ASTRONOMY TECHNOLOGY MEDICINE All the Light Our Best Treatments for There Ever Was Chance for Mars? Cells on Fire ScientificAmerican.com JUNE 2015 The Amazing Teen Braın Rapidly changing wiring leads to mental agility— and risky behavior © 2015 Scientific American ON THE COVER Teenage behavior is all over the map. For years neuro scientists (and parents) have been baffled as to why. Exten sive MRI studies are revealing that underneath the tri umphs and pitfalls of teen life are sweeping changes in the networking of brain regions. The new knowledge could help teens avoid mental illness and make smart choices for June 2015 Volume 312, Number 6 a bright future. Illustration by FOREAL. 56 FEATURES NEUROSCIENCE ETHOLOGY 32 The Amazing Teen Brain 50 The Networked Animal Why are adolescents prone to risky behavior and Who knows whom matters, not only in human societies mental illnesses? And why are their minds so agile but among the animals as well. and teachable? It’s all in their rapidly changing wiring. By Lee Alan Dugatkin and Matthew Hasenjager By Jay N. Giedd TECHNOLOGY ASTRONOMY 56 Birth of a Rocket 38 All the Light There Ever Was To some, nasa’s Space Launch System is a gigantic piece Astronomers have started measuring background light of congressional pork. It may also be our best shot at that dates back to nearly the beginning of time. Now getting humans to Mars. By David H. Freedman they are using it to trace the evolution of the cosmos. FORENSIC SCIENCE By Alberto Domínguez, Joel R. Primack and Trudy E. Bell 66 The Mystery of Case 0425 Forensic scientists are working to trace the identities of MEDICINE 44 Cells on Fire migrants who die trying to enter the U.S. By Ananda Rose Scientists have discovered how cells trigger inflam PUBLIC HEALTH mation, a critical factor in ailments as diverse as 72 The Dengue Stopper ath ero sclerosis, Alzheimer’s and fatty liver disease. Infecting mosquitoes with a common microbe may New treatments may soon follow. be key to keeping insects from spreading a brutal By Wajahat Z. Mehal global disease. By Scott O’Neill Photograph by Jeff Wilson (flame deflector on rocket-engine test stand) June 2015, ScientificAmerican.com 1 © 2015 Scientific American DEPARTMENTS 4 From the Editor 6 Letters 10 Science Agenda Doctors must be better trained in endoflife care. By the Editors 12 Forum 10 It’s time to halt experiments that separate infant monkeys from their mothers. By Barbara J. King 15 Advances When dark matter collides. The wealth in sewage. Dinosaurian fingers. An apocalypse think tank. 27 The Science of Health Nerve surgery is the latest aid for serious snoring. By David Noonan 29 TechnoFiles Featureclogged tech upgrades keep selling— and we keep buying. By David Pogue 78 Recommended The long history of black holes. An edible exploration of mathematics. Cautionary tales from human evolution. By Clara Moskowitz 21 80 Skeptic The humanities and science share the virtues of empiricism and skepticism. By Michael Shermer 81 Anti Gravity There’s gold in them thar hills of solid waste. By Steve Mirsky 82 50, 100 & 150 Years Ago 84 Graphic Science The epigenomic road map of the human body. By Dina Fine Maron ON THE WEB The Hubble’s Quarter of a Century Our InDepth Report commemorates the Hubble 78 Space Telescope’s unprecedented 25 years in orbit. Go to www.ScientificAmerican.com/jun2015/hubble-25 Scientific American (ISSN 0036-8733), Volume 312, Number 6, June 2015, published monthly by Scientific American, a division of Nature America, Inc., 75 Varick Street, 9th Floor, New York, N.Y. 10013-1917. Periodicals postage paid at at New York, N.Y., and at additional mailing offices. Canada Post International Publications Mail (Canadian Distribution) Sales Agreement No. 40012504. Canadian BN No. 127387652RT; TVQ1218059275 TQ0001. Publication Mail Agreement #40012504. 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All rights reserved. 