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Chronic asthma could be caused by cell overcrowding in the airways
Identifying drugs to reduce the excessive expulsion of cells in the lung lining could reduce the damage of chronic asthma.
50 years ago, phantom pain was blamed on misfiring nerves
A weaker magnetic field may have paved the way for marine life to go big
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Spotlight on Health
Traces of bird flu are showing up in cow milk. Here’s what to know
We asked the experts: Should people be worried? Pasteurization and the H5N1 virus’s route to infection suggests risks to people remains low.
Irregular bone marrow cells may increase heart disease risk
Malaria parasites can evade rapid tests, threatening eradication goals, from the archives.
Human Behavior: Do Animals Have the Answer
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NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image of a strong solar flare on May 8, 2024. The Wednesday solar flares kicked off the geomagnetic storm happening this weekend. NASA/SDO hide caption
NOAA Issues First Severe Geomagnetic Storm Watch Since 2005
May 10, 2024 Scientists at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration observed a cluster of sunspots on the surface of the sun this week. With them came solar flares that kicked off a severe geomagnetic storm. That storm is expected to last throughout the weekend as at least five coronal mass ejections — chunks of the sun — are flung out into space, towards Earth! NOAA uses a five point scale to rate these storms, and this weekend's storm is a G4. It's expected to produce auroras as far south as Alabama. To contextualize this storm, we are looking back at the largest solar storm on record: the Carrington Event.
Esther Nesbitt lost two of her children to drug overdoses, and her grandchildren are among more than 320,000 who lost parents in the overdose epidemic. Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images hide caption
Shots - Health News
In a decade of drug overdoses, more than 320,000 american children lost a parent.
May 8, 2024 New research documents how many children lost a parent to an opioid or other overdose in the period from 2011 to 2021. Bereaved children face elevated risks to their physical and emotional health.
This illustration depicts a washed-up Ichthyotitan severnensis carcass on the beach. Sergey Krasovskiy hide caption
Largest-ever marine reptile found with help from an 11-year-old girl
May 6, 2024 A father and daughter discovered fossil remnants of a giant ichthyosaur that scientists say may have been the largest-known marine reptile to ever swim the seas.
A survey shows that doctors have trouble taking full vacations from their high-stress jobs. Even when they do, they often still do work on their time off. Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images hide caption
Perspective
When pto stands for 'pretend time off': doctors struggle to take real breaks.
May 4, 2024 What's a typical vacation activity for doctors? Work. A new study finds that most physicians do work on a typical day off. In this essay, a family doctor considers why that is and why it matters.
Weliton Menário Costa (center) holds a laptop while surrounded by dancers for his music video, "Kangaroo Time." From left: Faux Née Phish (Caitlin Winter), Holly Hazlewood, and Marina de Andrade. Nic Vevers/ANU hide caption
'Dance Your Ph.D.' winner on science, art, and embracing his identity
May 4, 2024 Weliton Menário Costa's award-winning music video showcases his research on kangaroo personality and behavior — and offers a celebration of human diversity, too.
Researchers in a rainforest in Indonesia spotted an injury on the face of a male orangutan they named Rakus. They were stunned to watch him treat his wound with a medicinal plant. Armas/Suaq Project hide caption
Orangutan in the wild applied medicinal plant to heal its own injury, biologists say
May 3, 2024 It is "the first known case of active wound treatment in a wild animal with a medical plant," biologist Isabelle Laumer told NPR. She says the orangutan, called Rakus, is now thriving.
The federal government says it has taken steps toward developing a vaccine to protect against bird flu should it become a threat to humans. skodonnell/Getty Images hide caption
Launching an effective bird flu vaccine quickly could be tough, scientists warn
May 3, 2024 Federal health officials say the U.S. has the building blocks to make a vaccine to protect humans from bird flu, if needed. But experts warn we're nowhere near prepared for another pandemic.
A Nazca booby in the Galápagos Islands incubates eggs with its webbed feet. Wolfgang Kaehler/LightRocket via Getty Images hide caption
The Science of Siblings
For birds, siblinghood can be a matter of life or death.
May 1, 2024 Some birds kill their siblings soon after hatching. Other birds spend their whole lives with their siblings and will even risk their lives to help each other.
Planet Money
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April 30, 2024 An economic perspective on misinformation
This image shows a brain "assembloid" consisting of two connected brain "organoids." Scientists studying these structures have restored impaired brain cells in Timothy syndrome patients. Pasca lab, Stanford University hide caption
Scientists restore brain cells impaired by a rare genetic disorder
April 30, 2024 A therapy that restores brain cells impaired by a rare genetic disorder may offer a strategy for treating conditions like autism, epilepsy, and schizophrenia.
