At NASA, the next great airplane design is taking flight

Could this be the next great aircraft design? Within 10 years, a full-sized version of the hybrid wing body may offer big boosts in range, fuel efficiency, and quiet flight.

The X-48C, as seen in a warehouse at NASA Dryden Flight Research Center. The plane is a prototype of what could be the next great aircraft design.

EDWARDS AIR FORCE BASE, Calif.--If you want to know what the future of airplane design looks like, you might have to make your way out to the middle of the Mojave Desert.

Tucked away inside a nondescript warehouse building at NASA's Dryden Flight Research Center here, NASA, the U.S. Air Force, Boeing, and Cranfield Aerospace are working on an entirely new kind of plane, one which they hope could someday revolutionize aviation.

Known as a hybrid wing body, the plane design, which NASA describes as "a cross between a conventional plane and a flying wing design," is thought to offer long-term benefits in fuel efficiency, fuel capacity, and noise.

Since 2007, the team behind the X-48 project has been working on getting its prototype in the air. Over 92 flights, the X-48B -- an 8.5 percent scale model of an eventual full-size plane -- demonstrated many of the desired features of the design, explained Norm Princen, Boeing's chief engineer on the project.

But now, the team has retired the X-48B and is getting ready to start flying a new version of the design, the X-48C. And with this plane, they've implemented some fairly significant changes. The B-version of the plane was a blended-wing design featuring three engines and winglet vertical tails. The C-version, which has yet to take flight, has evolved to be even more efficient, Princen said, and because its engines are moved forward in such a way that shields them, is even quieter than its predecessor. "The engines are above aft center," he explained, "to make sound bounce up or to the side."

Though it looks radically different than today's aircraft, Princen said the idea is that to a pilot, the X-48 would seem very much like a standard transport plane, though it would probably offer a fuel efficiency improvement of between 20 percent and 30 percent. Although it's not yet known exactly what it's purpose would be, the thought is the X-48 would be useful as a tanker, as a command-and-control or transport plane, as a bomber, or as a commercial jetliner. However, because it has no windows outside the cockpit, there's some concern that passengers would be uncomfortable flying on it. To that end, there's some thought that a full-size version could include "virtual" windows, Princen explained. Still, the U.S. Air Force is likely to be the initial customer of the plane.

I've stopped by to see the X-48C as part of Road Trip 2012. The plane, given its small size, is a bit of a surprise. But Princen explained that a full-size version of the X-48 -- which may be about ten years away -- is likely to have a wingspan of at least 240 feet and be able to fly up to 11,000 nautical miles. Today, however, the X-48C, which should be getting airborne soon, has a top altitude of about 10,000 feet and can stay aloft for just 35 minutes.

Princen and his team expect to fly the X-48C about 20 times, gathering data, and trying to figure out what size the next prototype should be. But rather than being remotely-controlled as the B- and C-versions have been, the next iteration will be human-piloted and will have full capabilities in terms of altitude and range, he said. It is likely to be at least four years before that next version is ready, Princen added.

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At NASA, the next great airplane design is taking flight

'Seven Minutes of Terror': NASA's Viral Video

At NASA they've called it "Seven Minutes of Terror" -- the white-knuckle moments as the new Curiosity rover, scheduled to land on Mars on the night of Aug. 5, goes tearing into the Martian atmosphere and, engineers hope, lands safely seven minutes later.

NASA made a computer-animated video of the landing sequence, and found it has a hit on its hands. With almost a month to go until landing, the video has been viewed more than half a million times on YouTube alone, and it's appeared on countless other websites as well.

"We've got literally seven minutes to get from the top of the atmosphere to the surface of Mars -- going from 13,000 miles an hour to zero, in perfect sequence, perfect choreography, perfect timing," said Tom Rivellini, a NASA engineer who appears in the video.

NASA has been very good at visualizing its robotic missions, and, in fact, did similar videos (with the same title) for previous Mars landings in 2004 and 2008. But none went viral the way Curiosity's has.

The Curiosity rover, known originally as Mars Science Laboratory, is about the size of an SUV. Behind schedule and over budget, it was a decade in the making and has cost $2.5 billion. The nickname Curiosity came from a schoolchild who won a NASA contest to pick something memorable.

