Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Scientists Share Which Experiments They'd Love To Perform But Can't Without Seeming Crazy

Scientists Share Which Experiments They'd Love To Perform But Can't Without Seeming Crazy

Have you ever wanted to figure something out so desperately for the good of others, but realize that in order to find the answer you would have to skirt moral, human ethics to incredible degrees?

Welcome to the world of being a scientist. You are always hungry for more information, but have to realize there is a line that you cannot cross when experimenting, especially with human test subjects.


But that doesn't stop 'em from dreaming.

u/illuseyourusername asked:

(Serious) Scientists of Reddit, what is something you desperately want to experiment with, but will make you look like a mad scientist?

Here were some of those answers.

Psychopath Through The Ages

Giphy

I want to take DNA from infamous serial killers like Dahmer or Albert Fish or the like, clone them, then have the baby raised in a normal, supportive, loving family.

I'd study the kids all through adulthood to see how much is nurture and how much is nature.

RecalcitrantJerk

There's a guy who did a TED Talk, found out by accident that he has the brain of a serial killer (brain scan). Talked about the character qualities he has that fit the bill, family history and all that.

https://www.smithsonianmag.com/science-nature/the-neuroscientist-who-discovered-he-was-a-psychopath-180947814/

lonequack

Your Own Personal Ecosystem

I want to do a long term case study on children's Microbiome. It would start with samples of their mothers microbiome, and then when the child is first born get a sample of theirs, compare it, and continue comparing the two samples throughout breast feeding vs. bottle feeding. Also get a detailed comparison of how the microbiome changes after vaccinations, sickness, antibiotics.

I would basically study every single poop this child has, their eating habits, their health conditions, any medications, vaccinations, etc. for years.

But people want privacy, and most wouldn't want to commit to keeping such accurate accounts of their children's food/health/activities, so it's likely that even if I did this study it would be difficult to prove all variables were accounted for. And with all the variability I would need many, many children.

The end goal is to see how our microbiome changes throughout your childhood, and note when you may be more susceptible to things depending on the type of microflora you have. Everyone has a different ratio, so essentially if we can harness the individuals capability of unique flora we could find a whole new way to tackle illnesses and preventatives for sicknesses that would have significantly less side effects than many other medications.

This idea stems from others studying the microbiome, and finding that certain ratios of microflora can cause you to get over illnesses quicker when combined with the right medicine, and also help digestive tracks regulate better. But so far these tests are being done with cancer patients. I think if we're able to see how children are effected it may bring less possibilities of cancer and other illnesses down the road, as well as a faster recovery time.

BlondeStalker

Ethics

Giphy

I'm a physician and I would love to see how far the Placebo Effect really goes.

For those who are not familiar, the Placebo Effect is an unexplained phenomena where people who take medications that aren't real, but they believe are real, have an actual, measurable effect on their illness. People with depression who take sugar pills report feeling happier. People with pain who take sugar pills report a decrease to their pain etc.

I've seen even crazier ones where people think they are having surgery for their bad knee...but the docs just put them under, make an incision on their knee, do nothing, sew them back up and patients report improvement to their bad knee.

So part of me just wants to explore this to its full extent. Can we treat chronic illnesses like arthritis, lupus and bipolar disorder with just placebos? What about viral illness? Can you imagine if someone's HIV viral load decreased while they're eating Skittles thinking its a new miracle drug?

PhillipLlerenas

Call Of The Wild

Experiments with social isolation intrigue me. Raise a child with no language and see what happens. No contact. Wild children give us some insights, but also a sample of the kind of trauma this can produce. Completely and undeniably unethical. Incredibly cruel. But sooooo intriguing!!

Pyrocephalus-rubinus

Heat Vision

I want to work on genetically modifying the genes that control our active cones in our eyes. Specifically I want to try to activate a tertiary cone in the eyes of dogs so that they can see infared light just like snakes can.

In simpler terms, we could make rescue dogs that have infared vision to help locate missing people or recover people in natural disasters.

In even simpler terms I want to make heatseeking dogs.

