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Home » Can Dogs Detect the Next Pandemic Before It Begins? – Glen J. Golden (Transcript)

Can Dogs Detect the Next Pandemic Before It Begins? – Glen J. Golden (Transcript)

Read here the full transcript of neurobiologist Glen J. Golden’s talk titled “Can Dogs Detect the Next Pandemic Before It Begins?” at TED Talks 2024 conference.

Listen to the audio version here:

TRANSCRIPT:

The Concept of a Disease-Detecting Mechanical Nose

You know how smoke detectors work, right? So imagine if we had something like a smoke detector, but for diseases. Instead of testing the air for smoke particles, this alarm would look for tiny traces of an odor profile associated with being infected by a virus, for example, all day long, 24-7. If the second the odor profile reached a certain concentration, the alarm would start blaring.

Immediately, you would know that you were sick, that you should see a doctor, or at the very least, that you should isolate yourself. Ideally, this mechanical nose would sniff out a virus before you showed any symptoms or spread it to anyone else. Because if we learned anything from the COVID-19 pandemic, it’s that testing matters. And the sooner we know you’re infected, the better.

A mechanical nose like this could stop pandemics in their tracks, and not just for humans, but for animals, too. Take the high-pathogen avian influenza virus that left 53 million chickens dead in the U.S. alone and caused egg prices to skyrocket. It’s easy to test chickens for avian influenza virus, but there are tens of thousands of chickens at any given farm.

So which ones do you test? Wild waterfowl are basically asymptomatic and can transfer the virus just by landing on the farm. And if you do have a sick chicken, by the time you get the results back, it’s probably too late. The whole flock is sick.

What we need is a mechanical nose testing the air 24-7, nonstop. That is the ultimate end goal of my research. Well, not just my research, but a whole field of biologists, chemists, mechanical engineers, and physicists studying odor and scent detection.