Because of its size, Curiosity cannot just fly to Mars and come to a stop. It enters the Martian atmosphere encased in a heat shield, then lets out a parachute, then fires retro rockets, then is lowered by cables from a landing stage and finally -- if it hasn't left a $2.5 billion crater in the Martian soil -- sends a signal that it's safely down.

And all this has to happen automatically. Mars will be 150 million miles from Earth on Aug. 5 -- so distant that radio commands from Earth, travelling at the speed of light, would take 14 minutes to get there.

NASA has tried to play down expectations that Curiosity could find life on Mars. But if there ever were living microbes, the rover probably has the equipment to see signs that they were there.

An earlier rover, Opportunity, is still functioning after eight years on the Martian surface. It found geological evidence that scientists say shows Mars was once warm and wet, with pools of briny water that dried up eons ago.

NASA would like to expand on that find, which is why it has sent the larger and more ambitious Curiosity rover.

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'Seven Minutes of Terror': NASA's Viral Video

Ark. nanotechnology firm partners with Texas co.

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) A Springdale company's agreement to provide its industrial lubricant to a Texas company for oil and gas equipment is expected to create 10 to 20 new jobs in northwest Arkansas.

NanoMech Inc. and Cameron on Tuesday announced the agreement to provide TriboTuff lubricant in some of Cameron's values and flow equipment used in the gas and supply chain. NanoMech said the product reduces friction to near zero, which will improve the performance of machines while decreasing the amount of fossil fuels used.

The two companies announced the partnership at a news conference with Gov. Mike Beebe at the state Capitol.

NanoMech was founded in 2002 and offers engineering materials developed through nanotechnology. Cameron is headquartered in Houston, Texas, and employs more than 23,000 people worldwide.

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Ark. nanotechnology firm partners with Texas co.

S.Koreans athletes bet on traditional medicine

JINCHEON, South Korea (Reuters) - South Korean athletes looking to stay in peak shape for the Lodnon Olympics are turning to Oriental rather than Western medicine to see off aches and sprains that could derail their medal chances. While some athletes remain wary of remedies that are not certified due to doping concerns, for the vast majority regular treatment has boosted fitness and the ability ...

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S.Koreans athletes bet on traditional medicine

UMASS Medical School Distinguished Speaker Series Presents Titanic Explorer, Dr. Robert Ballard, at The Hanover …

Celebrating the 100th anniversary of the Titanic's fatal voyage, Ballard will speak about his discoveries at The Hanover Theatre for the Performing Arts as part of the UMASS Medical School Distinguished Speaker Series this fall. Tickets are now on sale to members of The Hanover Theatre before they go on sale to the general public on Friday, July 20 at 10am.Worcester, MA (PRWEB) July 13, 2012 ...

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UMASS Medical School Distinguished Speaker Series Presents Titanic Explorer, Dr. Robert Ballard, at The Hanover ...

“Buying-Islands” farce to badly damage hard-won China-Japan relations

Posted on July 13, 2012, Friday

Chinese patrol ships encounter Japanese Coast Guard vessels near the Diaoyu Islands in the East China Sea, July 11, 2012. Three Chinese fishery patrol ships engaged in a verbal confrontation with Japanese Coast Guard ships during a routine patrol in waters near the Diaoyu Islands on Wednesday, fishery authorities said Thursday. (Xinhua/Luo Zhengguang)

BEIJING: The Japanese side has staged a series of acts to buy Chinas Diaoyu Islands in recent weeks, but the country should be wary that its farcical ambitions may result in the situation spiralling out of control and seriously damaging China-Japan relations, Xinhua reported.

Against the backdrop of frequent shifts of leadership in recent years and a serious split within the Ruling Democratic Party on a tax hike bill, some Japanese politicians attempted to divert the attention from internal to external affairs by playing a leading role in the drama of buying the Diaoyu Islands.

The provocative move by the Japanese side seemingly helps Japan create some evidence for its real control over the Diaoyu Islands, but it will by no means change the fact that China has indisputable sovereignty over the islands.

On the contrary, Japanese provocations will only lead to escalating tensions with China, its major economic partner, and will harm bilateral ties and regional stability, and ultimately Japans own interests.

