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- 1From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedMajor life-science initiatives in Massachusetts and Maryland should mean thousands of science-related jobs. Author(s): Paul Smaglik Author Affiliations: Two US states are earmarking substantial funds in a bid to...
- 2From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedLab equipment gets the X factor. Author(s): Brendan Maher Author Affiliations: Could these five men persuade you to buy their automated pipette? COMPARENETWORKS; EPPENDORF In a dreary, lonely lab a young female...
- 3From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedBone-destructive diseases: The role of osteoclast size Osteoclasts are cells that resorb bone. Too many of them, and osteoporosis -- a common metabolic disorder of the skeleton -- can result, as well as several other...
- 4From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedG8 talks fail to advance fight against climate change. Author(s): Olive Heffernan Author Affiliations: Toyako, Japan B. Muhammad/REUTERS World leaders met this week in Toyako on the Japanese island of Hokkaido...
- 5From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedAuthor Affiliations: First author Predicting earthquakes has proved an elusive goal for seismologists, in part because direct measurements from deep inside faults have been lacking. California's San Andreas Fault...
- 6From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedAuthor Affiliations: 50 years ago In the past ten years the number of television licences in Britain has grown from less than 15,000 to nearly eight million, and the estimated number of adults aged sixteen or more in...
- 7From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedAuthor(s): Michael Hoffmann 1 , Clare E. Hawkins 2 , Peter D. Walsh 3 Author Affiliations: (1) IUCN/SSC-CI/CABS Biodiversity Assessment Unit, c/o Conservation International, 2011 Crystal Drive, Ste 500, Arlington,...
- 8From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedWherever we look in the Solar System, small bodies often seem to come in twos. Simulations show how asteroids spun in the Sun can produce such pairings -- one of whose members acquires a strangely familiar shape....
- 9From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedIn J. M. Swanson and N. D. Volkow's Correspondence (Nature 453, 586; 2008), consumption estimates of stimulant drugs by country in 1995-2006 were wrongly attributed to the World Health Organization. These data were...
- 10From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedAuthor Affiliations: Despite growing international concern about the future of the world's rainforests, the rate of tropical forest clearance has not slowed. A team used a combination of low- and high-resolution...
- 11From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedAuthor Affiliations: A former Texas official is suing the state's education agency, saying that its policies passively endorse creationism. In a complaint filed with a district court on 1 July, Christina Comer, a...
- 12From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedIn a bid to popularize the science and ethics of human genetics, two new books fail to address developments in gene testing since completion of the Human Genome Project, says Kathy Hudson. Author(s): Kathy Hudson 1...
- 13From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedFermi surfaces in superconductivity Recent quantum oscillation experiments on high transition temperature (T.sub.c) copper oxide superconductors have revealed the existence of a Fermi surface akin to that in normal...
- 14From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedTo understand how mirror neurons help to interpret actions, we must delve into the networks in which these cells sit, say Antonio Damasio and Kaspar Meyer. Author(s): Antonio Damasio 1 , Kaspar Meyer 1 Author...
- 15From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedLooking for that eureka moment. Author(s): Zachary Lippman 1 Author Affiliations: (1) Zachary Lippman is a postdoctoral fellow at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's faculty of agriculture., I haven't exclaimed...
- 16From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedEfforts to inform US military policy with insights from the social sciences could be a win-win approach. Author Affiliations: Given the current US administration's notorious lack of respect for science, the efforts...
- 17From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedTo maintain profits in the face of rising development costs and slow drug pipelines, big pharmaceutical firms are trying to cut back. Heidi Ledford examines how GlaxoSmithKline has tried to adapt. Author(s): Heidi...
- 18From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedNanoscientist aims to set up a major nanotechnology centre. Author(s): Virginia Gewin Author Affiliations: When James Ryan received his PhD in chemistry in 1988, nanotechnology wasn't yet a fashionable field nor,...
- 19From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedErythroid cell maturation: Then need for Nix Erythroid cells undergo enucleation and the removal of organelles during terminal differentiation. This paper shows that a member of the Bcl-2 family, Nix/Bnip3L, helps...
- 20From: Nature. (Vol. 454, Issue 7201) Peer-ReviewedScribbles on the margins of science. Author Affiliations: On the Record "The only thing different about me is that I can't breast-feed my baby." Thomas Beatie's comment after he gave birth to a healthy daughter....