Someone points out that, to demonstrate large effects from strong genomic vectoring, we can look at the successful results of historical animal or crop breeding programs. This is true, and is somewhat convincing, but only somewhat. That's for three reasons:
If we have historical data on genomes of agricultural lines, we could maybe test this. For example, you could in theory train a PGS on a wild-type population that you expect is similar to the starting population of some livestock population; and then ask "is the genome-cloud current (bred) livestock population exactly what you'd get if you did strong one-shot genomic vectoring to the wild-type population, based on this PGS, or is it different?".
Another possibility, which I heard from @kman , is to make a PGS1; then look at a subset of the population that's at some tail of that PGS1; then retrain a new PGS2 on that subset; then compare PGS1 and PGS2. At a coarse level, if they are basically the same, that's some evidence that genomic vectoring should work sort-of far out; if not, that's some evidence against.
PDF version. berkeleygenomics.org. x.com. bluesky.
This is a short miscellaneous list of projects that I think would help accelerate germline engineering. This isn't prioritized or comprehensive or anything—it's not the most important projects, but rather just some projects that have occurred to me. Happy to chat with anyone interested.
Project headlines:
Project details:
At the moment, the US government is calling for deregulation suggestions: https://www.regulations.gov/deregulation. If there's someone who understands how the US Code of Federal Regulations works, and would be up for making a couple submissions, one or two of the policy recommendations here, e.g. CITES treaty and Dickey-Wicker, might be doable: https://berkeleygenomics.org/articles/Policy_recommendations_regarding_reproductive_technology.html
Iterated selection scheduling problem.
Can genomic vectoring have large effects?
Chromosome selection.
Legibilizing interest in / demand for / opinion on germline engineering.
Understand the regulatory landscape.
There's a ton of stuff that would be helpful to present to the public, e.g. explaining the basics of future germline engineering, or addressing various concerns, or mapping the debates and the talking points. Talented / motivated writers or video makers could help! E.g. making a FAQ or short explainers on YouTube.