has required a sounding board that has often been missing.

The Science & Entertainment Exchange bridges this gap and addresses the mutual need of the two communities by providing the credibility and the verisimilitude upon which quality entertainment depends – and which audiences have come to expect. Drawing on the deep knowledge of the scientific community, we can collaborate on narrative and visual solutions to a variety of problems while contributing directly to the creativity of the content in fresh and unexpected ways.

Especially cool is this, from the report:

…the Exchange organised a symposium, sponsored in part by New Scientist, in which scientists and entertainers were to discuss hot topics in science like climate change and genomics.


Generic genome sequence press release (by Andy).

This comment by Andy was too good not to repost.

Generic press release for genome sequencing

Scientists map genome of (insert name).

A team of researchers from (insert university/institute/lockup garage) has completed mapping the genome of (animal/plant/squashy deep-sea thing).

“We were amazed how (strike one) similar/dissimilar it is to the human genome,” said (insert name of lead scientist/grad student/custodian who happened to answer the phone).

The discovery should help scientists (strike all but one) cure cancer/end world hunger/prevent hair loss).

A frustrating press release (or, adaptation is not random).

My feeling about science news reports is decidedly mixed. On the one hand, I read most of the main news services in order to keep up with research outside of my own discipline. On the other hand, I would say that about once every two or three days I find a story so silly that it makes me physically uncomfortable. This is one of those.

Evolution’s new wrinkle: proteins with ‘cruise control’ act like adaptive machines

It opens:

A team of Princeton University scientists has discovered that chains of proteins found in most living organisms act like adaptive machines, possessing the ability to control their own evolution.

The research, which appears to offer evidence of a hidden mechanism guiding the way biological organisms respond to the forces of natural selection, provides a new perspective on evolution, the scientists said.

Organisms do not “respond to natural selection”. Natural selection is the differential survival and reproduction of individuals within a population. It is a population level process and it is not interchangeable with “challenges to organism survival”. If all organisms in a population are able to respond to a challenge such that there is no differential survival and reproductive success, then there is no natural selection.

It continues:

The researchers — Raj Chakrabarti, Herschel Rabitz, Stacey Springs and George McLendon — made the discovery while carrying out experiments on proteins constituting the electron transport chain (ETC), a biochemical network essential for metabolism. A mathematical analysis of the experiments showed that the proteins themselves acted to correct any imbalance imposed on them through artificial mutations and restored the chain to working order.

“The discovery answers an age-old question that has puzzled biologists since the time of Darwin: How can organisms be so exquisitely complex, if evolution is completely random, operating like a ‘blind watchmaker’?” said Chakrabarti, an associate research scholar in the Department of Chemistry at Princeton. “Our new theory extends Darwin’s model, demonstrating how organisms can subtly direct aspects of their own evolution to create order out of randomness.”

Adaptive evolution is the result of natural selection — the differential survival and reproduction of randomly varying individuals on the basis of heritable characteristics. This differential survival and reproduction is, by definition, non-random. Again, organisms do not evolve, populations do.

And then it says:

The work also confirms an idea first floated in an 1858 essay by Alfred Wallace, who along with Charles Darwin co-discovered the theory of evolution. Wallace had suspected that certain systems undergoing natural selection can adjust their evolutionary course in a manner “exactly like that of the centrifugal governor of the steam engine, which checks and corrects any irregularities almost before they become evident.” In Wallace’s time, the steam engine operating with a centrifugal governor was one of the only examples of what is now referred to as feedback control. Examples abound, however, in modern technology, including cruise control in autos and thermostats in homes and offices.

The essay is the one presented by Lyell and Hooker to the Linnean Society in 1858, along with one by Darwin. Here is the full paragraph:

Wallace (1858):

