Art of the Question

7 Fascinating Facts About DNA - Sander Wuyts - #19

1 h 5 min · 14. Mai 2026
Episode 7 Fascinating Facts About DNA - Sander Wuyts - #19 Cover

Beschreibung

Sander Wuyts is a bioscience engineer and CEO of ImmuneWatch, a Belgian biotech startup using machine learning to decode the immune system's DNA for pharma and cancer drug development. He holds a PhD in computational microbiology from the University of Antwerp and Vrije Universiteit Brussel, where he studied the bacteria in fermented foods using DNA sequencing before completing a postdoc at EMBL Heidelberg on the human microbiome. After his academic career he co-founded ImmuneWatch, which helps pharma and biotech companies understand what the immune system is attacking, whether a cancer cell, a virus, or a bacterium, by reading the DNA of immune cells. In 2018, while still a PhD student, he made international headlines by becoming the first person in the world to crack the Davos DNA Bitcoin Challenge, a three-year-old public puzzle set by EMBL-EBI scientist Nick Goldman at the 2015 World Economic Forum, claiming a Bitcoin worth around 9,500 euros in the process. Expect to learn how DNA stores biological information using just four nucleotide building blocks, what Gregor Mendel's pea plant experiments revealed about inheritance centuries before DNA was discovered, how the central dogma of molecular biology connects DNA to RNA to proteins, why we still do not fully understand what every part of the human genome encodes, how CRISPR-Cas changed the way scientists edit and study genes, how DNA forensics works and why the falling cost of sequencing transformed criminal investigations, what ancestry testing companies actually measure when they compare your DNA to other populations, why editing tomatoes and editing humans raise very different ethical questions, how Nick Goldman encoded a Bitcoin inside a physical DNA sample and what it took to decode it, why DNA is a theoretically compelling but practically challenging medium for long-term digital data storage, how ImmuneWatch uses DNA readouts and machine learning to reveal what the immune system is targeting in real time, and what DNA origami and aptamers could one day make possible for targeted drug delivery. Sander Wuyts online: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/sander-wuyts [http://linkedin.com/in/sander-wuyts] Website: sanderwuyts.com [http://sanderwuyts.com] ImmuneWatch: immunewatch.com [http://immunewatch.com] 0:00 How Sander got interested in DNA 1:00 Gregor Mendel and the origin of genetics 3:30 From chromosomes to the double helix 5:56 DNA as the basis of all life 6:23 The central dogma: DNA, RNA, and proteins 8:05 How four bases store all biological information 11:42 The Human Genome Project 12:34 CRISPR and gene editing tools 15:52 DNA evidence at crime scenes 19:23 Ancestry testing and consumer DNA services 25:47 How much do we actually understand the genome 28:53 Synthetic biology and engineering organisms 30:00 Ethics of human genetic editing and GMOs 35:10 DNA as a digital data storage medium 35:44 The Davos Bitcoin Challenge explained 40:00 How Sander decoded the Bitcoin 43:03 Winning the Bitcoin and what he did with it 47:22 Current state and future of DNA storage 55:17 ImmuneWatch and reading the immune system 59:09 How ImmuneWatch helps pharma and cancer trials 1:01:23 DNA origami, aptamers, and future applications

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29 Folgen

Episode The Science of Slang and Swearing - Prof. Kate Burridge - #29 Cover

The Science of Slang and Swearing - Prof. Kate Burridge - #29

Kate Burridge is Professor of Linguistics at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia, and a Fellow of both the Australian Academy of the Humanities and the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia. She earned her PhD from the University of London in 1983 with a dissertation on syntactic change in medieval Dutch. Burridge has authored or co-authored more than 25 books on language, including Blooming English, Weeds in the Garden of Words, and Forbidden Words: Taboo and the Censoring of Language. She is a regular presenter of language segments on ABC Radio and co-hosts the Breaking Taboos podcast, which explores how older people talk about mental health. In this conversation, she explains how slang is born and dies, why swearing provides genuine physical relief, and what makes some words taboo in one era but perfectly acceptable in another. Expect to learn how medieval Dutch surgery manuals reveal patterns of language change, why 800 separate languages exist in Papua New Guinea, what linguistic accommodation is and why we do it instinctively, how swearing in your first language provides greater emotional release, why the ice water experiment proved that swearing increases pain tolerance, how slang got its start as underworld criminal jargon, why 30% of English words for stupidity begin with the letter D, how social media accelerates the birth and death of slang, what makes OK the most successful slang term of all time, how disease-based swearing works in Dutch, and why euphemisms around mental health can delay treatment for older people. Kate Burridge online: Monash University: research.monash.edu/en/persons/kathryn-burridge [http://research.monash.edu/en/persons/kathryn-burridge] Podcast: Breaking Taboos (available on all podcast platforms) Books: Forbidden Words, Blooming English, Weeds in the Garden of Words (Cambridge University Press)

