A new study highlights the risk that evidence of extraterrestrial life could go undetected even when present. Researchers call for better strategies to avoid false negatives in future space exploration.
A paper published in Nature Astronomy examines the problem of false negatives in the search for life beyond Earth. Lead author Inge Loes ten Kate of Utrecht University and the University of Amsterdam said these cases occur when life exists but scientists fail to recognize it.
Ten Kate noted that current missions may overlook evidence because traces of life can fade, signals may be too weak, or detection tools have limits. The team urges more lab work, modeling, and fieldwork to address these gaps.
The researchers also suggest Artificial Intelligence could help spot patterns humans might miss. They warned that missing life signs risks both overlooking habitable sites and allowing premature resource extraction that could destroy undetected organisms.
Ten Kate pointed to unusual iron-bearing minerals found on Mars as an example of unexplained observations that require further study to avoid potential false negatives.