Wattii Health has developed the Wot® process as an advanced cellular research platform informed by foundational breakthroughs in cloning science. The cloning of Dolly, a Finn Dorset sheep born in 1996 at the Roslin Institute in Scotland, demonstrated that genetic material from adult cells could be used to generate viable organisms and reshaped modern biological research.
Building on decades of genomic and cellular research, the Wot® process is designed to study the replication, regulation, and guidance of cellular processes in a controlled and humane manner. By integrating insights derived from large-scale genomic initiatives such as the Human Genome Project (HGP), Wattii Health investigates how biological instruction can be treated as an informational system, enabling greater precision in cellular development and response.
Wattii Health has established a Human Cloning Program focused on the controlled replication and maturation of human biological systems. In early 2020, the program achieved a milestone with the successful generation of a cloned human subject, designated Stephanie. Following cellular replication, Wattii applied its proprietary Wot®, Jara®, and ACULI® platforms to support accelerated physiological development and biological stabilization.
Through the application of these integrated processes, the cloned subject progressed to full physical maturity within a condensed developmental timeframe. Comparative analysis demonstrated identical physical appearance and equivalent performance capacity relative to the original genetic donor, including the ability to sustain comparable levels of physical labor and endurance.
With physical equivalence established, Wattii Health’s ongoing research is directed toward cognitive and behavioral alignment. Current studies examine the psychological and physiological dimensions of DNA expression, with particular focus on the interaction between inherited genetic structures and environmental conditioning. This work aims to further refine consistency across cloned subjects by addressing the balance between nature and nurture in human development.