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Robots power breakthrough in pregnancy research, boosting IVF success rates

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Robots power breakthrough in pregnancy research, boosting IVF success rates

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Starting a family may involve some robotic assistance in the near future.

AI-powered in-vitro fertilization (IVF) is the newest application for artificial intelligence, as labs and health centers around the world have adopted the new technology.

This includes Columbia University Fertility Center in New York. Its Sperm Tracking and Recovery (STAR) method uses AI to identify viable sperm in men who struggle with infertility.

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The fertility center also developed a robot to assist in the IVF lab, preparing specialized plates to sustain embryos.

Research published in the journal Fertility and Sterility found that this robot is 10 times more precise in preparing these embryo culture plates than humans.

Conceivable’s AURA automated technology assists embryologists in the IVF process, the CEO told Fox News Digital, like Dr. Alejandro Chavez-Badiola, co-founder and Conceivable CMO, pictured above. (Conceivable Life)

Dr. Zev Williams, director of Columbia University Fertility Center, said in a statement to Fox News Digital that these technologies have been “truly transformative” for patients.

“There are literally babies being conceived because of our innovations who otherwise could not have been,” he said. “We’re offering tangible solutions to couples who have struggled with infertility for years, even decades.”

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AI in action

Two other companies, Overture Life in California and Conceivable Life in New York, have developed AI-powered robotics to carry out IVF processes.

Conceivable Life CEO Alan Murray told Fox News Digital how the company’s AURA AI-powered IVF technology brings “robotics precision” to a delicate process. 

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“IVF requires extraordinary precision, but human hands introduce variability, no matter how skilled,” he said.

The AI technology “automates everything,” Murray said, including sperm selection, egg preparation, sperm injection, embryo culture and egg freezing.

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The Columbia University Fertility Center has introduced automated IVF systems. (Columbia University Fertility Center)

The technology is not intended to replace embryologists, he noted, but to support them with technology that helps eliminate human error.

Murray said the technology is showing “early but promising data.” In a pilot study, it achieved 51% pregnancy rates and led to 19 healthy babies from trial participants.

AURA is targeting a clinical launch in the U.S. in 2026, pending testing and validation.

Overture Life has created a similar system of products that are beginning to yield “healthy live babies,” CEO Hans Gangeskar told Fox News Digital in an interview.

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Overture’s key product, the DaVitri, is a handheld device that automates egg-freezing. The company also offers other technologies for embryo selection and fertilization.

Gangeskar said its clinical trials have had “very good results,” with the technology expected to launch in Europe “imminently.”

Cutting high costs 

Last week, President Donald Trump announced a plan to slash IVF costs for American families and expand access, as a single round in the U.S. can cost up to $25,000.

Although it takes an average of three cycles to have a baby, some women may undergo up to 15 cycles before achieving a viable pregnancy, according to Dr. Stephanie Kuku, chief knowledge officer of Conceivable Life.

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The AI-powered robots can help with egg freezing, as well as choosing viable embryos and insemination precision. (Conceivable Life)

It takes 200 manual steps to create an embryo in a lab, the expert noted — but a robotic assistant could help an embryologist make “complex decisions” with more precision and potentially reduce the number of cycles.

Murray said that AI is “reimagining the laboratory” to increase efficiency, reduce the number of cycles and improve IVF success rates.

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“Right now, IVF outcomes depend on which clinic you go to, which embryologist is on duty and whether you can afford multiple cycles,” he said. “Our vision is to change the technology that doctors use so they can do it without that big investment.”

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The CEO noted this technology could also remove some of the grief for families who have experienced multiple failed IVF cycles.

“Everybody has their limit on how much of that pain they can take before they give up,” he said. “It’s incredibly personal.”

An Overture Life scientist is pictured in the lab using the DaVitri device. (Overture Life)

Religious red flags

For those with certain religious beliefs, taking the IVF route may raise concerns.

“Different religious traditions have different perspectives on assisted reproduction,” Murray said. “It’s a very personal thing.”

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He pointed out that “infertility does not discriminate,” as one in six people experiences issues globally.

“Our role isn’t to make those decisions for families — it’s to provide technology that makes family building possible for those who choose this path,” Murray said. 

