Chinese Scientists Have Put Human Brain Genes In Monkeys -- And Yes, They May Be Smarter (technologyreview.com) 142
Scientists in southern China report that they've created several transgenic macaque monkeys with extra copies of a human gene suspected of playing a role in shaping human intelligence. "According to their findings, the modified monkeys did better on a memory test involving colors and block pictures, and their brains also took longer to develop -- as those of human children do," reports MIT Technology Review. "There wasn't a difference in brain size." From the report: The experiments, described on March 27 in a Beijing journal, National Science Review, and first reported by Chinese media, remain far from pinpointing the secrets of the human mind or leading to an uprising of brainy primates. Bing Su, the geneticist at the Kunming Institute of Zoology who led the effort, specializes in searching for signs of "Darwinian selection" -- that is, genes that have been spreading because they're successful. His quest has spanned such topics as Himalayan yaks' adaptation to high altitude and the evolution of human skin color in response to cold winters. [Instead of the FOXP2 gene famous for its potential link to human speech] Su was fascinated by a different gene: MCPH1, or microcephalin. Not only did the gene's sequence differ between humans and apes, but babies with damage to microcephalin are born with tiny heads, providing a link to brain size. With his students, Su once used calipers and head spanners to the measure the heads of 867 Chinese men and women to see if the results could be explained by differences in the gene.
By 2010, though, Su saw a chance to carry out a potentially more definitive experiment -- adding the human microcephalin gene to a monkey. China by then had begun pairing its sizable breeding facilities for monkeys (the country exports more than 30,000 a year) with the newest genetic tools, an effort that has turned it into a mecca for foreign scientists who need monkeys to experiment on. To create the animals, Su and collaborators at the Yunnan Key Laboratory of Primate Biomedical Research exposed monkey embryos to a virus carrying the human version of microcephalin. They generated 11 monkeys, five of which survived to take part in a battery of brain measurements. Those monkeys each have between two and nine copies of the human gene in their bodies. After putting the monkeys inside MRI machines to measure their white matter, they gave them computerized memory tests. "According to their report, the transgenic monkeys didn't have larger brains, but they did better on a short-term memory quiz, a finding the team considers remarkable," reports MIT Technology Review.
By 2010, though, Su saw a chance to carry out a potentially more definitive experiment -- adding the human microcephalin gene to a monkey. China by then had begun pairing its sizable breeding facilities for monkeys (the country exports more than 30,000 a year) with the newest genetic tools, an effort that has turned it into a mecca for foreign scientists who need monkeys to experiment on. To create the animals, Su and collaborators at the Yunnan Key Laboratory of Primate Biomedical Research exposed monkey embryos to a virus carrying the human version of microcephalin. They generated 11 monkeys, five of which survived to take part in a battery of brain measurements. Those monkeys each have between two and nine copies of the human gene in their bodies. After putting the monkeys inside MRI machines to measure their white matter, they gave them computerized memory tests. "According to their report, the transgenic monkeys didn't have larger brains, but they did better on a short-term memory quiz, a finding the team considers remarkable," reports MIT Technology Review.
New protected class (Score:5, Funny)
Soon there will monkey quotas at colleges and businesses...
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Soon there will monkey quotas at colleges and businesses...
Harvard immediately comes to mind........
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Planet of the Apes.
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Jesus Fucking Christ (Score:5, Funny)
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WWII apparently didn't teach us anything.
Well, we didn't have wars of that scale since then, so perhaps it did.
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It's probably censored in China. They won't learn from sci-fi, and may even be working on a HAL 9000.
(Actually, they like "lucky" numbers, so it's probably HAL 8888.)
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God schmod, I want my monkey man!
Re: Jesus Fucking Christ (Score:1)
Movies are fiction, only a fool would learn from them. Use logical extrapolation not movies.
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Your reply tells us why you don't learn from fiction -- it's because you don't question your own beliefs. A skeptical person is, above all, skeptical of their own beliefs. Fiction presents different perspectives and asks us to think "what if this is correct or partially correct?" and "what do I believe that's wrong?"
So no, we should not "treat fiction as if it is real" because that would be ridiculous. It means we should not treat our own beliefs as if they are real until they've been tested widely. If
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Alternate interpretation: chucking buckets of instant sunshine around isn't a great idea.
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Just be
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You didn't refute GP's point. If fiction is not predictive as you say, then there's no reason to use them for prediction. This includes learning "lessons" from those predictions.
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You missed the point: we don't learn about "future facts" from fiction: we learn about ourselves and our thinking processes. The best fiction, even hard SF, is about our interaction with tech, not the tech itself.
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I, for one, welcome our new Ape overlords
They generally show us the way (Score:2)
They generally show us the way, the don't actually "teach us". Hey, planet of the apes is cool, let's do that! Hey, president Camacho is cool, if we can't get Terry Crews right now, let's start with Trump!
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You finally really did it. You maniacs! You blew it up!
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It taught us how to get a cheap source of labor now that the serfs have the nerve to demand a living wage. Sure, they'll eventually rise up and overthrow humanity, but that will be someone else's problem.
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Guess they wanted to rewrite the origin story. They’ll lose containment for sure. Then the genie is out of the bottle for good. Planet of the Apes and Secret of NIMH both come to mind.
