What could our future be like if we could significantly slow down aging?
In this episode of the Existential Hope podcast, Morgan Levine speaks on what she thinks the future of aging will look like, and what her hopes are. She answers questions such as what a day in her life as an aging researcher looks like, if she is optimistic for the future, and what science and technology she believes will be necessary for us to be able to get to a bright future.
Levine is a ladder-rank Assistant Professor in the Department of Pathology at the Yale School of Medicine and a member of both the Yale Combined Program in Computational Biology and Bioinformatics, and the Yale Center for Research on Aging. Her research aims to track epigenetic, transcriptomic, and proteomic changes with aging and incorporate
this information to develop measures of risk stratification for major chronic diseases, such as cancer and Alzheimer’s disease.
Submit your contribution to the storytelling bounty from Morgan's prompt to “Truly scientifically proving that you’ve taken someone back 10 years in aging” here: https://gitcoin.co/issue/29245
Existential Hope
A group of aligned minds who cooperate to build beautiful futures from a high-stakes time in human civilization by catalyzing knowledge around potential paths to get there and how to plug in.
Follow us!
Twitter: https://twitter.com/HopeExistential
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/existential...
In the Existential Hope-podcast (https://www.existentialhope.com), we invite scientists to speak about long-termism. Each month, we drop a podcast episode where we interview a visionary scientist to discuss the science and technology that can accelerate humanity towards desirable outcomes.