18. Juni 20261 h 2 min
Episode Can We Upload The Human Brain? - Dr. Randal Koene - #28 Cover

Can We Upload The Human Brain? - Dr. Randal Koene - #28

Randal Koene is a Dutch neuroscientist, neuroengineer, and co-founder of the Carboncopies Foundation, a nonprofit advancing research into substrate-independent minds. He holds a Ph.D. in Computational Neuroscience from McGill University and an M.Sc [http://M.Sc]. in Electrical Engineering from Delft University of Technology. Koene coined the term "whole brain emulation" in 2000 and has spent decades building the scientific roadmap for recreating brain function in non-biological substrates. He previously served as a professor at Boston University's Center for Memory and Brain, as Director of Neuroengineering at Tecnalia in Spain, and as Science Director of the 2045 Initiative. In this conversation, he explains how structural brain scanning has advanced dramatically, why the viral fruit fly brain demo was more limited than headlines suggested, and what it would actually take to build and validate an emulation of a human brain. Expect to learn how Randal's father at CERN shaped his thinking about substrate independence, what inspired him to coin the term whole brain emulation, how lesion studies and evolutionary biology support the idea that minds can run on different hardware, what the difference is between neuronal networks and artificial neural networks, how electron microscopy is transforming brain data collection, why the viral fruit fly brain demo was misleading, what the two biggest bottlenecks are in scaling brain emulation to humans, how AI is being used as a tool in computational neuroscience, what consciousness is according to the Metzinger framework, whether a brain emulation would have human rights, how the Carboncopies Foundation's brain emulation challenge works, and why whole brain emulation and mind uploading are not the same thing. Randal Koene online: Website: randalkoene.com [http://randalkoene.com] Carboncopies Foundation: carboncopies.org [http://carboncopies.org] LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/randalkoene [http://linkedin.com/in/randalkoene] Contact: contact@carboncopies.org [contact@carboncopies.org]

15. Juni 20261 h 17 min
Episode The Science of Decision Making - Gerd Gigerenzer - #27 Cover

The Science of Decision Making - Gerd Gigerenzer - #27

Gerd Gigerenzer is a German psychologist, director of the Harding Center for Risk Literacy at the University of Potsdam, and director emeritus of the Max Planck Institute for Human Development in Berlin, where he led the Center for Adaptive Behavior and Cognition for over two decades. He is the author of numerous books including Risk Savvy, Gut Feelings, and The Intelligence of Intuition, and has spent his career studying how people actually make decisions under uncertainty, as opposed to how theorists think they should. Before becoming an academic, he spent roughly a dozen years as a professional musician, an experience that directly shaped his thinking about heuristics and real-world choice. His long-running intellectual debate with Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman over the nature of human rationality is one of the defining controversies in modern behavioral science. Expect to learn how Gigerenzer chose an academic career over life as a professional musician using heuristic rather than calculated reasoning, how the gap between what is taught about rationality in universities and how people actually decide prompted his life's research agenda, what the crucial distinction between risk and uncertainty means and why standard probability tools fail in an uncertain world, how intuition works as a form of unconscious intelligence built on experience rather than arbitrary feeling, why corporate executives routinely hide gut decisions behind consulting reports and what Gigerenzer calls defensive decision making, how predictive AI systems used in US courts fail to outperform simple strategies despite being marketed as superior, what ecological rationality means and how it differs from the logical rationality assumed by most economists and behavioral scientists, why Gigerenzer disagreed with Daniel Kahneman about heuristics and what their decades-long debate was actually about, when ignoring information leads to better decisions than processing all of it, how the framing of medical statistics as relative rather than absolute risk caused thousands of unnecessary procedures in the UK, and what risk literacy means and why Gigerenzer believes it is a necessary condition for a functioning democracy. Gerd Gigerenzer online: Website: www.gerd-gigerenzer.com [http://www.gerd-gigerenzer.com] Books: Risk Savvy, Gut Feelings, The Intelligence of Intuition, How to Stay Smart in a Smart World (available wherever books are sold).