Katie Krimitsos is among the majority of American women who have trouble getting healthy sleep, according to a new Gallup survey. Krimitsos launched a podcast called Sleep Meditation for Women to offer some help. Natalie Champa Jennings/Natalie Jennings, courtesy of Katie Krimitsos hide caption
Helping women get better sleep by calming the relentless 'to-do lists' in their heads
April 26, 2024 A recent survey found that Americans' sleep patterns have been getting worse. Adult women under 50 are among the most sleep-deprived demographics.
Bird flu is spreading through U.S. dairy cattle. Scientists say the risk to people is minimal, but open questions remain, including how widespread the outbreak is and how the virus is spreading. DOUGLAS MAGNO/AFP via Getty Images hide caption
As bird flu spreads in cows, here are 4 big questions scientists are trying to answer
April 26, 2024 Health officials say there's very little risk to humans from the bird flu outbreak among dairy cattle, but there's still much they don't know. Here are four questions scientists are trying to answer.
A coyote at the Fort Worth Zoo is photographed in the hours leading up to the April 8 total solar eclipse. The Hartstone-Rose Research Lab, NC State hide caption
Animals get stressed during eclipses. But not for the reason you think
April 25, 2024 After studying various species earlier this month, some scientists now say they understand the origin of animal behavior during solar eclipses.
Dr. Jeffrey Stern, assistant professor in the Department of Surgery at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, and Dr. Robert Montgomery, director of the NYU Langone Transplant Institute, prepare the gene-edited pig kidney with thymus for transplantation. Joe Carrotta for NYU Langone Health hide caption
A woman with failing kidneys receives genetically modified pig organs
April 24, 2024 Surgeons transplanted a kidney and thymus gland from a gene-edited pig into a 54-year-old woman in an attempt to extend her life. It's the latest experimental use of animal organs in humans.
Drug companies often do one-on-one outreach to doctors. A new study finds these meetings with drug reps lead to more prescriptions for cancer patients, but not longer survival. Chris Hondros/Getty Images hide caption
Oncologists' meetings with drug reps don't help cancer patients live longer
April 22, 2024 Drug company reps commonly visit doctors to talk about new medications. A team of economists wanted to know if that helps patients live longer. They found that for cancer patients, the answer is no.
When the media covers scientific research, not all scientists are equally likely to be mentioned. A new study finds scientists with Asian or African names were 15% less likely to be named in a story. shironosov/Getty Images hide caption
Which scientists get mentioned in the news? Mostly ones with Anglo names, says study
April 19, 2024 A new study finds that in news stories about scientific research, U.S. media were less likely to mention a scientist if they had an East Asian or African name, as compared to one with an Anglo name.
An artistic rendering of a washed-up Ichthyotitan severnensis carcass on the beach. Sergey Krasovskiy hide caption
An 11-year-old unearthed fossils of the largest known marine reptile
April 19, 2024 When the dinosaurs walked the Earth, massive marine reptiles swam. Among them, a species of Ichthyosaur that measured over 80 feet long. Today, we look into how a chance discovery by a father-daughter duo of fossil hunters furthered paleontologist's understanding of the "giant fish lizard of the Severn." Currently, it is the largest marine reptile known to scientists.
COMIC: Our sun was born with thousands of other stars. Where did they all go?
April 18, 2024 Our sun was born in a cosmic cradle with thousands of other stars. Astrophysicists say they want to find these siblings in order to help answer the question: Are we alone out there?
Surgeon Christoph Haller and his research team from Toronto's Hospital for Sick Children are working on technology that could someday result in an artificial womb to help extremely premature babies. Chloe Ellingson for NPR hide caption
An artificial womb could build a bridge to health for premature babies
April 12, 2024 Artificial wombs could someday save babies born very prematurely. Even though the experimental technology is still in animal tests, there are mounting questions about its eventual use with humans.
In the womb, a brother's hormones can shape a sister's future
April 9, 2024 When siblings share a womb, sex hormones from a male fetus can cause lasting changes in a female littermate. This effect exists for all kinds of mammals — perhaps humans too.
The black-capped chickadee, seen here, is well known for its strong episodic memory. Dmitriy Aronov hide caption
The "barcodes" powering these tiny songbirds' memories may also help human memory
April 5, 2024 Tiny, black-capped chickadees have big memories. They stash food in hundreds to thousands of locations in the wild – and then come back to these stashes when other food sources are low. Now, researchers at Columbia University's Zuckerman Institute think neural activity that works like a barcode may be to thank for this impressive feat — and that it might be a clue for how memories work across species.