Gangeskar acknowledged that religion “comes up all the time” when speaking with patients about IVF options, noting that “Christian IVF” has surfaced as an alternative option.

“AI may assist in creating life, but it must also respect it.”

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Instead of retrieving many eggs, fertilizing all of them and then freezing the embryos, Christian IVF historically involves freezing and fertilizing them one by one, so there are never embryos left over.

“This is something that the DaVitri can actually be very helpful with, because you know that your eggs were frozen in the best possible way,” Gangeskar said. 

“The goal is to make IVF more accessible by making it more efficient, and ideally more affordable,” one expert said. (iStock)

Potential risks

Dr. Harvey Castro, an ER physician and AI expert in Texas, who was not involved in this IVF research, told Fox News Digital he considers this an “industrial revolution of reproductive medicine.”

Castro warned, however, that there may be room for algorithm error when making important decisions such as classifying an embryo. This calls into question who’s accountable — the clinician, the developer or the AI vendor, for example.

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He said most AI systems are validated on limited patient data, which means large, diverse, multi-center trials are required before expanding these machines for clinical use.

“AI may assist in creating life, but it must also respect it,” he said. “As both a physician and an AI futurist, I believe our goal is not just more births, but healthier beginnings — achieved responsibly, ethically and equitably.”

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Wegovy Pill Side Effects To Watch for and How It Compares to Injections

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Wegovy Pill Side Effects To Watch for and How It Compares to Injections


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Parkinson’s risk increases with exposure to common chemical, study suggests

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Parkinson’s risk increases with exposure to common chemical, study suggests

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A pesticide commonly used in America’s food supply has been linked to Parkinson’s disease, new research suggests.

A UCLA study published in the journal Springer Nature Link suggests that exposure to chlorpyrifos could increase the risk of the neurological disease.

The chemical is often used on agricultural products like soybeans, fruit and nut trees, broccoli, cauliflower and other row crops, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

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The study compared 829 people with Parkinson’s to 824 people without the disease over a 45-year period, focusing on their proximity to chlorpyrifos.

The researchers also conducted mouse experiments, where mice inhaled the pesticide as humans would for 11 weeks. Experiments were also carried out on zebrafish to study cell-level brain damage.

Chlorpyrifos is often used on agricultural products like soybeans, fruit and nut trees, broccoli, cauliflower and other row crops, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (iStock)

In humans, the study revealed that long-term exposure to chlorpyrifos led to more than a 2.5 times higher risk of Parkinson’s.

In mice, exposure to the pesticide caused movement problems similar to Parkinson’s symptoms, loss of dopamine-producing neurons, increased brain inflammation and build-up of harmful proteins.

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Zebrafish suffered brain cell death and damage linked to failure in the cell’s “cleanup system,” according to the study press release.

Dr. Jeff Bronstein, director of the Movement Disorders Program at UCLA and professor of neurology and molecular toxicology, noted that previous human studies also suggested an association between chlorpyrifos exposure and Parkinson’s.

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“[We were] surprised that the mechanism of toxicity was apparent in both mice and zebrafish,” he said. “We rarely find such consistent results in different animal models.”

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A researcher commented that the consistency in results between human and animal subjects is “rare.” (iStock)

The researcher emphasized that the association between pesticide exposure and Parkinson’s was “very strong,” and the longer someone was exposed, the higher the risk became.

“People should avoid exposure to CPF and similar pesticides (organophosphates) by not using them in their home, eating organics, and washing fruits and vegetables before eating them,” Bronstein advised.

Study limitations

The study did have some limitations, the researchers acknowledged, primarily that it was observational, meaning it shows an association but cannot prove causation.

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It also estimated exposure based on participants’ locations, and did not measure diet, indoor exposure or personal lifestyle behaviors. Additionally, the results of the animal models can’t be translated directly to humans.

There was also the possibility that chlorpyrifos was used along with other chemicals, which means it could be difficult to measure its specific impact, the study noted.

Chlorpyrifos is used to control different kinds of pests, like termites, mosquitoes and roundworms, among crops. (iStock)

Industry reaction

Chlorpyrifos is used to control different kinds of pests, like termites, mosquitoes and roundworms, among crops, according to the National Pesticide Information Center (NPIC) at Oregon State University.

People can be exposed to the pesticide by breathing it in or by consuming contaminated food or water.