The hypothesis of Lamarck—that progressive changes in species have been produced by the attempts of animals to increase the development of their own organs, and thus modify their structure and habits—has been repeatedly and easily refuted by all writers on the subject of varieties and species, and it seems to have been considered that when this was done the whole question has been finally settled; but the view here developed renders such an hypothesis quite unneccessary, by showing that similar results must be produced by the action of principles constantly at work in nature. The powerful retractile talons of the falcon- and the cat-tribes have not been produced or increased by the volition of those animals; but among different varieties which occurred in the earlier and less highly organized forms of these groups, those always survived longest which had the greatest facilities for seizing their prey. Neither did the giraffe acquire its long neck by desiring to reach the foliage of the more lofty shrubs, and constantly stretching its neck for the purpose, but because any varieties which occurred among its antitypes with a longer neck than usual at once secured a fresh range of pasture over the same ground as their shorter-necked companions, and on the first scarcity of food were thereby enabled to outlive them. Even the peculiar colours of many animals, especially insects, so closely resembling the soil or the leaves or the trunks o which they habitually reside, are explained on the same principle; for though in the course of ages varieties of many tints may have occurred, yet those races having colours best adapted to concealment from their enemies would inevitably survive the longest. We have also here an acting cause to account for that balance so often observed in nature,—a deficiency in one set of organs always being compensated by an increased development of some others—powerful wings accompanying weak feet, or great velocity making up for the absence of defensive weapons; for it has been shown that all varieties in which an unbalanced deficiency occurred could not long continue their existence. The action of this principle is exactly like that of the centrifugal governor of the steam engine, which checks and corrects any irregularities almost before they become evident; and in like manner no unbalanced deficiency in the animal kingdom can ever reach any conspicuous magnitude, because it would make itself felt at the very first step, by rendering existence difficult and extinction almost sure soon to follow. An origin such as is here advocated will also agree with the peculiar character of the modifications of form and structure which obtain in organized beings—the many lines of divergence from a central type, the increasing efficiency and power of a particular organ through a succession of allied species, and the remarkable persistence of unimportant parts such as colour, texture of plumage and hair, form of horns or crests, through a series of species differing considerably in more essential characters. It also furnishes us with a reason for that “more specialized structure” which Professor Owen states to be a characteristic of recent compared with extinct forms, and which would evidently be the result of the progressive modification of any organ applied to a special purpose in the animal economy.

Wallace was talking about the consequences of randomly determined variants that had a change in one feature without a compensatory change in some other feature, namely that they would not survive. There is nothing in this that implies that individual organisms are changing in response to challenges or that species are directing their evolution.

It goes on, but I will jump forward:

The research, published in a recent edition of Physical Review Letters, provides corroborating data, Rabitz said, for Wallace’s idea. “What we have found is that certain kinds of biological structures exist that are able to steer the process of evolution toward improved fitness,” said Rabitz, the Charles Phelps Smyth ’16 Professor of Chemistry. “The data just jumps off the page and implies we all have this wonderful piece of machinery inside that’s responding optimally to evolutionary pressure.”

The authors sought to identify the underlying cause for this self-correcting behavior in the observed protein chains. Standard evolutionary theory offered no clues. Applying the concepts of control theory, a body of knowledge that deals with the behavior of dynamical systems, the researchers concluded that this self-correcting behavior could only be possible if, during the early stages of evolution, the proteins had developed a self-regulating mechanism, analogous to a car’s cruise control or a home’s thermostat, allowing them to fine-tune and control their subsequent evolution. The scientists are working on formulating a new general theory based on this finding they are calling “evolutionary control.”

Various researchers working over the past decade, including some at Princeton like George McClendon, now at Duke University, and Stacey Springs, now at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, fleshed out the workings of [ATP], finding that they were often turned on to the “maximum” position, operating at full tilt, or at the lowest possible energy level.

Chakrabarti and Rabitz analyzed these observations of the proteins’ behavior from a mathematical standpoint, concluding that it would be statistically impossible for this self-correcting behavior to be random, and demonstrating that the observed result is precisely that predicted by the equations of control theory. By operating only at extremes, referred to in control theory as “bang-bang extremization,” the proteins were exhibiting behavior consistent with a system managing itself optimally under evolution.

Based on this story, it is challenging to determine just how this is differs from evolution in the usual sense. Looking at the original paper, it appears that what the authors are arguing is that 1) the constituent proteins in the electron transport chain are tuned to an extreme, 2) that this extreme is not related to the function of the proteins as would be “visible” to natural selection on the grounds of electron transport capability, 3) that the proteins in the network are optimized for redox potential, which has no consequences for the organism and therefore cannot have evolved through normal selection, and 4) that something else, i.e. self organization, is involved in producing the extreme features of the proteins. The rest is mathemagic, so someone else can wade through it and see if the argument makes sense if they like.

I am not actually concerned with whether the calculations are correct. As it so often is, the issue is about press releases and the hype and sloppy descriptions of both ideas and history that they (and, too often, the people interviewed) present.

________

Update:

PZ weighs in.

People have been having trouble finding the article. It’s here.

The authors have another paper in the bastion of bad biology, arXiv, that quotes directly from Wallace (here). Don’t blame the story author, these guys lifted that out of context by their own selves.

Misc media.

Busy preparing for the start of the semester, so to tide you over here are some links of things to check out.

1) In our genes, old fossils take on new roles
by David Brown, Washington Post

It turns out that about 8 percent of the human genome is made up of viruses that once attacked our ancestors. The viruses lost. What remains are the molecular equivalents of mounted trophies, insects preserved in genomic amber, DNA fossils.