11. Juni 20261 h 6 min
Episode Ozempic, GLP-1s and the Future of Obesity - Prof. Carel Le Roux - #26 Cover

Ozempic, GLP-1s and the Future of Obesity - Prof. Carel Le Roux - #26

Carel le Roux is a Professor of Experimental Pathology at University College Dublin, Director of the Metabolic Medicine Group, and one of the world's leading researchers on how the gut communicates with the brain. He completed his PhD at Imperial College London, where he conducted foundational research on gut hormones and appetite, and later co-founded My Best Weight, Ireland's leading obesity care clinic accredited by the European Association for the Study of Obesity. His clinical work and trials span GLP-1 receptor agonists, bariatric surgery outcomes, and the emerging class of multi-receptor drugs now transforming obesity medicine. He is currently leading the trial of survodutide, one of the most promising next-generation treatments in the field. Expect to learn how GLP-1 was discovered during PhD research into gut-brain communication and how it became one of the most consequential drug classes in medical history, what the Gila monster's saliva has to do with the development of Ozempic and drugs like it, why obesity is a disease of the brain rather than a failure of willpower or lifestyle, how these medications reset the brain's fat-mass setpoint so that weight loss happens without deliberate effort, what ultra-processed foods may be doing to brain inflammation and why reversing the obesity epidemic through diet advice alone has failed everywhere it has been tried, why the goal of treatment should be health gain rather than weight loss and what that distinction means in practice, how to manage and minimise side effects by titrating the dose slowly, what the long-term safety record of GLP-1 drugs actually shows and why not taking the medication is often the riskier choice, why muscle loss on these drugs is largely a misunderstood phenomenon and what protein intake and exercise do to address it, what the evidence says about non-obese people using GLP-1 drugs recreationally and why these treatments were designed as lifelong medications, how GLP-1-like drugs appear to reduce alcohol consumption and are now being studied for addiction and other conditions including heart and kidney disease, and what new triple-receptor drugs like retatrutide and survodutide offer over existing treatments. Carel le Roux online: Website: mybestweight.ie [http://mybestweight.ie] University profile: University College Dublin, Conway Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research

8. Juni 20261 h 0 min
Episode The Science of Awe - Gloria Simoncini - #25 Cover

The Science of Awe - Gloria Simoncini - #25

Gloria Simoncini is a neuropsychologist, psychotherapist, and PhD student at eCampus University, Department of Theoretical and Applied Sciences, researching the emotion of awe. She trained clinically in cognitive rehabilitation with patients who had acquired brain injuries, an experience that drew her toward the scientific study of emotions and their role in human transformation. Her doctoral project sits at the intersection of affective neuroscience, virtual reality, and clinical neuropsychology, with a particular focus on using VR environments to screen for mild cognitive impairment in ecologically valid, real-life-like scenarios. She works within a research group on emotions and complex emotional experiences, including awe, positive psychology, and affect dynamics. Expect to learn how awe is formally defined through its two core ingredients of vastness and the need for accommodation, what makes awe distinct from related emotions like wonder, elevation, and fear, why awe is unusually difficult to study in laboratory conditions and how virtual reality helps solve that problem, what happens in the brain during awe including changes in the default mode network and the small self effect, how positive and negative awe recruit different neural structures, what physical responses in the body accompany an awe experience, why the evolutionary negativity bias makes cultivating positive emotions like awe require conscious effort, how awe may function as a therapeutic tool for depression by reducing rumination and loosening rigid mental frameworks, what Gloria's own PhD research on VR-based cognitive screening looks like in practice, and how awe can be trained as a perspective rather than simply waited for as a fleeting moment. Gloria Simoncini online: ResearchGate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Gloria-Simoncini [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Gloria-Simoncini] Research group (Prof. Alice Chirico): https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Alice-Chirico-2 [https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Alice-Chirico-2]

4. Juni 20261 h 6 min