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- 1From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Y. Tsujimoto [1]; C. Tassel [1, 2]; N. Hayashi [3]; T. Watanabe [1]; H. Kageyama (corresponding author) [1]; K. Yoshimura [1]; M. Takano [4, 5]; M. Ceretti [2]; C. Ritter [6]; W. Paulus [2] Conventional...
- 2From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedThe president of Venezuela, Hugo Chávez, suffered his first electoral defeat for a decade on 2 December, when he unexpectedly lost a referendum on constitutional change that was supposed to cement his powers and...
- 3From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedThe announcement last week that Europe's largest medical-research facility is to be built in central London has been largely welcomed by Britain's biomedical community, which hopes that the centre will accelerate the...
- 4From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Rex Dalton [illus. 3] From a hillside overlooking Kabul, a dozen Afghan archaeology students have a monumental vista of their nation's ancient heritage. Domes of tombs of past kings dot the skyline; a...
- 5From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedIt took many years of acrimonious debate for the European Union (EU) to agree a directive regulating the cultivation of genetically modified (GM) crops. In many member countries, the public was ready to accept genetic...
- 6From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Glenn Murphy [1] by Phillip Ardagh Macmillan: £3.99 by Mark Carwardine Natural History Museum: £20 by Steve Jenkins Francis Lincoln: £9.99 by Amanda Li Macmillan: £3.99 With the growth of the...
- 7From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedIt is a rare event that patient 13 is let out of the high security Dr S. van Mesdag Clinic in Groningen, the Netherlands, and he is making the most of the attention he is getting. Already, the prison guards have had to...
- 8From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedThe Neuroscience Peer-Review Consortium is an imaginative alliance of neuroscience journals. From 1 January 2008, if a manuscript is not accepted by one journal in the consortium, the authors can submit it to a second...
- 9From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Tom Standage [1] by Claire Llewellyn; Ant Parker (illus.) Macmillan: £3.85 by Jo Readman; Ley Honor Roberts (illus.) Eden Project: £5.99 by Giles Thaxton Egmont: £4.99 by David Bellamy; Penny Dann...
- 10From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Andrea Chipman [illus. 1] The announcement last week that Europe's largest medical-research facility is to be built in central London has been largely welcomed by Britain's biomedical community, which...
- 11From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Zhe-Xi Luo (corresponding author) [1] Evolution of the earliest mammals shows successive episodes of diversification. Lineage-splitting in Mesozoic mammals is coupled with many independent evolutionary...
- 12From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedFollow the UN meeting in Bali online. www.nature.com/news/specials/bali/index...
- 13From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-Reviewed"If you want your children to be intelligent," Albert Einstein said, "read them fairy tales. If you want them to be very intelligent, read them more fairy tales." Stories are how we make sense of the world, they help...
- 14From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedTwenty-three US senators are calling on President George W. Bush to boost funding for food-safety oversight in 2009. In a 6 December letter to Bush, the bipartisan group complained that the budget of the Food and Drug...
- 15From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedOne of the world's largest systems-biology research consortiums, known as SystemsX, has been launched in Switzerland. The federal government has committed 200 million Swiss francs (US$177 million) to the project, half...
- 16From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-Reviewed[illus. 1] A patient-profiling study that may explain why symptoms of malaria vary widely between individuals began as a simple chat on board an aeroplane. Computational biologists Aviv Regev and Jill Mesirov, now...
- 17From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedNature Photonics doi:10.1038/nphoton.2007.251 (2007) The most bioluminescently efficient organism, the firefly, is less than half as efficient as previously thought, according to work by researchers in Japan. Studies...
- 18From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedThe process of continental break-up provides a large-scale experiment that can be used to test causal relations between plate tectonics and the dynamics of the Earth's deep mantle (1,2). Detailed diagnostic information...
- 19From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Lloyd N. Trefethen [1] [illus. 1] A century ago, matrices and the techniques for their manipulation -- linear algebra -- were a backwater of mathematics. Today, they are the foundation not just of the...
- 20From: Nature. (Vol. 450, Issue 7172) Peer-ReviewedAnimal behaviour: An elephant never forgets [illus. 1] Biol. Lett. doi:10.1098/rsbl.2007.0529 (2007) Among the mobile elephant societies of Amboseli National Park in Kenya, the ability to keep track of kin may...