Today in Science: The truth about UFO sightings

June 9, 2023: What dreams tell us about mental health, the realities of fusion power and how to stay healthy in smoky skies. Enjoy and TGIF!
Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
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What Dreams May Mean

Dreams can be bizarre and disturbing, and even sometimes frightening. Do some betray a pathology? Dreams alone are not enough to diagnose a mental illness. But some characteristics of a dream may hint at disorders: for example, the frequency of nightmares is generally higher in people with a mental disorder, whether depression, anxiety or post-traumatic stress disorder (they're particularly indicative of a person's risk for suicide).

Why this is cool: Dreams may serve to integrate memories and lessen negative emotions around difficult life experiences; in fact, people tend to wake up happier than when they went to sleep (what I'm hearing: more naps, because SCIENCE). Those systems can get derailed in people with depression or PTSD.

What the experts say: Dreams can be useful in diagnosing some brain disorders, like differentiating between Alzheimer's and Lewy body dementia. Both involve cognitive loss, but the latter is accompanied by REM sleep behavior disorder, where the dreamer tries to physically act out what's happening in their dream.

Fusion Hopes

Last December, physicists working on fusion technology claimed a big milestone victory: for the first time, a fusion reaction put out more energy than was put into it. This achievement brings the technology closer to becoming a viable source of global energy. But some critics argue that progress is not fast enough, nor will it be the only way to transition away from fossil fuels.

Why this matters: The world desperately needs sources of clean energy so we can mitigate the climate crisis created by burning fossil fuels. Despite multinational and startup efforts to build prototype fusion reactors, significant power production is decades away, say some.

What the experts say: "When we realize what climate change will do as an existential threat, the delivery of fusion will accelerate enormously," says Ian Chapman, CEO of the U.K. Atomic Energy Authority, the British government's nuclear energy organization.
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Happy Friday, readers! I hope you've enjoyed Today in Science this week and have found it informative and maybe a bit inspirational. I've received a lot of nice notes from many of you with ideas and feedback, so thank you! And keep it coming. This newsletter will continue to evolve, and YOU can influence what it becomes, so email me at newsletters@sciam.com.
Wishing you clean, smoke-free air this weekend, wherever you are.
—Andrea Gawrylewski, Chief Newsletter Editor
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