For Chinas part, its commitment to the path of peaceful development doesnt mean blindly self-surrender, especially on issues that are related to crucial national interests.

China has always expressed its position on defending its territorial sovereignty over the Diaoyu Islands, and will never tolerate any of Japans unilateral moves to infringe on Chinese territorial integrity.

Given the fact that Japan went ahead with its provocative plan to buy the Diaoyu Islands, anti-Japanese sentiments among Chinese netizens have run high over the recent months, which would obviously undermine the public will for stronger bilateral ties.

Besides, rising tensions have also aroused speculations among some Japanese media outlets about whether there would be conflicts between the two East Asian countries.

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“Buying-Islands” farce to badly damage hard-won China-Japan relations

Mass. health architects in demand

HARTFORD Kevin Counihan, an architect of the online insurance exchange that was key to expanding health care coverage in Massachusetts, found himself playing a familiar role this week briefing state officials on how to create a new health insurance marketplace.

Were going to get it done, Counihan promised the nodding bureaucrats. He ticked off plans to tap federal grants, hire administrators, and make people aware of coverage choices.

But he wasnt outlining his strategy on Beacon Hill. Counihan was addressing the Governors Health Care Cabinet in Connecticut, which like many states is scrambling to build from scratch the insurance apparatus called for in President Obamas new health care law.

Nowhere is there more experienced talent for the job than in Massachusetts, which developed the nations first and only universal health coverage system six years ago. That means there is a gold rush on to hire people who helped implement the Massachusetts plan.

Counihan, who consulted on insurance exchanges for 40 states before accepting a post as chief executive of Connecticuts Health Insurance Exchange, is among more than a dozen former Massachusetts health officials cashing in on the need for their expertise. In one way or another, all were pioneers of the expanded coverage at the heart of the health care overhaul championed by former governor Mitt Romney.

Under the US health care law upheld by the Supreme Court, states are required to establish insurance exchanges places where people, especially those now without health insurance, can shop for and buy coverage. In Massachusetts, its called the Health Connector.

The fingerprints of the Massachusetts Connector are clearly visible in the work going on everywhere, said Jon Kingsdale, former executive director of the Connector Authority. Kingsdale has worked with 15 states in the past two years as managing partner in the Boston office of Florida-based Wakely Consulting Group. This week, he flew to Oregon to talk with representatives of 10 states about their exchanges.

The Connector, established under Massachusetts landmark 2006 law to develop a one-stop shopping website for subsidized and unsubsidized health insurance, has become a seedbed for similar efforts now taking shape across the nation, Kingsdale said. The program has helped reduce the ranks of the uninsured to about 2 percent in Massachusetts.

Other former Massachusetts health officials also find themselves in demand. Some were employed under Romney, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee who opposes the federal law. Others worked for his Democratic successor, Deval Patrick. A few straddled both administrations.

While they are keenly aware of the tensions surrounding health exchanges in some states, the former Bay State officials take pains to avoid identifying themselves by political party. They say their primary role is to help get national health care up and running.

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Mass. health architects in demand

Inside health care's employer rules

Splitting up a company to avoid health care reform's employer penalties won't work. Instead, to avoid bankruptcy, business owners like David Barr say they'll fire workers and cut hours.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- In the wake of the Supreme Court's health care decision, several companies with 50 or more full-time workers have embarked on a quest.

Their aim: Get below 50 and dodge the employer mandate.

The health reform law forces them to start providing insurance by 2014 or pay stiff penalties.

Kari DePhillips, who co-owns the Content Factory, a public relations firm in Pittsburgh, was hoping she could just break up the company to sidestep the rule. Maybe one firm would do marketing while the other builds websites.

The small company is on pace to exceed the 50-worker threshold in the next few years. DePhillips doesn't want to provide health care, and she definitely doesn't want to pay the penalty, which would be $2,000 per full-time worker minus the first 30.

"A $40,000 fine to my company would be catastrophic," she said.

The only problem with her break-up plan is that it won't work. The government would still consider both of her companies as one. That's because the employer mandate penalty relies on "controlled group" provisions, focusing on who controls the company -- not necessarily what they do.

It's meant to prevent skirting around the law, said Christopher Condeluci, a Washington D.C. attorney at the law firm Venable who helped draft the rule for the Senate Finance Committee.

