Tetris therapy and algorithmic feeds rewire choices as habitability tightens

The findings link interface design to mental health, while models restrict viable planetary chemistry.

Alex Prescott

Key Highlights

  • A controlled study of 82 adults found beef jerky became the top snack choice after THC exposure.
  • A 67,800-year-old Indonesian hand stencil pushes back timelines for symbolic art and seafaring.
  • Analysis of births from 2003–2006 indicates broader, more complex prenatal PFAS exposure than earlier assays captured.

r/science spent the day proving that modern science isn’t just discovering the world—it’s actively redesigning our attention, our bodies, and even our narratives about where life can thrive. The threads converge on a contrarian truth: we’re outsourcing self-control to systems while realizing just how narrow the universe’s tolerances really are.

Algorithmic levers: from political feeds to therapeutic games

When a community obsesses over algorithms, it’s rarely about code; it’s about power. That’s why the top discussion dug into evidence that X’s “For You” feed nudges users toward conservative priorities, while another celebrated how a simple interface can become medicine through a Tetris-based intervention that slashes traumatic flashbacks in healthcare workers. Two different levers, same principle: tweak the inputs, rewire the mind.

"I'm always shocked when I open twitter and see the richest man in the world posting AI generated propaganda forced onto my feed. If you'd told me this would happen 10 years ago I'd laugh and call you crazy. It's all very dystopian." - u/baroldnoize (1047 points)

Meanwhile, the lab meets the liquor aisle. Substitution, not abstinence, ruled the data showing cannabis beverages can curb alcohol intake, and even the “munchies” have moved from punchline to protocol in a controlled trial where beef jerky topped snack choices after THC exposure. The throughline is unflattering but honest: we keep delegating willpower to product design and calling it progress.

Rewriting the body’s playbook

The preventive imagination is in overdrive, from an intranasal approach that promises a universal, months-long shield against diverse respiratory threats in mice to a biomarker that estimates when Alzheimer’s symptoms might emerge years ahead. It’s a seductive future: predict early, intervene once, and move on.

"My concentration skills went to hell, but I am a champion multi-tasker." - u/hananobira (262 points)

But the body resists neat timelines. Neuroimaging shows that second pregnancies uniquely rewire attention and sensory networks, while environmental chemistry reminds us that prenatal PFAS exposure has been broader and more complex than our old assays captured. The message: bold interventions will work best when they acknowledge the shifting baselines etched by life stages and legacy pollutants.

Boundaries: from mantles to murals

Exoplanet optimism took a reality check with modeling that puts Earth in a narrow chemical corridor, where mantle oxygen levels kept nitrogen and phosphorus available instead of locked in the core. Water is not enough; habitability is a knife’s edge, and we may have been treating a miracle as a default setting.

"Well that’s going to make the Fermi paradox a lot less interesting if it’s that pedestrian." - u/Otaraka (51 points)

Yet our species keeps outrunning the boundaries we like to draw. The record-setting find of a 67,800-year-old Indonesian hand stencil rearranges the origin myth of art and migration, implying long-range planning and seafaring where we once assumed stasis. If nature’s tolerances are narrow, human creativity compensates by pushing timelines, distances, and assumptions as far as evidence allows.

Journalistic duty means questioning all popular consensus. - Alex Prescott

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Sources

TitleUser
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