The "barcodes" powering these tiny songbirds' memories may also help human memory
"One second doesn't sound like much, but in today's interconnected world, getting the time wrong could lead to huge problems," geophysicist Duncan Agnew says. Here, an official clock is seen at a golf tournament in Cape Town, South Africa. Johan Rynners/Getty Images hide caption
Negative leap second: Climate change delays unusual step for time standard
March 30, 2024 We're nearing a year when a negative leap second could be needed to shave time — an unprecedented step that would have unpredictable effects, a new study says.
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1 Cite Share APOE4 homozygozity represents a distinct genetic form of Alzheimer's disease. Fortea J, Pegueroles J, Alcolea D, Belbin O, Dols-Icardo O, Vaqué-Alcázar L, Videla L, Gispert JD, Suárez-Calvet M, Johnson SC, Sperling R, Bejanin A, Lleó A, Montal V. Fortea J, et al. Nat Med. 2024 May 6. doi: 10.1038/s41591-024-02931-w. Online ahead of print. Nat Med. 2024. PMID: 38710950 Cite Share Item in Clipboard
2 Cite Share Mapping the cellular biogeography of human bone marrow niches using single-cell transcriptomics and proteomic imaging. Bandyopadhyay S, Duffy MP, Ahn KJ, Sussman JH, Pang M, Smith D, Duncan G, Zhang I, Huang J, Lin Y, Xiong B, Imtiaz T, Chen CH, Thadi A, Chen C, Xu J, Reichart M, Martinez Z, Diorio C, Chen C, Pillai V, Snaith O, Oldridge D, Bhattacharyya S, Maillard I, Carroll M, Nelson C, Qin L, Tan K. Bandyopadhyay S, et al. Cell. 2024 May 2:S0092-8674(24)00408-2. doi: 10.1016/j.cell.2024.04.013. Online ahead of print. Cell. 2024. PMID: 38714197 Cite Share Item in Clipboard
3 Cite Share Puppy-dog eyes in wild canines sparks rethink on dog evolution. Dohrn G. Dohrn G. Nature. 2024 May 5. doi: 10.1038/d41586-024-01315-x. Online ahead of print. Nature. 2024. PMID: 38705890 No abstract available. Cite Share Item in Clipboard
4 Cite Share Accurate structure prediction of biomolecular interactions with AlphaFold 3. Abramson J, Adler J, Dunger J, Evans R, Green T, Pritzel A, Ronneberger O, Willmore L, Ballard AJ, Bambrick J, Bodenstein SW, Evans DA, Hung CC, O'Neill M, Reiman D, Tunyasuvunakool K, Wu Z, Žemgulytė A, Arvaniti E, Beattie C, Bertolli O, Bridgland A, Cherepanov A, Congreve M, Cowen-Rivers AI, Cowie A, Figurnov M, Fuchs FB, Gladman H, Jain R, Khan YA, Low CMR, Perlin K, Potapenko A, Savy P, Singh S, Stecula A, Thillaisundaram A, Tong C, Yakneen S, Zhong ED, Zielinski M, Žídek A, Bapst V, Kohli P, Jaderberg M, Hassabis D, Jumper JM. Abramson J, et al. Nature. 2024 May 8. doi: 10.1038/s41586-024-07487-w. Online ahead of print. Nature. 2024. PMID: 38718835 Cite Share Item in Clipboard
5 Cite Share Fluorescent bicolour sensor for low-background neutrinoless double β decay experiments. Rivilla I, Aparicio B, Bueno JM, Casanova D, Tonnelé C, Freixa Z, Herrero P, Rogero C, Miranda JI, Martínez-Ojeda RM, Monrabal F, Olave B, Schäfer T, Artal P, Nygren D, Cossío FP, Gómez-Cadenas JJ. Rivilla I, et al. Nature. 2020 Jul;583(7814):48-54. doi: 10.1038/s41586-020-2431-5. Epub 2020 Jun 22. Nature. 2020. PMID: 32572207 Cite Share Item in Clipboard
6 Cite Share Evaluation of post-surgical cognitive function and protein fingerprints in the cerebro-spinal fluid utilizing surface-enhanced laser Desorption/Ionization time-of-flight mass-spectrometry (SELDI-TOF MS) after coronary artery bypass grafting: review of proteomic analytic tools and introducing a new syndrome. Reis HJ, Wang L, Verano-Braga T, Pimenta AM, Kálmán J, Bogáts G, Babik B, Vieira LB, Teixeira AL, Mukhamedyarov MA, Zefirov AL, Kiyasov AP, Rizvanov AA, Matin K, Palotás M, Guimarães MM, Ferreira CN, Yalvaç ME, Janka Z, Palotás A. Reis HJ, et al. Curr Med Chem. 2011;18(7):1019-37. doi: 10.2174/092986711794940897. Curr Med Chem. 2011. PMID: 21254974 Free article. Review. Cite Share Item in Clipboard
