A team led by Project Associate Professor Harrison B. Smith of the Earth and Life Science Institute (ELSI) at Tokyo University of Science and Project Associate Professor Lana Sinapaen of the Institute for Basic Biology has introduced a new strategy to discover extraterrestrial life. Rather than looking for specific biological signals, their approach looks for patterns shared across groups of planets. This idea provides a new direction for astrobiology, especially when traditional biosignatures are unclear or unreliable.
One of the biggest challenges in the search for extraterrestrial life is determining whether features observed on distant planets are truly indicative of life. Common biosignatures, such as certain gases in a planet’s atmosphere, can be produced by abiotic processes and can lead to false positives. Technosignatures may be more convincing, but they rely on assumptions about how intelligent life forms behave, which increases uncertainty.
To address these issues, researchers considered another perspective. They asked whether life could be identified through widespread effects across many worlds, rather than focusing on individual planets.
“Agnostic biosignature” approach
The research team is introducing the concept of “agnostic biosignatures,” which avoid relying on detailed knowledge of what life is or how it works. This method is built on two general concepts. One is that life can move between planets (for example, through panspermia), and the other is that it gradually changes the environment in which it lives.
To test this concept, the researchers used agent-based simulations to model how life spreads through star systems and affects the properties of planets. Their results show that if life spreads and changes the planets, it could create measurable statistical associations between the planets’ positions and the characteristics they exhibit.
Importantly, these patterns can emerge even when no planet exhibits clear biological signatures.
Detecting life through planetary patterns
In addition to determining the presence of life, the team developed a method to determine which planets are most likely to host life. By grouping planets based on common characteristics and location in space, they were able to identify planetary clusters that were likely formed by biological activity.
This method emphasizes accuracy over completeness. It is designed to reduce false positives, even if it means parts of planets that support life are missed. This trade-off is valuable when telescope time is limited and follow-up observations must be carefully selected.
New directions in astrobiology research
“By focusing on how life spreads and interacts with its environment, we can explore life without the need for a perfect definition or a single definitive signal,” said Harrison B. Smith. Lana Sinapaen added: “Even if life elsewhere is fundamentally different from life on Earth, large-scale effects such as planetary dispersal or modification can still leave detectable traces. That’s what makes this approach compelling.”
The discovery suggests that future surveys of large numbers of exoplanets could use statistical methods to detect life across planet populations. This is especially useful when individual signals are weak, unclear, or easily misinterpreted.
For the future
The study also points to the need to better understand the natural diversity of planets that form without life. Having a clearer baseline makes it easier to recognize abnormal patterns that may be caused by biological processes.
Although the current research is based on simulation, it lays the foundation for a new kind of life detection method. The researchers note that future studies will need to incorporate more detailed planetary data and realistic models of how galaxies evolve. Still, the results show that life may be identified not just by its chemistry, but by the large-scale patterns it leaves across the universe.