2 Scientific American, June 2015 © 2015 Scientific American From the Editor Mariette DiChristina is editor in chief of Scientific American. Follow her on Twitter @mdichristina Promises and Perils L istening to my 14-year-old daughter explain her those that handle so-called executive function, which mature in a writing assignment the other night, I was surprised person’s 20s. Giedd also describes how an earlier onset of puber- to learn we both had similar homework. I was about ty in recent decades has ext ended this angst-ridden period. to start this letter to introduce the current issue and The protracted maturation, however, beneficially creates its cover story, “The Amazing Teen Brain,” by psychi- prolonged plasticity—enabling teenagers’ enviable leaps of cog- atrist Jay N. Giedd. Her essay was goi ng to analyze the nition and ada ptability, for example, to today’s reasons behind the rash behavior of the famous data-enriched world. Both traits have served star-crossed young lovers in Shakespeare’s Ro- our species well in the past. Now, as science meo and Juliet. As she explained, “Teenagers’ provides a better understanding of this brains are not fully developed yet, so they powerfully influential developmental win- have a problem with impulse control.” As dow, society—from parents to policy lead- she dispassionately talked about the brains ers to youngsters themselves—can work of people her own age, I was struck anew together to support teens on their jour- by how grown-up teens can seem. ney. For the full story, turn to page 32. At the same time, as we are reminded Rather than soaring into the future, painfully and too frequently not only by the Space Launch System, a successor to fictional plays but also by real-world the shuttle, has been called a “rocket to headlines, adolescents are uniquely vul- no where”—a congressional jobs pro- nerable to risky behavior, leading to mis- gram with little hope of actually flying haps or to recruitment to violent ends as to space. But in “Birth of a Rocket,” soldiers or even terrorists. A key question around the recent tri- starting on page 56, journalist David H. Freedman takes a look al of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, who was 19 at the time of the Boston at how the system, which is on time and on budget for a 2018 Marathon bombing, for instance, was the degree to which he flight, could actually bec ome the vehicle of choice to reach was under the influence of his 26-year-old brother, Tamerlan. Mars in about 25 years. Given the sufficient political will—no At root is a developmental mismatch be tween the mental net- small hurdle—the teens of today could see humans step onto works that manage emotion, which shift rapidly at puberty, and another planet. BOARD OF ADVISERS Leslie C. Aiello Kaigham J. Gabriel Lawrence M. Krauss Martin A. Nowak Terry Sejnowski President, Wenner-Gren Foundation President and Chief Executive Officer, Director, Origins Initiative, Director, Program for Evolutionary Professor and Laboratory Head for Anthropological Research Charles Stark Draper Laboratory Arizona State University Dynamics, and Professor of Biology and of Computational Neurobiology Laboratory, of Mathematics, Harvard University Salk Institute for Biological Studies Roger Bingham Harold “Skip” Garner Morten L. Kringelbach Co-Founder and Director, Director, Medical Informatics and Robert E. Palazzo Michael Shermer The Science Network Systems Division, and Professor, Virginia Director, Hedonia: TrygFonden Dean, University of Alabama at Publisher, S keptic m agazine Bioinformatics Institute, Virginia Tech Research Group, University of Oxford Birmingham College of Arts and Sciences Arthur Caplan and University of Aarhus Michael Snyder Director, Division of Medical Ethics, Michael S. Gazzaniga Carolyn Porco Professor of Genetics, Stanford Department of Population Health, Director, Sage Center for the Study of Mind, Steven Kyle Leader, Cassini Imaging Science University School of Medicine NYU Langone Medical Center University of California, Santa Barbara Professor of Applied Economics and TSepaamce, aSncdie Dnciree Icntsotri,t uCtIeCLOPS, Michael E. Webber David J. Gross Management, Cornell University Co-director, Clean Energy Incubator, Vinton Cerf Professor of Physics and Permanent Vilayanur S. Ramachandran and Associate Professor, Chief Internet Evangelist, Google Member, Kavli Institute for Theoretical Robert S. Langer Director, Center for Brain and Cognition, Department of Mechanical Engineering, George M. Church Physics,University of California, Santa David H. Koch Institute Professor, University of California, San