7 Cite Share A high-fat diet promotes cancer progression by inducing gut microbiota-mediated leucine production and PMN-MDSC differentiation. Chen J, Liu X, Zou Y, Gong J, Ge Z, Lin X, Zhang W, Huang H, Zhao J, Saw PE, Lu Y, Hu H, Song E. Chen J, et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024 May 14;121(20):e2306776121. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2306776121. Epub 2024 May 6. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2024. PMID: 38709933 Cite Share Item in Clipboard
8 Cite Share Current Pathological and Laboratory Considerations in the Diagnosis of Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation. Toh CH, Alhamdi Y, Abrams ST. Toh CH, et al. Ann Lab Med. 2016 Nov;36(6):505-12. doi: 10.3343/alm.2016.36.6.505. Ann Lab Med. 2016. PMID: 27578502 Free PMC article. Review. Cite Share Item in Clipboard
9 Cite Share Transcriptional Analysis of Blood Lymphocytes and Skin Fibroblasts, Keratinocytes, and Endothelial Cells as a Potential Biomarker for Alzheimer's Disease. Mukhamedyarov MA, Rizvanov AA, Yakupov EZ, Zefirov AL, Kiyasov AP, Reis HJ, Teixeira AL, Vieira LB, Lima LM, Salafutdinov II, Petukhova EO, Khaiboullina SF, Schlauch KA, Lombardi VC, Palotás A. Mukhamedyarov MA, et al. J Alzheimers Dis. 2016 Oct 18;54(4):1373-1383. doi: 10.3233/JAD-160457. J Alzheimers Dis. 2016. PMID: 27589530 Free PMC article. Cite Share Item in Clipboard
10 Cite Share Navigating Cardiology's Leaky Pipeline. Burns CJ. Burns CJ. JAMA Cardiol. 2022 Nov 1;7(11):1089-1090. doi: 10.1001/jamacardio.2022.3188. JAMA Cardiol. 2022. PMID: 36169937 Cite Share Item in Clipboard
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Empirical Tests of the Green Paradox for Climate Legislation
The Green Paradox posits that fossil fuel markets respond to changing expectations about climate legislation, which limits future consumption, by shifting consumption to the present through lower present-day prices. We demonstrate that oil futures responded negatively to daily changes in the prediction market's expectations that the Waxman-Markey bill — the US climate bill discussed in 2009-2010 — would pass. This effect is consistent across various maturities as the proposed legislation would reset the entire price and consumption path, unlike temporary supply or demand shocks that phase out over time. The bill’s passage would have increased current global oil consumption by 2-4%. Furthermore, a strengthening of climate policy, as measured by monthly variations in media salience regarding climate policy over the last four decades, and two court rulings signaling limited future fossil fuel use, were associated with negative abnormal oil future returns. Taken together, our findings confirm that restricting future fossil fuel use will accelerate current-day consumption.
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Title: kan: kolmogorov-arnold networks.
Abstract: Inspired by the Kolmogorov-Arnold representation theorem, we propose Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (KANs) as promising alternatives to Multi-Layer Perceptrons (MLPs). While MLPs have fixed activation functions on nodes ("neurons"), KANs have learnable activation functions on edges ("weights"). KANs have no linear weights at all -- every weight parameter is replaced by a univariate function parametrized as a spline. We show that this seemingly simple change makes KANs outperform MLPs in terms of accuracy and interpretability. For accuracy, much smaller KANs can achieve comparable or better accuracy than much larger MLPs in data fitting and PDE solving. Theoretically and empirically, KANs possess faster neural scaling laws than MLPs. For interpretability, KANs can be intuitively visualized and can easily interact with human users. Through two examples in mathematics and physics, KANs are shown to be useful collaborators helping scientists (re)discover mathematical and physical laws. In summary, KANs are promising alternatives for MLPs, opening opportunities for further improving today's deep learning models which rely heavily on MLPs.
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Collection 12 March 2023
Journal Top 100 - 2022
This collection highlights our most downloaded* research papers published in 2022. Featuring authors from around the world, these papers highlight valuable research from an international community.
