Ants Could be Used to Detect Cancer, Scientists Suggest

A Matabele ant is seen carrying an injured mate back to the nest after a raid in this July 26, 2013 handout photo. (Reuters)
A Matabele ant is seen carrying an injured mate back to the nest after a raid in this July 26, 2013 handout photo. (Reuters)
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Ants Could be Used to Detect Cancer, Scientists Suggest

A Matabele ant is seen carrying an injured mate back to the nest after a raid in this July 26, 2013 handout photo. (Reuters)
A Matabele ant is seen carrying an injured mate back to the nest after a raid in this July 26, 2013 handout photo. (Reuters)

Although small in size, ants could soon play a big role in protecting our health, reported The Daily Mail. The insects may one day be used to detect cancer, according to a new study. Scientists have discovered ants, like dogs, can "sniff" out the disease.

In various experiments dogs have detected different types – for example, finding breast and lung cancer by sniffing patients’ breath. But a study has now found ants have a "high potential" to be used as a form of detection.

Researchers discovered that after just a few minutes of training, formica fusca black ants were able to differentiate healthy human cells from cancerous ones in a petri dish. This, they believe, is because healthy and cancerous cells emit different compounds that ants can distinguish by smell.

Most people rely on an MRI, mammogram or blood tests, which can be expensive and invasive, to pick up cancerous cells.

The study, published in the journal iScience, is the first to show ants have high potential, are capable of learning very quickly, at lower cost, and are efficient.

The authors, from the French National Center for Scientific Research, said: "We show that individual ants need only a few training trials to learn, memorize, and reliably detect the odor of human cancer cells."

The target for suspected cancer patients to be seen by a specialist within two weeks of an urgent referral may be axed.

Instead, the NHS proposed a focus on diagnosis within 28 days of referral and treatment within 31 days of a decision as it began a consultation recently.



Monsters and Memes: Labubu Dolls Ride China Soft-power Wave

Labubu dolls on display at the Pop Land theme park in Beijing. Pedro PARDO / AFP
Labubu dolls on display at the Pop Land theme park in Beijing. Pedro PARDO / AFP
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Monsters and Memes: Labubu Dolls Ride China Soft-power Wave

Labubu dolls on display at the Pop Land theme park in Beijing. Pedro PARDO / AFP
Labubu dolls on display at the Pop Land theme park in Beijing. Pedro PARDO / AFP

Small, fuzzy and baring sharp teeth, Chinese toymaker Pop Mart's Labubu monster dolls have taken over the world, drawing excited crowds at international stores and adorning the handbags of celebrities such as Rihanna and Cher.

Beijing-based Pop Mart is part of a rising tide of Chinese cultural exports gaining traction abroad, furry ambassadors of a "cool" China even in places associated more with negative public opinion of Beijing such as Europe and North America, said AFP.

Labubus, which typically sell for around $40, are released in limited quantities and sold in "blind boxes", meaning buyers don't know the exact model they will receive.

The dolls are "a bit quirky and ugly and very inclusive, so people can relate", interior designer Lucy Shitova told AFP at a Pop Mart store in London, where in-person sales of Labubus have been suspended over fears that fans could turn violent in their quest for the toys.

"Now everything goes viral... because of social media. And yes, it's cool. It's different."

While neighboring East Asian countries South Korea and Japan are globally recognized for their high-end fashion, cinema and pop songs, China's heavily censored film and music industry have struggled to attract international audiences, and the country's best-known clothing exporter is fast-fashion website Shein.

There have been few success stories of Chinese companies selling upmarket goods under their own brands, faced with stereotypes of cheap and low-quality products.

"It has been hard for the world's consumers to perceive China as a brand-creating nation," the University of Maryland's Fan Yang told AFP.

Pop Mart has bucked the trend, spawning copycats dubbed by social media users as "lafufus" and detailed YouTube videos on how to verify a doll's authenticity.

Brands such as designer womenswear label Shushu/Tong, Shanghai-based Marchen and Beijing-based handbag maker Songmont have also gained recognition abroad over the past few years.

"It might just be a matter of time before even more Chinese brands become globally recognizable," Yang said.

TikTok effect

Through viral exports like Labubu, China is "undergoing a soft-power shift where its products and image are increasingly cool among young Westerners," said Allison Malmsten, an analyst at China-based Daxue Consulting.

Malmsten said she believed social media could boost China's global image "similar to that of Japan in the 80s to 2010s with Pokemon and Nintendo".

Video app TikTok -- designed by China's ByteDance -- paved the way for Labubu's ascent when it became the first Chinese-branded product to be indispensable for young people internationally.

Joshua Kurlantzick from the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) told AFP that "TikTok probably played a role in changing consumers' minds about China".

TikTok, which is officially blocked within China but still accessible with VPN software, has over one billion users, including what the company says is nearly half of the US population.

The app has become a focus of national security fears in the United States, with a proposed ban seeing American TikTok users flock to another Chinese app, Rednote, where they were welcomed as digital "refugees".

A conduit for Chinese social media memes and fashion trends, TikTok hosts over 1.7 million videos about Labubu.

Labubumania

Cultural exports can "improve the image of China as a place that has companies that can produce globally attractive goods or services", CFR's Kurlantzick told AFP.

"I don't know how much, if at all, this impacts images of China's state or government," he said, pointing to how South Korea's undeniable soft power has not translated into similar levels of political might.

While plush toys alone might not translate into actual power, the United States' chaotic global image under the Trump presidency could benefit perceptions of China, the University of Maryland's Yang said.

"The connection many make between the seeming decline of US soft power and the potential rise in China's global image may reflect how deeply intertwined the two countries are in the minds of people whose lives are impacted by both simultaneously," she told AFP.

At the very least, Labubu's charms appear to be promoting interest in China among the younger generation.

"It's like a virus. Everyone just wants it," Kazakhstani mother-of-three Anelya Batalova told AFP at Pop Mart's theme park in Beijing.