Diego University of Texas at Austin Director, Center for Computational Barbara (Nobel Prize in Physics, 2004) Department of Chemical Lisa Randall Steven Weinberg Genetics, Harvard Medical School Lene Vestergaard Hau Engineering, M.I.T. Professor of Physics, Harvard University Director, Theory Research Group, Rita Colwell Mallinckrodt Professor of Lawrence Lessig Martin Rees Department of Physics, Distinguished University Professor, PHhayrsviacrsd a Undn iovfe Arspitpylied Physics, Professor, Harvard Law School Astronomer Royal and Professor (UNnoivbeerl sPitryiz oef iTne Pxhays saict sA, u19st7i9n) University of Maryland College Park of Cosmology and Astrophysics, and Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School Danny Hillis John P. Moore Institute of Astronomy, University George M. Whitesides of Public Health Co-chairman, Applied Minds, LLC Professor of Microbiology and of Cambridge Professor of Chemistry and Richard Dawkins Daniel M. Kammen Immunology, Weill Medical John Reganold Chemical Biology, Harvard University Founder and Board Chairman, Class of 1935 Distinguished Professor College of Cornell University Regents Professor of Soil Science Nathan Wolfe of Energy, Energy and Resources Group, and Agroecology, Washington Director, Global Viral Forecasting Initiative Richard Dawkins Foundation M. Granger Morgan and Director, Renewable and Appropriate State University DEdSPrtweraowanferf Eosdsnr Wdod rUy .o Fnfe iBvlteioerensin tgyineering, ViEPnonafo Credtran gKleiyfhro L,o rKansbhliaaoo,rs Balaet oVrkreyen,l etUuynreivse rsity MPECignraougrfnieenelse gNseoierirci nMoagnlee dalll nioHsdne PUaudnb oivlifce rPsoitlyic y, JEeuDCffgoriereleunycmi teDob .Cr i,Sa .T aSUhccnehoi Evstetarrsthit yInstitute, JAonPQInntrauofootanfhren mZastsuenaomi tZlriio noiNtngft a,rQ eUnaruionnapivnhetyurssmiict syO, oQpf tuVicaisen,n t unma MAGES ( )brain TDeicrehcntoolro, gCye Pnotelirc fyo, rP Irninfocremtoant iUonn iversity ChCrSisOto, Af lKleonc Ihnstitute for Brain Science NCoe-udrioreecntgoinr,e Ceernintge,r Dfourk e University NChaatiior,n Aadl Cviesnotreyr C fooru Sncciiel, n ce Education SPcroiefnescseo, rH oafr Lvaawrd a Unndi voef rCsoitmyputer GETTY I 4 Scientific American, June 2015 Illustration by Nick Higgins © 2015 Scientific American Letters [email protected] “ It would be wise liances” would be historically unlikely. The most likely scenario would involve for us to give up waves of immigrating anatomically mod- the notion that ern humans taking over land and causing death by plunder and disease, as Europe- we are a benevolent ans discovering the New World did. And it and sharing species.” would be naive to think that our Neander- tal DNA was the result of consensual dalli- robert e. marx u niversity of miami miller school of medicine ances when rape went hand in hand with the pillage of every other civilization. It would be wise for us to give up the atable than population controls, which notion that we are, or our ancestors before are objectionable on many levels. us were, a benevolent and sharing species. Robert E. Marx BLACK HOLE BIZARRENESS University of Miami I agree with Adam Brown’s crazy but fun Miller School of Medicine article—“Can We Mine a Black Hole?”— that it is physically impossible to rapidly NEANDERTAL SPELLING February 2015 mine black holes for energy. There are The cover of the issue and Wong’s article many other “catches” that he does not refer to “Neandertals.” So is the spelling mention, however. One is that the more for “Neanderthal” now without an “h”? PRIORITIZING POPULATION massive a black hole is, the colder it is, and Steve Larios In “A Puzzle for the Planet,” Michael E. a black hole with a mass greater than via e-mail Webber discusses the need to integrate about one tenth of that of Earth will have a three key factors (energy, water and food) temperature lower than that of the cosmic THE EDITORS REPLY: G erman linguistic to make it possible to meet the needs of a microwave background (CMB), which is reforms in the early 1900s changed the growing population. A critical point is that about 2.73 kelvins. Any black hole with spelling of the name of the Neander Valley we have to stabilize that population in the greater mass will therefore gain energy from “Neander Thal” to “Neander