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Metformin administration is associated with enhanced response to transarterial chemoembolization for hepatocellular carcinoma in type 2 diabetes patients
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Life tables of annual life expectancy and mortality for companion dogs in the United Kingdom
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Bioarchaeological and palaeogenomic portrait of two Pompeians that died during the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 AD
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Reading on a smartphone affects sigh generation, brain activity, and comprehension
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Principal Component Analyses (PCA)-based findings in population genetic studies are highly biased and must be reevaluated
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The determinants of COVID-19 morbidity and mortality across countries
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Birdsongs alleviate anxiety and paranoia in healthy participants
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Identification of ADS024, a newly characterized strain of Bacillus velezensis with direct Clostridiodes difficile killing and toxin degradation bio-activities
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Multiple sclerosis genetic and non-genetic factors interact through the transient transcriptome
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The effect of metformin on the survival of colorectal cancer patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus
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Chemical characterisation of the vapour emitted by an e-cigarette using a ceramic wick-based technology
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Large-magnitude (VEI ≥ 7) ‘wet’ explosive silicic eruption preserved a Lower Miocene habitat at the Ipolytarnóc Fossil Site, North Hungary
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Far-UVC (222 nm) efficiently inactivates an airborne pathogen in a room-sized chamber
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Low dose aspirin associated with greater bone mineral density in older adults
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First direct evidence of adult European eels migrating to their breeding place in the Sargasso Sea
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Infections with the SARS-CoV-2 Delta variant exhibit fourfold increased viral loads in the upper airways compared to Alpha or non-variants of concern
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Inappropriate sinus tachycardia in post-COVID-19 syndrome
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The microstructure and the origin of the Venus from Willendorf
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COVID-19 reinfections among naturally infected and vaccinated individuals
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Lockdown measures during the COVID-19 pandemic strongly impacted the circulation of respiratory pathogens in Southern China
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Alzheimer’s disease large-scale gene expression portrait identifies exercise as the top theoretical treatment
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COVID-19 symptoms are reduced by targeted hydration of the nose, larynx and trachea
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SARS-CoV-2 spike protein induces cognitive deficit and anxiety-like behavior in mouse via non-cell autonomous hippocampal neuronal death
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Abdominal pain patterns during COVID-19: an observational study
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Detection of human pathogenic bacteria in rectal DNA samples from Zalophus californianus in the Gulf of California, Mexico
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Industrialised fishing nations largely contribute to floating plastic pollution in the North Pacific subtropical gyre
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Hypertension and diabetes including their earlier stage are associated with increased risk of sudden cardiac arrest
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Utility of an artificial intelligence system for classification of esophageal lesions when simulating its clinical use
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Prevalence, age of decision, and interpersonal warmth judgements of childfree adults
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Acute and protracted abstinence from methamphetamine bidirectionally changes intrinsic excitability of indirect pathway spiny projection neurons in the dorsomedial striatum
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Indeterminacy of cannabis impairment and ∆ 9 -tetrahydrocannabinol (∆ 9 -THC) levels in blood and breath
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High rates of plasmid cotransformation in E. coli overturn the clonality myth and reveal colony development
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Metformin sensitizes leukemic cells to cytotoxic lymphocytes by increasing expression of intercellular adhesion molecule-1 (ICAM-1)
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Incorporation of machine learning and deep neural network approaches into a remote sensing-integrated crop model for the simulation of rice growth
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Perceiving societal pressure to be happy is linked to poor well-being, especially in happy nations
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The earliest Pleistocene record of a large-bodied hominin from the Levant supports two out-of-Africa dispersal events
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Generation mechanism and prediction of an observed extreme rogue wave
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Domestic dogs ( Canis familiaris ) grieve over the loss of a conspecific