At least there's an application for this (Score:1)
Helping people with development disabilities lead a normal life.
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Wasn't that the plot of Congo?
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Do you develop flight control software for Boeing, by any chance?
Smarter than monkeys?... (Score:2)
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Or smarter than humans?
"Chinese Scientists Have Put Human Brain Genes In Monkeys -- And Yes, They May Be Smarter"
Obviously these Chinese scientists are smarter than either monkeys or humans.
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Or smarter than humans?
"Chinese Scientists Have Put Human Brain Genes In Monkeys -- And Yes, They May Be Smarter"
Obviously these Chinese scientists are smarter than either monkeys or humans.
The monkeys are probably smarter than many world-leaders though.
Humans confirmed for UTTERLY STUPID! (Score:1)
Now let's see, which extinction-level event is going to get us?
o Nuclear war
o Runaway GMOs
o Runaway AIs
o Global pandemic
o MRSAs (created by our own antibiotics)
o Human-caused climate change
o Chinese-created human-level-intellect simians (how convenient, the replacement for us)
o All the above
???
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That, and we vastly outnumber simians. It would take them hundreds of years to build up population where they could feasible threaten us.
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Slashdot Luddite mode activated (Score:1, Insightful)
What's dangerous is our current set of "ethics" and sense of sacredness when it comes to human DNA. The Chinese inner party doesn't give a fuck, and neither do Russian billionaires who want smart children. The improvement (or "improvement", if you prefer the scare quotes) of the human genome is goi
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Gene expression is fantastically complex and it is likely that experiments to increase intelligence will have nasty side effects (cf. Tay-Sachs in Ashkenazi Jews). That is why even most leading researchers in genetic modification favour a moratorium on human germline editing, at least for now. The Chinese and Russian oligarchs may have some nasty surprises.
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Not a problem. What, you think all the sudden ethics are going to come into play when its time to get rid of some "mistakes"?
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We can always refine it on pets. A few very rich people would be willing to pay a hundred thousand dollars for the smartest dog in the show.
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But the easiest, and probably the only, way to discover and work around those complexities you refer to is to run forward, fall down, then get back up again. The human race as a whole is simply not going to wait around for 500+ yea
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What could possibly go wrong!
Go on keep invoking Murphy, fool.
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What could POSSIBLY go wrong?
*poke poke poke*
*Murphy wakes up*
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The only real danger as I see is this: Kids grow up with some unforseen fucked up genetic disorder as
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I've seen the phrase "stuff like this never seems to work out" used so many times in regards to TOTALLY NEW genetic technologies that have never been tried in any way, shape or form and when you press the pe
Late... (Score:2)
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No. They say "They generated 11 monkeys, "
Not 12.
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I think that was honestly one of Brad Pitt's best roles.
Wnat to know what is at the bottom of this slope (Score:5, Interesting)
Before we go anywhere toward blurring the lines between human and non-human I want to see some agreements on rules. We may seen be able to grow Neanderthals and create various human / animal chimeras, but they could end up in a very fuzzy and controversial legal space. How much and what types of human DNA gives something rights.
We are approaching this from another direction (but possibly very slowly) through AI.
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They care about international perception. Also at least we can think about what we our doing ourselves.
Hello, 1850 calling... (Score:2)
Su once used calipers and head spanners to the measure the heads of 867 Chinese men and women to see if the results could be explained by differences in the gene
Wasn't this a thing in the 1800's? "Craniology" or somesuch.
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Phrenology.
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Yes science was a thing in the 1800's (but too colored by superstition) as were techniques of measurement. Maybe you confused doing physical measures to determine if a certain gene expression influence skull size with something completely different?
Sounds familiar (Score:5, Funny)
One of their large yellow-haired orangutans escaped from the lab a few years ago, last seen on a cargo ship headed for the USA. It has light-colored rings around its eyes, and reportedly likes KFC, Big Macs, and bricks. The researchers are not really concerned because it wasn't one of their more promising apes.
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don't forget it like to build walls.
What did you think the bricks were for?
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Cockroach lawyers & politicians? So not really any change.
Dear China (Score:4, Insightful)
If you have any spare Smart Monkeys laying about, please send us some.
We would like to replace most of our elected government as we feel Intelligent Monkeys could not possibly do any worse than what we've been forced to endure over the past few decades.
Thanks in advance
Hardly a Mecca for Monkeys (Score:1)
China by then had begun pairing its sizable breeding facilities for monkeys (the country exports more than 30,000 a year) with the newest genetic tools, an effort that has turned it into a mecca for foreign scientists who need monkeys to experiment on.
But hardly a Mecca for Monkeys.
Alex Jones will lose his mind over this (Score:1)
Gattaca was a great movie (Score:1)
Ah ... so sad I am not a racist ... (Score:2)
Ethics: Does China have any? (Score:2)
Hamlet (Score:1)
If you put 100 of them on typewriters in a room, they will write the next Hamlet
Might try it the other way around (Score:2)
Messed up (Score:2)
This seems like animal cruelty/crazy/mad scientist/you name it. Not a fan. WTF China?
5 of 11 monkeys survived (Score:2)
How did the monkeys die?
I hate every ape I see.. (Score:1)
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