Tal” first place. As long as it continues to grow, from the CMB and get more massive (and (the “h” was silent). Today the common all other efforts are merely stopgaps. hence, oddly, colder). Only lighter, smaller name of these extinct humans can be Avi Ornstein black holes radiate, getting lighter and hot- spelled with or without the “h.” Scientific New Britain, Conn. ter as they do so, until they explode in a American has long favored “Neandertal.” sudden burst of particles. So find a micron- WEBBER REPLIES: P opulation growth is size black hole but do not go close to it! MEMRISTOR NETWORKS indeed important, but it turns out that eco- Michael Albrow In “Just Add Memory,” Massimiliano Di nomic growth is a bigger deal: demand for Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory Ventra and Yuriy V. Pershin talk about food, energy and water are growing faster how a network of memristors—comput- than population because people tend to de- BROWN REPLIES: T he CMB is indeed ing components that change electrical re- mand more meat and electricity (both of much hotter than a solar-mass black hole, sistance in response to the amount of which are water-intensive) as they are ele- but it won’t be for long. Because the universe current and retain that change—can vated out of poverty. The average Chinese is expanding, the temperature of the CMB is solve a maze problem in one step. They citizen, for instance, consumes about a falling; thanks to dark energy, it is falling fail to mention that to appropriately fourth of the energy of a typical U.S. citi- exponentially, halving every 10 billion “wire” the memristors in the maze, so zen, and as the former becomes richer, that years or so, and will soon (relatively speak- that an input is connected to an output, gap narrows. (Meanwhile urbanization, ing!) be much colder than any black hole. each square of it would need to be visited which reduces birth rates, is increasing.) and a memristor placed where needed. Therefore, making sure that people OUR MURDEROUS ANCESTORS Doing so may require more of the maze to have the energy, water and food they need Kate Wong’s suppositions about what be visited than a random drunkard’s walk for a free and prosperous life, without all brought about Neandertals’ extinction solution or the classic right-hand-to-the- the environmental and security challeng- in “Neandertal Minds” are contrary to wall solution. es that plague our old approaches, is the the known history of anatomically mod- Dave Brumley most effective place to start. Plus, the poli- ern Homo sapiens ( that is, us). Her as- San Diego cy levers (investing in new technologies, sertions that Neandertals were just out- reinventing markets and pushing for a competed and that the 1.5 to 2.1 percent THE AUTHORS REPLY: T o create a maze, culture of conservation) for solving this Neandertal DNA within people outside the only thing you need to know is the nexus are more straightforward and pal- of Africa is the result of occasional “dal- maze topology—namely the position of the 6 Scientific American, June 2015 © 2015 Scientific American Letters LETTERS TO THE EDITOR walls and openings. But the knowledge of the topology does not mean that the maze Scientific American solution is known or even exists. As an ex- ESTABLISHED 1845 75 Varick Street, 9th Floor ample, let us consider a maze drawing in EDITOR IN CHIEF AND SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT New York, NY 10013-1917 Mariette DiChristina or [email protected] a magazine. The maze solver knows the to- EXECUTIVE EDITOR DESIGN DIRECTOR pology at the outset but not the maze solu- Fred Guterl Michael Mrak Letters may be edited for length and clarity. tion and needs time to find it. The same is MRiAcNkAi GLI.N RGu EsDtITinOgR MANAPGhINiliGp E MDIT. OYRa, mONLINE RNoEWbiSn E DLlIToOyRd We regret that we cannot answer each one. Post a comment on any article at true for finding the maze solution with SENIOR EDITORS Mark Fischetti ENERGY / ENVIRONMENT ScientificAmerican.com/jun2015 memristor networks. Josh Fischman BIOLOGY / CHEMISTRY / EARTH SCIENCES Seth Fletcher TECHNOLOGY Christine Gorman BIOLOGY / MEDICINE Gary Stix MIND / BRAIN Kate Wong EVOLUTION HOW TO CONTACT US IS VS. 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