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Human transgenerational observations of regular smoking before puberty on fat mass in grandchildren and great-grandchildren
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Chlamydia pneumoniae can infect the central nervous system via the olfactory and trigeminal nerves and contributes to Alzheimer’s disease risk
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Oxycodone/naloxone versus tapentadol in real-world chronic non-cancer pain management: an observational and pharmacogenetic study
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Cooking methods are associated with inflammatory factors, renal function, and other hormones and nutritional biomarkers in older adults
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Classification of pig calls produced from birth to slaughter according to their emotional valence and context of production
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Higher emotional awareness is associated with greater domain-general reflective tendencies
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A large Megaraptoridae (Theropoda: Coelurosauria) from Upper Cretaceous (Maastrichtian) of Patagonia, Argentina
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Long COVID occurrence in COVID-19 survivors
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Water activated disposable paper battery
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Intestinal preservation in a birdlike dinosaur supports conservatism in digestive canal evolution among theropods
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Antiviral effect of cetylpyridinium chloride in mouthwash on SARS-CoV-2
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Evidence of an oceanic impact and megatsunami sedimentation in Chryse Planitia, Mars
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Curcumin and metformin synergistically modulate peripheral and central immune mechanisms of pain
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The first occurrence of an avian-style respiratory infection in a non-avian dinosaur
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Optimal linear estimation models predict 1400–2900 years of overlap between Homo sapiens and Neandertals prior to their disappearance from France and northern Spain
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The influence of time on the sensitivity of SARS-CoV-2 serological testing
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Online misinformation is linked to early COVID-19 vaccination hesitancy and refusal
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A distinct symptom pattern emerges for COVID-19 long-haul: a nationwide study
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SARS-CoV-2-reactive IFN-γ-producing CD4 + and CD8 + T cells in blood do not correlate with clinical severity in unvaccinated critically ill COVID-19 patients
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Classification of 74 facial emoji’s emotional states on the valence-arousal axes
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The emergence of a new sex-system (XX/XY 1 Y 2 ) suggests a species complex in the “monotypic” rodent Oecomys auyantepui (Rodentia, Sigmodontinae)
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Detection of COVID-19 using multimodal data from a wearable device: results from the first TemPredict Study
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Spinal degeneration is associated with lumbar multifidus morphology in secondary care patients with low back or leg pain
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- Tue S. Jensen
- Jeffrey J. Hebert
Phenomenology and content of the inhaled N , N -dimethyltryptamine ( N , N -DMT) experience
- David Wyndham Lawrence
- Robin Carhart-Harris
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A gigantic bizarre marine turtle (Testudines: Chelonioidea) from the Middle Campanian (Late Cretaceous) of South-western Europe
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- Àngel H. Luján
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The first experience with fully endoscopic posterior cervical foraminotomy and discectomy for radiculopathy performed in Viet Duc University Hospital
- Son Ngoc Dinh
- Hung The Dinh
Mapping the “catscape” formed by a population of pet cats with outdoor access
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Investigation of humans individual differences as predictors of their animal interaction styles, focused on the domestic cat
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Genesis of fecal floatation is causally linked to gut microbial colonization in mice
- Syed Mohammed Musheer Aalam
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Young children’s screen time during the first COVID-19 lockdown in 12 countries
- Christina Bergmann
- Nevena Dimitrova
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Cichlids and stingrays can add and subtract ‘one’ in the number space from one to five
- V. Schluessel
Elevated estradiol levels in frozen embryo transfer have different effects on pregnancy outcomes depending on the stage of transferred embryos
- Liming Ruan
Group VR experiences can produce ego attenuation and connectedness comparable to psychedelics
- David R. Glowacki
- Rhoslyn Roebuck Williams
- Mike Chatziapostolou
New therizinosaurid dinosaur from the marine Osoushinai Formation (Upper Cretaceous, Japan) provides insight for function and evolution of therizinosaur claws
- Yoshitsugu Kobayashi
- Ryuji Takasaki
- Yoshinori Hikida
Smartphone-based ecological momentary assessment reveals mental health benefits of birdlife
- Ryan Hammoud
- Stefania Tognin
- Andrea Mechelli
Long-term outcomes of cataract surgery with toric intraocular lens implantation by the type of preoperative astigmatism
- Tetsuro Oshika
- Shinichiro Nakano
- Tsutomu Kaneko
Forest fire detection system using wireless sensor networks and machine learning
- Udaya Dampage
- Lumini Bandaranayake
- Bathiya Jayasanka