"These rules are intended to snuff out this type of abuse," Condeluci said. "You cannot get around the employer mandate."

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Inside health care's employer rules

Health care responses paint clear picture for voters

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Health care responses paint clear picture for voters

Trying to duck health care's employer rules? Don't bother.

In the wake of the Supreme Court's health care decision, several companies with 50 or more full-time workers have embarked on a quest.

Their aim: Get below 50 and dodge the employer mandate.

The health reform law forces them to start providing insurance by 2014 or pay stiff penalties.

Kari DePhillips, who co-owns the Content Factory, a public relations firm in Pittsburgh, was hoping she could just break up the company to sidestep the rule. Maybe one firm would do marketing while the other builds websites.

The small company is on pace to exceed the 50-worker threshold in the next few years. DePhillips doesn't want to provide health care, and she definitely doesn't want to pay the penalty, which would be $2,000 per full-time worker minus the first 30.

"A $40,000 fine to my company would be catastrophic," she said.

The only problem with her break-up plan is that it won't work. The government would still consider both of her companies as one. That's because the employer mandate penalty relies on "controlled group" provisions, focusing on who controls the company -- not necessarily what they do.

Related: What companies need to know about health reform

It's meant to prevent skirting around the law, said Christopher Condeluci, a Washington D.C. attorney at the law firm Venable who helped draft the rule for the Senate Finance Committee.

"These rules are intended to snuff out this type of abuse," Condeluci said. "You cannot get around the employer mandate."

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Trying to duck health care's employer rules? Don't bother.

Impressive Steps To Freedom in control at Dundalk

The Irish Times - Friday, July 13, 2012

STEPS TO FREEDOM registered his first victory of the year with an impressive performance in the Boylesports.comHandicap at Dundalk yesterday. Jessica Harringtons dual-purpose performer showed smart form over hurdles last winter, but was well beaten in the Supreme Novices Hurdle at the Cheltenham Festival and subsequently at Fairyhouse.

He ran with more encouragement when third behind Fame And Glory back on the level in the Vintage Crop Stakes at Navan and he was the 15 to 8 favourite for this two-mile handicap.

Sensibly settled towards the rear by Fran Berry as outsider Cloone Rocket set a ferocious pace, Steps To Freedom made gradual headway through the field. He quickened up to lead heading towards the furlong marker and soon put the race to bed, passing the post with four and a half lengths in hand over Night Glimmer. Rattan and Norah Starr filled the places.

Harrington said: Im absolutely delighted and to do that under 10st 3lb is a good performance. Ive been stymied with the wet summer, with all my horses in fact.

He settled brilliantly. He is entered in the Challenge Stakes at Leopardstown next Thursday and also in the Ebor at York and the Irish St Leger so he has plenty of options.

Well wait and see where the ground is good. Hes a very good Flat stayer and in the autumn will go back over hurdles and hopefully well have a fine spring next year.

Meanwhile, Golden Lilac is viewed by many as something of a certainty for the Etihad Airways Falmouth Stakes, but John Oxxs Alanza is taken to spoil her party at Newmarket today as well as her compatriot, the Aidan OBrien-trained Maybe.

Having won over 10 furlongs last year and an extended nine on her return to action when beating Cirrus Des Aigles, there is a small chance Golden Lilac could be caught for speed.

There is no doubt she is the classiest horse in the race, but she is priced up accordingly whereas Oxxs Alanza appears to have gone under the radar. She won three on the bounce last season and that the Aga Khan left her in training suggests Oxx believes he can get a big win out of her and after a pipe-opener behind Emulous, she was a comfortable winner of a Group Three last time.

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Impressive Steps To Freedom in control at Dundalk

Gene test could soon see if future lovers are compatible

By Fiona Macrae

PUBLISHED: 18:30 EST, 12 July 2012 | UPDATED: 18:30 EST, 12 July 2012

A scientist has said the falling cost of DNA testing means Britain is on the verge of a new era of eugenics. Picture posed by model

It sounds like something from a dystopian nightmare. Instead of couples settling down after falling in love with each other, they will choose their partners based on the compatibility of their genes.

According to a leading scientist, the falling cost of DNA testing means Britain is on the verge of a new era of eugenics.

