Scientists and educators age fastest. Athletes age slowest.
A facial aging clock trained on occupation-linked photos found that the gap between your biological face-age and your real age predicts all-cause mortality. The wider that gap, the higher your risk.
Women aged slower than men in every single occupation measured. No exceptions.
The ranking, from youngest-looking to oldest-looking relative to chronological age:
Athletes > service workers > sales > clerical > managers > professionals > scientists and educators.
The people who study aging for a living look the oldest. I wish I could say I'm surprised.
Your face is a record of cumulative stress, UV, sleep loss, and metabolic wear. Your job title determines how much of each you get.
By 2024, U.S. cancer survivors are expected to reach 26 million, driven by medical research breakthroughs ⚕️
Here, our partner, @RangeETFs, charts survival rates by cancer type over time.
https://t.co/ASlT4diNYq
Aggressive move by this wikipedia contributor to geometrically visualize the binomial theorem.
Oh, do you "have trouble" seeing things in 4D? Sorry that life is so difficult for you. Stop whining and try harder.
Ranked: What Europeans Are Most Proud Of 🌍
This graphic by The European Correspondent is one of the many incredible data-driven charts and stories from creators featured on our website. ✅
https://t.co/GhICrgeZjr
AI-generated articles online rose from 6.81% in 2022 to 51.38% in the 2025 📝
This graphic is part of AI Week, our @TerzoHQ-sponsored series exploring how artificial intelligence is reshaping business, technology, and society.
https://t.co/1y7IjM41A6 #aiweek
Longer is not always better. @harvardmed doc @pnatarajanmd measured telomere lengths across the USA and discovered something really interesting! 👇
Shorter telomeres (in white blood cells) were associated with higher risk of heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, pulmonary fibrosis, kidney disease, certain neurodegenerative diseases & were more common in people with European & south Asian ancestry.
Longer telomeres were associated with higher risk of several cancers, including melanoma, lung, glioma leukemia & more often found in individuals of African & certain Latin American ancestries.
Conclusion: Telomere length is a tradeoff. Too short and you are predisposed to degenerative diseases. Too long and you're at increased cancer risk.
Thus, telomere length is not a simple “longer is better” aging biomarker
Parts of the West Coast trend longer, while areas like Florida and the Southeast show shorter telomeres. But overall, telomere length is driven mainly by ancestry and genetics, not geography.
You can get your telomere length measured with a simple blood test
@NatureGenet
https://t.co/qy9ckKRcNW
Ranked: The Countries Generating the Most Electricity ⚡
From @VCElements—bridging the gap between global trends shaping our future, and the raw materials powering them.
https://t.co/9dMxas5jV0
False and misleading. The Ice Ages were 5-14°F colder. Last time Earth was this hot was ~125,000 years ago. If current warming continues, by 2100 we will reach temps higher than 3 million yrs ago, before humans existed
https://t.co/7RGvCOiyQ1
https://t.co/S2GmZliXP1
Happy Year of the Horse! I was fortunate to be looking out of the Cupola while we were passing over Beijing, and saw the twinkling of fireworks celebrating the Lunar New Year!