Misinformation of COVID-19 vaccines and vaccine hesitancy
- Sun Kyong Lee
- Juhyung Sun
- Shane Connelly
Deep language algorithms predict semantic comprehension from brain activity
- Charlotte Caucheteux
- Alexandre Gramfort
- Jean-Rémi King
Children with autism spectrum disorder show atypical electroencephalographic response to processing contextual incongruencies
- Amparo V. Márquez-García
- Vasily A. Vakorin
- Sam M. Doesburg
A generalizable one health framework for the control of zoonotic diseases
- Ria R. Ghai
- Ryan M. Wallace
- Casey Barton Behravesh
HS3ST2 expression induces the cell autonomous aggregation of tau
- M. B. Huynh
- N. Rebergue
- D. Papy-Garcia
Exceptional warming over the Barents area
- Ketil Isaksen
- Øyvind Nordli
- Tatiana Karandasheva
A new Early Cretaceous lizard in Myanmar amber with exceptionally preserved integument
- Andrej Čerňanský
- Edward L. Stanley
- Susan E. Evans
Coffee consumption and diabetic retinopathy in adults with diabetes mellitus
- Hak Jun Lee
- Daniel Duck-Jin Hwang
Shifts in the foraging tactics of crocodiles following invasion by toxic prey
- Abhilasha Aiyer
- Richard Shine
- Georgia Ward-Fear
Production of high loading insulin nanoparticles suitable for oral delivery by spray drying and freeze drying techniques
- Alberto Baldelli
- Anubhav Pratap-Singh
Cable news and COVID-19 vaccine uptake
- Matteo Pinna
- Christoph Goessmann
Estimating the time of last drinking from blood ethyl glucuronide and ethyl sulphate concentrations
- Zhongyuan Guo
COVID-19 infections in infants
- Małgorzata Sobolewska-Pilarczyk
- Maria Pokorska-Śpiewak
- Małgorzata Pawłowska
COVID-19 increases the risk for the onset of atrial fibrillation in hospitalized patients
- Jakob Wollborn
- Sergey Karamnov
- Jochen D. Muehlschlegel
Childhood temperament and adulthood personality differentially predict life outcomes
- Amanda J. Wright
- Joshua J. Jackson
Antivirus applied to JAR malware detection based on runtime behaviors
- Ricardo P. Pinheiro
- Sidney M. L. Lima
- Wellington P. dos Santos
Therapeutic enzyme engineering using a generative neural network
- Andrew Giessel
- Athanasios Dousis
- Stuart Licht
Identification of genes associated with human-canine communication in canine evolution
- Akiko Tonoike
- Ken-ichi Otaki
- Miho Nagasawa
Breath chemical markers of sexual arousal in humans
- G. Pugliese
- J. Williams
A 5-km-thick reservoir with > 380,000 km 3 of magma within the ancient Earth's crust
- Rais Latypov
- Sofya Chistyakova
- Mauritz van der Merwe
Return of large fin whale feeding aggregations to historical whaling grounds in the Southern Ocean
- Helena Herr
- Sacha Viquerat
- Bettina Meyer
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Gibson publishes new paper on police legitimacy in post-George Floyd era
James Gibson's article "African Americans’ Willingness to Extend Legitimacy to the Police: Connections to Identities and Experiences in the Post-George Floyd Era" is now available for open access from the Cambridge University Press. Read the article here .
Abstract: Numerous benefits materialize when people extend legitimacy to institutions; consequently, many investigations of the legitimacy of the police have been reported. However, several critical issues remain unanswered. My paper’s purpose is to revisit the question of willingness to grant police legitimacy, focusing on a nationally representative sample of African Americans. I test hypotheses connecting police legitimacy with experiences with unfair treatment by legal authorities, ingroup attachments, attitudes toward systemic racism, and engagement with Black Lives Matter. My findings reveal significant connections between experience with discrimination, ingroup attachments, and beliefs about systemic racism but little relationship between BLM attitudes and police legitimacy.
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Marie Ng. Maigeng Zhou. The study's findings support the increased risk of premature mortality associated with low education, particularly in women and urban populations. The considerable number of deaths attributed to educational inequality underscores the necessity for more effective and targeted public health interventions.
Browse the archive of articles on Nature. A completely genetically encoded boronic-acid-containing designer enzyme was created and characterized using X-ray crystallography, high-resolution mass ...
Read the latest Research articles from Nature. Using a cryogenic 300-mm wafer prober, a new approach for the testing of hundreds of industry-manufactured spin qubit devices at 1.6 K provides high ...
It is published by the Society for Science, a nonprofit 501(c)(3) membership organization dedicated to public engagement in scientific research and education (EIN 53-0196483). Science News ...
The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) is a weekly general medical journal that publishes new medical research and review articles, and editorial opinion on a wide variety of topics of ...
The severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) emerged in late 2019 and spread globally, prompting an international effort to accelerate development of a vaccine. The candidate ...
JAMA - The Latest Medical Research, Reviews, and Guidelines. Home New Online Issues For Authors. Editor's Choice: AI Could Mean Better Mental Health for All. Original Investigation Ponatinib vs Imatinib in Frontline Philadelphia Chromosome-Positive Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia: A Randomized Clinical Trial Elias Jabbour, MD; Hagop M ...
The Scientific Reports team is pleased to announce the most read* articles from 2023. Featuring authors from around the world and from research fields across the scope of the journal, these papers highlight valuable research from an international community. Take a look at the Journal's overall top 100 to find out more about the ...
May 8, 2024 • New research documents how many children lost a parent to an opioid or other overdose in the period from 2011 to 2021. Bereaved children face elevated risks to their physical and ...