Professor Armand Leroi, of Imperial College London, said that within five to ten years it will be common for young people to pay for a read-out of their entire genetic code.

The desire to have a healthy baby will then lead them to requesting to see the genetic blueprint of any prospective long-term partner.

Armed with the information, the couple could then use IVF to weed out babies with incurable diseases, a major science conference in Dublin heard.

He added that it is unlikely that people will have the luxury of using the technology to design babies by intellect or eye colour and instead the focus will be on stopping genetic diseases.

Professor Leroi told the Euroscience Open Forum 2012 that in some ways eugenics are already here, with tens of thousands of unborn babies with Downs syndrome and other illnesses being aborted every year.

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Gene test could soon see if future lovers are compatible

A Bitter Fight Over Forced Sterilization

In 1973, Elaine Riddick had been married for a year when she and her husband decided to start a family. She was surprised when her Brooklyn doctor told her it wasnt possibleand even more surprised to discover why: Shed been medically sterilized during a hospital stay in rural Edenton, N.C., where she grew up.

Five years earlier, Riddick had become pregnant at 14. While performing the Caesarean delivery, doctors made sure that her son, Tony, would be her only child. Social workers with the Eugenics Board of North Carolina labeled her feeble-minded and promiscuous. They told her illiterate grandmother that Riddick had to be sterilized. She consented by marking an X on the form.

Riddick is one of an estimated 7,600 North Carolinians sterilized under the states eugenics program. On the books from 1929-74, its goal was to keep those deemed to have undesirable traits from having kids. The vast majority marked for sterilization were minorities, poor, undereducated, institutionalized, sick, or disabled. Eighty-five percent were female, some as young as 10 years old. To find out that my government has done something so hideous only brought shame upon me, Riddick says.

Now an administrative assistant living in Atlanta, shes spent four decades telling her story and pressing state politicians for redress. In May it looked like that would finally happen. A bipartisan bill in the North Carolina House that would pay each living victim $50,000 attracted more than 50co-sponsors, including the Republican speaker, Thom Tillis, and easily passed. The House established an $11 million fund. North Carolina was on its way to becoming the first state in the country to compensate those harmed by eugenics programs.

Thats when things fell apart. Opponents of reparations in the state senate have blocked the bill, claiming theres no money to spare in North Carolinas $20.2 billion budget. While our hearts go out to the victims, the budgetary and economic realities we inherited prevent us from pursuing a financial solution, Republican Senator Phil Berger said in an e-mail. Others dont couch their objections in fiscal jargon. You just cant rewrite history, GOP Senator Don East told the Associated Press. Im so sorry it happened, but throwing money dont change it, dont make it go away. It still happened. If theyre sterile, theyre still sterile.

Indiana enacted the countrys first eugenics legislation in 1907. Eventually 32 states followed, and more than 60,000 people underwent forced sterilization. The practice was largely abandoned after World War II, but North Carolina didnt officially end its program until 1974. In 2003, a five-part series in the Winston-Salem Journal put the states shameful past back in the news. Then-Governor Mike Easley, a Democrat, apologized to the victims and their families, calling it a sad and regrettable chapter in the states history.

His successor, Democrat Bev Perdue, has made reparations a priority. In 2010 she established the N.C. Justice for Sterilization Victims Foundation to determine the number of people harmed by the program and how many are still alive. So far, 146 of the estimated 1,500 to 2,000 living victims have been identified through government records.

Following the senates decision to strip compensation money from the budget, Governor Perdue tried to compromise by offering to cut the fund in half. Republican lawmakers refused and, with the help of several Democrats, overrode her veto of the budget. The issue is now dead until at least next year.

Riddick is no longer counting on politicians to do the right thing. She and hundreds of others who were sterilized are now considering bringing a class action against the state. Its not because were greedy, says Riddick, who points out that $50,000 isnt enough to make anyone rich. Its the principle.

The bottom line: From 1929-74, North Carolina sterilized 7,600 people as part of a eugenics program that mostly targeted minorities and the poor.

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A Bitter Fight Over Forced Sterilization

'Injustice' reveals Cyborg and Nightwing

Two new characters have been revealed for Injustice: Gods Among Us.

