Hello Nature readers, would you like to get this Briefing in your inbox free every day? Sign up here.

An artist's impression of a giant collision between the ancient protoplanet Theia and proto-Earth.

The protoplanet Theia, which was roughly the size of Mars, slammed into proto-Earth 4.5 billion years ago (artist’s impression).Credit: Hernán Cañellas

Strange mantle blobs are relics of collision

Two mysterious blobs of rock in Earth’s mantle could be remnants of the planetary smash-up that formed the Moon. The formations sit in the layer between the crust and the core, are thousands of kilometres long and are slightly denser than their surroundings. Computer simulations suggest that they are from the protoplanet Theia, which smashed into Earth 4.5 billion years ago. Some of Theia’s remnants were flung into orbit, where they coalesced into the Moon.

Nature | 4 min read

Reference: Nature paper

Mysteries of fainting revealed

Experiments in mice have identified a specific group of sensory neurons that is responsible for syncope, the brief loss of consciousness during fainting. The cells — called NPY2R vagal sensory neurons — are found in the vagus nerve, which connects the brain to the heart and other organs. Scientists activated these cells in mice that were roaming about, which then fainted within a few seconds. Their pupils dilated, their eyes rolled back and their heart rate, blood pressure and breathing rate all dipped. The team also found that a region of the brain’s hypothalamus is responsible for recovery from fainting.

Nature | 5 min read

Reference: Nature paper

First treatment against ‘super-gonorrhoea’

The first new gonorrhoea antibiotic in decades could address a worrying rise of a drug-resistant form of the bacterium. The disease is often symptomless, and can cause infertility if left untreated. In a trial with 930 participants, the new drug, called zoliflodacin, was as effective and safe as two older drugs in curing infections. Researchers warn that zoliflodacin will have to be used wisely to avoid the bacterium developing resistance to it, too.

Nature | 4 min read

UK researchers launch anti-bullying group

Academics and staff members at several UK universities have set up an initiative to combat bullying and harassment. The ‘21 Group’ advocates for the establishment of an independent advocate to whom people can turn if their institutions handle complaints badly. “Perpetrators are almost always protected, while targets frequently face retaliation,” says anti-bullying researcher Morteza Mahmoudi.

Nature | 4 min read

Features & opinion

(Totto Renna)

‘Peer pressure’ could help steer AI ethics

Can artificial intelligence (AI) systems be taught to make ethical choices? Human judgement is shaped by social interactions — and virtual ‘peer pressure’ for chatbots, in which ones trained with ethical standards interact with others to teach them how to behave, could mimic this process. Another approach is a sort of brain surgery for AI, in which the parts of a system that are responsible for undesirable behaviour are neatly excised. How AI systems are supposed to deal with differing opinions is an open question. “We’re looking to ideas from governance,” says cognitive scientist Sydney Levine. Ethical AI could even lead to insights about why humans make the moral choices they do, “to help humans be better at being human”, says computer scientist Oren Etzioni.

Nature | 12 min read

This article is part of Nature Outlook: Robotics and artificial intelligence, an editorially independent supplement produced with financial support from FII Institute

How to keep secrets in a quantum world

“Your data could already be lost to a future quantum computer, even though one hasn’t been built,” says mathematician Dustin Moody. He’s one of the scientists working on ways to encrypt data that will resist quantum computers’ attempts at unravelling them. The task is urgent: spy agencies or cybercriminals could collect encrypted data now and simply wait for the technology to catch up. Of 69 potentially quantum-resistant algorithms that the US National Institute of Standards and Technology chose in late 2017, up to 30 have already been broken or suffered significant attack. “The strongest will survive,” says Moody.

Nature | 10 min read

Read more in Nature Spotlight: Cryptography

Could the atomic ‘dual mandate’ tame AI?

In 1957, the International Atomic Energy Agency was created with a dual mandate: promote the transfer of peaceful nuclear technology — while curtailing its military use. By providing a mechanism for sharing the benefits of nuclear technology, the dual mandate secured international support for measures to limit proliferation, write Harry Law and Lewis Ho, who are both AI governance researchers at Google DeepMind. “States on the frontier of artificial intelligence (AI) development could take inspiration from the dual mandate,” they argue. “They could provide assistance to other countries in harnessing the benefits of AI. This could incentivize buy-in to a system of global governance.”

Nature Reviews Physics | 5 min read

Video: How would a starfish wear trousers?

A starfish is getting ready for a day out — but would it pop its trousers on over each of its arms, or maybe over each little tiny-tube foot? This light-hearted animated video shows how this silly question reveals a perplexing problem with bilateral symmetry and how the starfish’s body plan evolved.

Nature | 3 min video

Reference: Nature paper

Quote of the day

“Modern industrial products should not be recognized as foods at all.”

Pediatric-obesity researcher David Ludwig says that parents and others must fight back against the normalization of ultraprocessed foods to reduce the epidemic of childhood obesity in the United States. (The New York Times | 29 min read)