Explore this issue of The New England Journal of Medicine ... Research Summaries; Videos in Clinical Medicine; ... Recently Published. Save. Medicine and Society; May 08, 2024 ...
arXiv is a free distribution service and an open-access archive for nearly 2.4 million scholarly articles in the fields of physics, mathematics, computer science, quantitative biology, quantitative finance, statistics, electrical engineering and systems science, and economics.
Trending articles. Puppy-dog eyes in wild canines sparks rethink on dog evolution. Dohrn G. Nature. 2024 May 5. doi: 10.1038/d41586-024-01315-x. Online ahead of print. PMID: 38705890 No abstract available. APOE4 homozygozity represents a distinct genetic form of Alzheimer's disease. Fortea J, Pegueroles J, Alcolea D, Belbin O, Dols-Icardo O ...
New research finds that the death rate among Black youths soared by 37 percent, and among Native American youths by 22 percent, between 2014 and 2020, compared with less than 5 percent for white ...
Publications. Our teams aspire to make discoveries that impact everyone, and core to our approach is sharing our research and tools to fuel progress in the field. Google publishes hundreds of research papers each year. Publishing our work enables us to collaborate and share ideas with, as well as learn from, the broader scientific community.
One research paper started it all. The research we do today becomes the Google of the future. Google itself began with a research paper, published in 1998, and was the foundation of Google Search. Our ongoing research over the past 25 years has transformed not only the company, but how people are able to interact with the world and its information.
Smartphones dependency risk analysis using machine-learning predictive models. Claudia Fernanda Giraldo-Jiménez. Javier Gaviria-Chavarro. André Luiz Felix Rodacki. Article Open Access 31 Dec 2022.
Harness the power of visual materials—explore more than 3 million images now on JSTOR. Enhance your scholarly research with underground newspapers, magazines, and journals. Explore collections in the arts, sciences, and literature from the world's leading museums, archives, and scholars. JSTOR is a digital library of academic journals ...
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As studied in previous research on plume-induced subduction, temperature, size, and buoyancy of plumes play a major role in subduction initiation. Therefore, we systematically explore the influence of CMB temperature, which significantly affects all these factors in models where plumes are self-consistently generated.
We survey the recent literature in economics measuring what is on top of people's minds using open-ended questions. We first provide an overview of studies in political economy, macroeconomics, finance, labor economics, and behavioral economics that have employed such measurement. We next describe ...
Today, Nature published an Intel research paper, "Probing single electrons across 300-mm spin qubit wafers," demonstrating state-of-the-art uniformity, fidelity and measurement statistics of spin qubits.The industry-leading research opens the door for the mass production and continued scaling of silicon-based quantum processors, all of which are requirements for building a fault-tolerant ...
The Green Paradox posits that fossil fuel markets respond to changing expectations about climate legislation, which limits future consumption, by shifting consumption to the present through lower present-day prices. We demonstrate that oil futures responded negatively to daily changes in the ...
Inspired by the Kolmogorov-Arnold representation theorem, we propose Kolmogorov-Arnold Networks (KANs) as promising alternatives to Multi-Layer Perceptrons (MLPs). While MLPs have fixed activation functions on nodes ("neurons"), KANs have learnable activation functions on edges ("weights"). KANs have no linear weights at all -- every weight parameter is replaced by a univariate function ...
Research Summaries; Videos in Clinical Medicine; ... This letter was published on May 3, 2024, at NEJM.org. ... New England Journal of Medicine. Recently Published.
Flame retardants (FRs) are added to vehicles to meet flammability standards, such as US Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard FMVSS 302. However, an understanding of which FRs are being used, sources in the vehicle, and implications for human exposure is lacking. US participants (n = 101) owning a vehicle of model year 2015 or newer hung a silicone passive sampler on their rearview mirror for ...
A total of 78 papers published between 1993 and 2021 were identified. From the 34 journals reviewed, 23 (68%) published studies on LGBTQ+ people. The first paper published on the topic was in the Journal of Consumer Marketing, while Psychology and Marketing and Consumption Markets and Culture published the highest number of papers (nine each ...
Journal Top 100 - 2022. This collection highlights our most downloaded* research papers published in 2022. Featuring authors from around the world, these papers highlight valuable research from an ...
James Gibson's article "African Americans' Willingness to Extend Legitimacy to the Police: Connections to Identities and Experiences in the Post-George Floyd Era" is now available for open access from the Cambridge University Press. Read the article here. Abstract: Numerous benefits materialize when people extend legitimacy to institutions; consequently, many investigations of the legitimacy ...