This week at San Diego Comic-Con, NetherRealm Studios announced that Nightwing and Cyborg will be playable characters in the DC Universe fighting game with the first screenshots of them in action.

Injustice: Gods Among Us screenshot

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The two heroes join a cast that includes Batman, Harley Quinn, Solomon Grundy, Superman, The Flash and Wonder Woman.

The game is said to have a deep original story, taking place in "a world where the lines between good and evil are blurred".

NetherRealm is developing the title, after last year's success with Mortal Kombat. In 2008, the team also created Mortal Kombat vs DC Universe as Midway Games.

Injustice: Gods Among Us is scheduled to release in 2013 on Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Wii U.

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'Injustice' reveals Cyborg and Nightwing

Signs warn about algae at Burlington, Vt, beaches

BURLINGTON, Vt.Visitors to Lake Champlain beaches in Burlington are being warned about the possibility of toxic blue-green algae in the water.

Warning signs have been posted at city beaches as a precaution.

WCAX-TV ( http://bit.ly/N2UYPa) reports that the beaches are still open but people are advised to keep their dogs out of the water.

Algae blooms can irritate the skin and make people sick if ingested. They also can be lethal to pets.

The water is being tested and results are expected on Friday.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Signs warn about algae at Burlington, Vt, beaches

All beaches closed in Ipswich

IPSWICH All Ipswich beaches were ordered closed yesterday because of concerns about bacterial contamination.

The towns wastewater treatment plant was discharging higher-than-normal levels of coliform bacteria earlier this week, and the health department closed town beaches and clam beds yesterday afternoon as a precaution.

Ipswich wastewater flows into Greenwood Creek, which feeds into the Ipswich River and eventually the ocean.

The closure affects Crane Beach, as well as the smaller Pavilion, Steep Hill, Little Neck and Clark beaches.

Mondays mechanical failure at the wastewater treatment plant, which caused the increased levels of bacteria, has been fixed, said Tim Henry, director of Ipswichs Utilities Department.

This is strictly a precaution, Henry said. Were uncertain of how it might impact the beaches. But as a precaution, this is what the health department wishes to do.

The news comes on the eve of a weekend when temperatures are expected to rise into the 90s, under sunny skies.

Samples of Ipswich beach water were taken yesterday and sent for testing, with results expected by midday today. If the results are clean, its possible Ipswich beaches and clam flats will be reopened, said Colleen Fermon, the towns health agent.

We are closing until testing shows there is no risk, Fermon said.

Henry said earlier water samples taken at Ipswich beaches showed no contamination.

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All beaches closed in Ipswich

Search for human essence 'a 2,000-year myth'

The Irish Times - Friday, July 13, 2012

DICK AHLSTROM

ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE:WE ALL cling to the notion we possess a unique self, but new technologies including gene analysis and artificial intelligence are slowly chipping away at our uniqueness.

The differences between humans and our nearest relatives, the great apes, may be no more than a small collection of genes. And increasingly we are measuring our supposedly human mental capabilities against those running on the nearest computer, a session at the EuroScience Open Forum in Dublin heard yesterday titled: I human: are new scientific discoveries challenging our identity as a species?

We are actually beginning to identify the genes that make a human, said Dr Armand Leroi of Imperial College London. This was the final demolition, as genomic research revealed the genetic similarities and differences. The search for an essence is a 2,000-year-old myth. What we are left with is a sense of capacity and the role of genes in the way they give us these things, he said.

This analysis will change the boundaries of what it is to be human. The technology will also allow us to approach a form of eugenics based on what is found in any DNA analysis. The cost of doing a complete genetic map of a person has fallen from $1 billion 12 years ago to about $4,000, Dr Leroi said.

While a person might not benefit from looking at their own DNA if they are well, it becomes a different matter if the person decides to find a partner and have children. The goal would be to avoid passing on recessive genes, for example for cystic fibrosis, and embryo pre-selection would help accomplish this, he said.

I am certain genome sequencing will be available on the NHS [UK health service] within our lifetimes. It is going to be very, very accessible very, very soon, he said.

Panellist Brian Christian from the US described how since the time of the Greek philosophers humans have drawn comparisons of our capabilities against those of animals, but this changed from the advent of computers.

Now we are much more likely to measure ourselves against machines.

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Search for human essence 'a 2,000-year myth'