CleanableYetti

In The Way

Giphy

I wouldn't say "mad scientist", but medical privacy laws get in the way of a LOT of incredibly useful research. Everything has to be so de-identified and confidential that it makes doing any sort of large-scale statistics nearly impossible. You have to make a ton of assumptions because you can't know many details.

If I had full access to everyone's medical records, we could probably fix a whole lot.

scottevil110

When Mad Lightning Strikes

The typical discovery and clinical testing pipeline of a pharmaceutical looks something like this:

cell culture > rodent models > other animals (primates, rabbits, etc.) > humans

If at any step the drug fails the test (either for toxicity or efficiacy), the potential drug is nixed. And this process of discovery and clinical testing can take up to 10 years at the cost of billions of dollars.

What happens if your model systems can't fully recapitulate the human disease phenotype? So what happens if you've got a drug that might work really well in the human, but we never know, because it gets trashed because there's no response in the mouse model?

Now I completely understand the ethical concerns with testing on human subjects from the get go, but if you asked me to don my mad scientist lab coat and goggles, I'd try to push for earlier testing on human subjects.

bigtcm

Violating The Oath

I'd never do the experiment, but it's hard to overstate how helpful it would be to have large-scale, longitudinal data on how different chemotherapeutic drugs/drug cocktails affect the evolutionary trajectory of tumors.

The problem is that in order to study it, you'd need to:

  1. Give a large number of people experimental or substandard care, which is highly unethical.
  2. Perform serial surgeries even when they aren't medically necessary in order to collect tissue samples from the tumors, and since every surgery carries with it some risk this is also highly unethical.

breadeatingheathen

Ichor

Giphy

Use the milk from orb spiders (they mix the DNA of orb spiders with goals at U Wyoming) to build a better dental filling. They'd hypothetically last exponentially longer, would bond to tooth as an organic substance, and are stronger that Teflon. It would also be minimally invasive as to set the groundwork for more invasive medical applications such as knee replacements. If you fund me I know the orb goat and dental guys.

StarbuckXMachina

Many Moooooooore

I'd like to raise babies in various planned conditions such as:

  • Without any adult human interaction
  • Without language
  • Indoors only
  • With different concepts of a family unit
  • With different concepts of gender roles

And many more!

NewClayburn

More from News/science

Pete Buttigieg
Flagrant/YouTube

Buttigieg Explains What He Wants 'Everyday Life' To Look Like For Americans In Pitch Perfect Rant

On his Substack Wednesday, former South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg wrote about why he decided to enter the "manosphere" and sit down with the hosts of the Flagrant podcast.

The manosphere is defined as a "varied collection of websites, blogs, podcasts, and online forums by men and for men often promoting masculinity, misogyny, and opposition to feminism. Communities within it include men's rights activists, incels, Men Going Their Own Way, pick-up artists, and fathers' rights groups."

Keep Reading Show less
Jennifer Vasquez Sura
Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

Abrego Garcia's Wife Forced To Move To Safe House After Homeland Security Shares Her Address On Social Media

The name Kilmar Abrego Garcia has been in the news steadily since his abduction by the Department of Homeland Security's Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the United States Supreme Court unanimously ordering he be returned to his family in Maryland.

But much less has been said or written about Abrego Garcia's American-born wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura. The pair have been married since 2019 and share a child.

Keep Reading Show less
Sarah Michelle Gellar
Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images

Could SMG return to the IKWYDLS reboot?

Sarah Michelle Gellar? More like "Sarah Dead Gellar."

At least that’s what the iconic scream queen told director and best friend Jennier Kaytin Robinson when she tried to pitch all the ways to bring back Helen Shivers’ frozen corpse to life for the I Know What You Did Last Summer reboot.

Keep Reading Show less
Pete Hegseth
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Hegseth Dragged After Report Reveals He Demanded His Own Makeup Studio At Pentagon

Hating drag queens and insisting on traditional gender roles is a Republican article of faith at this point.

So why is far-right MAGA Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who has tried to kick trans people out of the military, demanding that a makeup studio be added to the Pentagon press briefing room for him?

Keep Reading Show less