2) Gaming evolves
by Carl Zimmer, New York Times

Evolutionary biologists like Dr. Near and Dr. Prum, who have had a chance to try the game, like it a great deal. But they also have some serious reservations. The step-by-step process by which Spore’s creatures change does not have much to do with real evolution. “The mechanism is severely messed up,” Dr. Prum said.

Nevertheless, Dr. Prum admires the way Spore touches on some of the big questions that evolutionary biologists ask. What is the origin of complexity? How contingent is evolution on flukes and quirks? “If it compels people to ask these questions, that would be great,” he said.

I may have to check out this game.

3) Research raises questions about DNA barcoding methodology
by Andrea Anderson, GenomeWeb Daily News

This one is about the PNAS article by Song et al. that at first seemed like it was going to get a lot of hype (it did from NSF, but other venues decided it wasn’t worth a story). A lot of silliness going on with this one that I can’t really talk about, but suffice it to say I am not impressed with this paper or the conduct of the authors. I’ll just quote from the linked story.

“Sadly, the authors of this paper do not understand barcoding protocols,” Paul Hebert, director of the Biodiversity Institute of Ontario at the University of Guelph, told GenomeWeb Daily News. Calling the title of the paper misleading, he said barcoders have been aware of nuclear pseudogenes for years and have already designed some strategies for dealing with the problems described in the paper.

“Given that pseudogenes were reported 25 years ago, it’s not new news to us,” Hebert said. He said the team focused on species in which numts are particularly common and drew conclusions based on these eight species. Barcoding projects such as iBOL, he said, include data from thousands of species and are carried out using methods that differ from those described in the paper.
Hebert emphasized that the Barcoding of Life Data Systems, or BOLD, database scours sequences for indels, stop codons, and other tell-tale pseudogene signs. Barcoding sequences are also screened against a pool of sequences representing known contaminants, he said. Sequences that raise red flags are then set aside for further assessment, including longer sequence analysis or RT-PCR.
And, he noted, large barcoding studies typically amalgamate DNA barcode data with information provided by taxonomy, morphology, ecology, and other biological measures. “We’ve never advocated that sequence information alone is declarative for species boundaries,” he said.

For his part, Crandall conceded that large barcoding projects such as iBOL “have excellent strategies for quality control of data” and are already applying many of the steps he and his colleagues recommended. Still, he said, even though some people are already worrying about numts does not mean everyone in the field is addressing the problems appropriately.

The Woodstock of Evolutionary Biology and eye rolling

In a recent issue of Science there was a piece by Elizabeth Pennisi on the "Altenberg 16" who will be attending what overhyping journalist Suzan Mazur calls the "Woodstock of Evolutionary Biology", only it "promises to be far more transforming for the world".

Puh-lease. People have been saying that the Modern Synthesis is neither modern nor a synthesis and needs to be expanded for some time. And there are a lot more than 16 people saying it.

Thankfully, Pennisi uses the nonsensical hype to discuss some relevant issues, and even points out that the people involved themselves do not see it as a revolution.

Massimo Pigliucci is no Jimi Hendrix. This soft-spoken evolutionary biologist from Stony Brook University in New York state looks nothing like that radical hard-rock musician whose dramatic guitar solos helped revolutionize rock 'n'roll. But to Suzan Mazur, a veteran journalist who occasionally covers science, Pigliucci is the headliner this week at a small meeting she believes will be the equivalent of Woodstock for evolutionary biology. The invitation-only conference, being held in Altenberg, Austria, "promises to be far more transforming for the world" than the 1969 music festival, Mazur wrote online in March for Scoop.co.nz, an independent news publication in New Zealand.

That hyperbole has reverberated throughout the evolutionary biology community, putting Pigliucci and the 15 other participants at the forefront of a debate over whether ideas about evolution need updating. The mere mention of the "Altenberg 16," as Mazur dubbed the group, causes some evolutionary biologists to roll their eyes. It's a joke, says Jerry Coyne of the University of Chicago in Illinois. "I don't think there's anything that needs fixing." Mazur's attention, Pigliucci admits, "frankly caused me embarrassment."

My eyes have rolled — and did so again at the sight of this latest report, until I saw that it was much more reasonable.

…no one truly expects a scientific Woodstock. "Woodstock was an immensely popular event celebrating a new musical mainstream," says Newman. "I imagine this will be more like a jam session circa 1962."

I look forward to reading the papers that emerge from the meeting, but I don't expect anything revolutionary — more like some cool ideas to continue discussing.

 

What can be done about press releases?

