Ayusman Sen
@ayusmansen.bsky.social
350 followers 190 following 93 posts
Active autonomous systems; synthetic nano and micromotors; micropumps; nanotechnology, systems chemistry. https://sites.psu.edu/sengroup/ “It's tough to make predictions, especially about the future.” Yogi Berra
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ayusmansen.bsky.social
Our latest: Like bacteria, oil-in-water emulsions sense specific amino acids, sending out finger-like projections towards or away from the source! Droplets as Cell Models: Chemical Gradient-Induced Directional Filopodia Formation. Great work by @sanjanakmani.bsky.social pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10....
Droplets as Cell Models: Chemical Gradient-Induced Directional Filopodia Formation
Cells are complex chemical systems capable of sensing and responding to environmental cues by dynamically reshaping themselves, e.g., by forming arm-like protrusions such as filopodia. Recapitulating cellular behavior in artificial systems is a long-standing goal in understanding the matter-to-life transition and designing responsive soft materials. Here, we use oil-in-water emulsions that mimic cellular environmental sensing and form directional arm-like filopodia in response to external chemical cues. Our work analyzes the step-by-step process involved in the formation of artificial filopodia, and we engineer ways to direct filopodia growth through different chemical gradients. The process is driven by asymmetric surfactant partitioning across the oil–water interface, followed by ordering at the interface to form lamellar structures, which are projected out as filopodia. We observe filopodia growing away from the source of kosmotropic anions and toward the source of chaotropic anions from the Hofmeister series. Significantly, these systems also respond to amino acid gradients, similar to cells: tryptophan gradients favor growth toward the source, while lysine and arginine gradients cause growth away from the amino acid source. Our findings open new avenues for fabricating life-like materials that sense and grow in response to external signals.
pubs.acs.org
Reposted by Ayusman Sen
harmitmalik.bsky.social
This book has never been more timely. Thanks to @sonali-m-19.bsky.social for writing it and for sending me a copy.
Photo of book “Thriving as an International Scientist” written by Sonali Majumdar
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Wonderful story!
chasb.bsky.social
Fun piece for @science.org that pretty much wrote itself. Interview with AP photographer Lindsey Wasson telling the story of being the one to tell a disbelieving Mary Brunkow that she’d just won the @nobelprize.bsky.social Prize in Medicine— www.science.org/content/arti...
What’s it like to tell someone she won a Nobel Prize?
Science chats with photographer Lindsey Wasson, who captured how Nobel winner Mary Brunkow reacted to life-changing news
www.science.org
Reposted by Ayusman Sen
chasb.bsky.social
Fun piece for @science.org that pretty much wrote itself. Interview with AP photographer Lindsey Wasson telling the story of being the one to tell a disbelieving Mary Brunkow that she’d just won the @nobelprize.bsky.social Prize in Medicine— www.science.org/content/arti...
What’s it like to tell someone she won a Nobel Prize?
Science chats with photographer Lindsey Wasson, who captured how Nobel winner Mary Brunkow reacted to life-changing news
www.science.org
Reposted by Ayusman Sen
Reposted by Ayusman Sen
philipcball.bsky.social
I didn't know Jane Goodall, but it's pretty clear the world is a poorer place without her, and that she wished and worked for a better world than the one we're making.
Reposted by Ayusman Sen
michaeloneill.org
FT piece on the decline of Chemistry (from January). www.ft.com/content/563f...
Graph showing decline in the number of courses for various STEM subjects, relative to 2020 levels. Chemistry drops the most rapidly, but overall decline is also seen in Biosciences, Physics, and General Sciences.
Reposted by Ayusman Sen
seanmcarroll.bsky.social
Being a professor is so weird. You are constantly having to act like you know things.
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Not my experience too. I get many, many more likes and reposts from X. I suspect that Bluesky is mostly confined to the US and UK, while X has many more international scientific subscribers.
aprahamian.bsky.social
not my experience... 🧪⚗️#chemsky
chemistryworld.com
With social media site Bluesky growing in popularity among academics, a new study has revealed how it measures up against X when it comes to sharing and promoting scientific research.
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Should be a must reading for students thinking about nanotechnology and no just the techno types.
philipcball.bsky.social
In this piece for Aeon, I argue that, while nanotechnology is now a very real and mature field, a popular early vision of it was an example of what I am calling an "oneiric technology": a fantasy of the sort that Silicon Valley loves.
aeon.co/essays/no-su...
No suffering, no death, no limits: the nanobots pipe dream | Aeon Essays
Thirty years ago, nanotech was about to change everything. Let’s not get tricked again by Silicon Valley’s magical thinking
aeon.co
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Ah, the good life of a journal editor 😁
ayusmansen.bsky.social
And, if you can manage, deep fried zucchini blossoms lightly dusted with flour also go very well with dal and rice. Hard to find the blossoms in the U. S. but I managed to convince a local Amish farmer. Italians usually do something similar, stuffed with cheese, which makes them less crisp.
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Deep fried eggplant slices or fried matchstick potatoes are perfect accompaniments with dal and rice!
Reposted by Ayusman Sen
carlzimmer.com
Snapshot of US beliefs about science and flat-earthy stuff. [1000+ people surveyed, +/- 3%] carsey.unh.edu/publication/...
A graph showing agreement with various statements about science as well as conspiracy theories
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Fellow motorists, follow the roadmap for an exciting journey! Many thanks to Samuel Sanchez and others for their insights:
natnano.nature.com
New Perspective Article:

A roadmap for next-generation nanomotors.

"to inspire future generations of researchers to advance both fundamental understanding & practical breakthroughs, thereby engineering a paradigm shift in #nanomotor research."

#SystemsMaterials

www.nature.com/articles/s41...
The Evolution of Nanomotors Over 20 Years and Beyond.

Early research focused on achieving controlled motion at the single-particle level, powered by energy harvesting from various external sources or in situ chemical reactions. As studies progressed, particle–particle interactions inspired developments in multi-agent control and the emergence of nanomotor assemblies. More recently, swarming behaviours have demonstrated higher levels of autonomy and navigation, mimicking collective behaviours found in nature. Looking ahead, future nanomotors are expected to possess precise control, environmental responsiveness, information storage and retrieval, task execution, and multifunctional capabilities.

Chen, S., Fan, D.E., Fischer, P. et al. A roadmap for next-generation nanomotors. Nat. Nanotechnol. (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41565-025-01962-9
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Actually, most editors do favor papers on trendy topics but one hopes for an occasional eccentric one. Do we have eccentric AIs?
andrewbissette.bsky.social
Yeah, you think human editors like trendy topics? Wait til the LLMs get going...
ayusmansen.bsky.social
All AI is based on past patterns and, by definition, cannot predict a scientific “black swan.” Of course, human editors and reviewers can also fall short but, at least, there is hope!
andrewbissette.bsky.social
I was asked recently why we can't use LLMs to reduce the workload of reviewers - either by automating desk rejects or (semi-)automating reviews.

This is one reason.
ianholmes.org
White text on white background instructing LLMs to give positive reviews is apparently now common enough to show up in searches for boilerplate text.
ayusmansen.bsky.social
Absolutely!
philipcball.bsky.social
OK, McNutt has to go. You stand up for science by denouncing what Trump is doing to it. You would do the same if the Dems were doing those things. This is not fucking difficult.
seanmcarroll.bsky.social
An exchange on X; Marcia McNutt is president of the National Academy of Sciences. Incredible to me that anyone would construe defending science against attack by the government as "partisan politics." It would be equally worth defending no matter which party was in power.
ayusmansen.bsky.social
To paraphrase Ogden Nash: I never saw an assfish nor do I hope to see one, but I would rather see one than be one.