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In 2021, the EPA banned the use of chlorpyrifos on food crops, but a federal appeals court overturned that decision in 2023, allowing its use to resume on some crops while regulators revisit the rule.

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In January 2026, the EPA issued an update outlining plans to move forward with a rule that would ban most uses of chlorpyrifos.

“Chlorpyrifos is subject to registration review, a process required under FIFRA (the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act) in which registered pesticides are comprehensively evaluated every 15 years against current safety standards and the latest scientific evidence,” the EPA said in a statement sent to Fox News Digital.

“EPA is currently developing a revised human health risk assessment for chlorpyrifos as part of that review, and will consider this study alongside any other relevant submissions,” the agency said in a statement sent to Fox News Digital. (Getty)

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“EPA is currently developing a revised human health risk assessment for chlorpyrifos as part of that review, and will consider this study alongside any other relevant submissions. Where the science calls for stronger protections or tolerance revocations, EPA will act without hesitation and without delay.”

Fox News Digital reached out to several manufacturers of the chemical for comment.

“People should avoid exposure to CPF and similar pesticides.”

Corteva, an Indiana agrichemical company formed in 2019 through the merger of Dow Chemical and DuPont, announced in 2020 that it would end production of chlorpyrifos within the year, citing declining sales.

In April 2022, the German chemical company BASF requested the cancellation of its pesticide registrations for products containing chlorpyrifos. 

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“BASF does not manufacture chlorpyrifos and does not have any pesticide registrations issued by the U.S. EPA for chlorpyrifos-containing products,” the company told Fox News Digital. 

No products from Corteva or BASF were included in the study linking chlorpyrifos to Parkinson’s disease.

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‘Call a Boomer’ payphones help cure loneliness, spark friendships across generations

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‘Call a Boomer’ payphones help cure loneliness, spark friendships across generations

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Along a bustling sidewalk in Boston, a bright yellow payphone invites folks to “call a Boomer.”

Almost 3,000 miles away in Reno, Nevada, a nearly identical phone prompts residents of Sierra Manor – an apartment complex for seniors – to “Call a Zoomer.” The goal is simple: to get strangers to talk to each other.

The project, often referred to as simply “Call a Boomer,” is the latest initiative from Matter Neuroscience, a New York-based company dedicated to mapping the “biomarkers of happiness.”

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By connecting “two of the loneliest demographics” (older adults and younger adults), the project aims to prove that on a molecular level, “humans need one another in order to be happy,” according to Calla Kessler, a social strategist at Matter Neuroscience.

Along a bustling sidewalk in Boston, a bright yellow payphone invites folks to “Call a Boomer.” (Matter Neuroscience)

“Younger adults and older adults tend to experience the highest levels of loneliness of any age group,” the company wrote on its website. “So the goal of this project is to inspire generational connection through meaningful conversations, despite differences in age, lifestyle or politics.”

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The hope, according to Kessler, is that the calls will shift the brain’s focus from stress to bonding.

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“Our neuroscience angle is cannabinoids over cortisol,” Kessler told Fox News Digital. “Cannabinoids are the feel-good neurotransmitter in our brain that creates that warm feeling with a friendship — and when you activate cannabinoids, you’re counteracting the negative effects of cortisol, which is our primary stress hormone.”

“Younger adults and older adults tend to experience the highest levels of loneliness of any age group,” the company noted. (Matter Neuroscience)

This isn’t Matter’s first round of payphones. Its initial experiment connected one of the most liberal cities in the U.S. (San Francisco) with one of the most conservative (Abilene, Texas).

“We basically just wanted people to find common ground and encourage people to think beyond labels,” Kessler said.

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She noted that the negative results were “almost negligible,” with most participants enjoying their time speaking to different people.

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Now, the focus has shifted from political labels to generational divides.

The negative results have beem “almost negligible,” with most participants enjoying their time speaking to different people. (Matter Neuroscience)

As the “Call a Boomer” experiment continues, the team is busy collecting audio files of these intergenerational chats to prove that simple connections with other humans can help improve mental health.

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“Our research is essentially trying to find a non-pharmaceutical cure to depression,” Kessler added.

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Looking ahead, she said, “we’ll definitely be doing fun things that we hope get people’s attention and inspire them to learn a little more about themselves.”

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