Maybe I was a little slow out of the gate on that one, but it dawned on me a while ago that press releases are one of the main problems when it comes to undermining the reliability of science reporting. This is especially relevant because sites like ScienceDaily, LiveScience, PhysOrg, and EurekAlert repost them with few or no changes, and this ends up being the only information about the study that many people read. In the most recent case, RPM and Larry point to a press release about an interesting article in PLoS Biology. Now, I am all for having accessible summaries of new articles, but inaccurate ones or those that play on common misconceptions are worse than nothing. So, what can be done about this? Can we require approval of press releases by the authors of the paper? (Not that this will help if the authors choose to partake in irresponsible hype). Are scientific blogs the only hope?

The great headline mismatch.

So, on ScienceDaily there is a story (adapted from a press release by the University of Bath) about an interesting study in PNAS regarding patterns of macroevolution in crustaceans. In particular, it seems that there is often an increase in morphological complexity over time in different lineages within this group, which makes sense because complexity in this case relates to specialization of limbs and so on. (Lineages necessarily begin simple, with repeated segments that are the same, then some limbs evolve to become specialized for feeding, walking, swimming, and so on — it’s probably a driven trend in that it is adaptive to have specialized features, but one also can really only increase in complexity when the beginning is around some minimum level of simplicity, as one of the authors notes in the story).

Here is the abstract:

The prospect of finding macroevolutionary trends and rules in the history of life is tremendously appealing, but very few pervasive trends have been found. Here, we demonstrate a parallel increase in the morphological complexity of most of the deep lineages within a major clade. We focus on the Crustacea, measuring the morphological differentiation of limbs. First, we show a clear trend of increasing complexity among 66 free-living, ordinal-level taxa from the Phanerozoic fossil record. We next demonstrate that this trend is pervasive, occurring in 10 or 11 of 12 matched-pair comparisons (across five morphological diversity indices) between extinct Paleozoic and related Recent taxa. This clearly differentiates the pattern from the effects of lineage sorting. Furthermore, newly appearing taxa tend to have had more types of limbs and a higher degree of limb differentiation than the contemporaneous average, whereas those going extinct showed higher-than-average limb redundancy. Patterns of contemporary species diversity partially reflect the paleontological trend. These results provide a rare demonstration of a large-scale and probably driven trend occurring across multiple independent lineages and influencing both the form and number of species through deep time and in the present day.

The news release itself is interesting, and includes an excellent quote from the study’s lead author Sarah Adamowicz:

Our results apply to a group of animals with bodies made of repeated units. We must not forget that bacteria – very simple organisms – are among the most successful living things. Therefore, the trend towards complexity is compelling but does not describe the history of all life.

And yet, the headline of the piece is…

First ‘Rule’ Of Evolution Suggests That Life Is Destined To Become More Complex

Do the people who determine headlines not even read the stories?


Orgel’s Second Rule and toxicity — again.

Some time ago, I posted about a story involving frogs and snakes in which an author of the study was quoted as saying that:

In evolutionary terms, the snake’s strategy of ‘bite, release, and wait’ is unbeatable by the frogs. Although prey often evolve ways of overcoming predator tactics, the frogs can’t do so in this case – because the snake’s strategy only becomes effective after the frog has died. Natural selection ceases to operate on an individual after that individual’s death, so frogs will probably never evolve toxins that last longer in response to the snake’s tactic. Thus, this waiting strategy is likely to be stable and unbeatable over evolutionary time.

I mentioned Orgel’s Second Rule — “evolution is cleverer than you are” — and provided a list of seven possible scenarios which would refute the claim that a response could never evolve in frogs.

Today in ScienceDaily there is another example of a toxicologist who does not get Orgel’s Second Rule. In this case, it is toxic newts and garter snakes. The newts are extremely poisonous in some regions, which is a result of an arms race between them and snakes that feed on them. While there is often an escalating interaction with no net gain for either side in an arms race, in some locales a particular mutation has made snakes completely resistant. Here is what the story notes:

In most locations, the snakes’ level of resistance closely matched newt toxicity. In such cases, the poison temporarily slows the snakes down but isn’t enough to kill them. This supports “arms race” theories explaining how toxicity and resistance co-evolve.

But in some areas where newt toxicity was relatively high, the poison had no measurable affect on snake mobility.

The team found that resistant snakes had a single genetic mutation on TTX receptor sites on their neural and muscle cells, which prevented the toxin from binding. It made snakes with this mutation “untouchable”.

It is pretty much biologically impossible for the newts to ever catch up,” Hanifin says.

Compare this with what is stated in the abstract of the actual peer-reviewed paper:

This coadaptation proceeds until the evolution of extreme phenotypes by predators, through genes of large effect, allows snakes to, at least temporarily, escape the arms race.

I wonder if a reviewer, knowing Orgel’s Second Rule, made them insert the “at least temporarily” caveat.