Aggregator
Neural representation of action symbols in primate frontal cortex
A critical initialization for biological neural networks
Feature-specific threat coding in lateral septum guides defensive action
Dopamine drives persistent remodelling of the maternal brain
Nonlinear atomic tunnelling boosted by bright squeezed vacuum
Genetic analysis of circulating metabolic traits in 619,372 individuals
De novo design of quasisymmetric two-component protein cages
A pathogen lncRNA secreted into rice sequesters a host miRNA for virulence
Cusp-singularity-enhanced Coriolis effect for sensitive chip-scale gyroscopes
What China’s rise in chemistry means for the rest of the world
AI ‘scientists’ promise to accelerate research — how do they work?
Red light therapy: the science behind the hype
Nearly half of the world’s Nature Index chemistry research is now done in China
Author Correction: Inactivating <i>SnRK1β1A</i> promotes broad-spectrum disease resistance in rice
Spinal neuromotor rehabilitation using a portable isokinetic training robot
A conference taught me that scientists and journalists must work together to protect research
The CAPTCHA protocol
The brain’s code seems to be in constant flux. Neuroscientists are baffled
U.S. researchers face new restrictions on publishing with foreign collaborators
NIH, NASA grantees are confused and concerned amid agencies’ piecemeal communication
Scientists discover strange link between vitamin D and pain
Low vitamin D levels could be quietly making breast cancer surgery recovery far more painful. In a new study, patients deficient in vitamin D were three times more likely to experience moderate to severe pain after mastectomy surgery and ended up using significantly more opioid medication to cope. Researchers say vitamin D may help regulate how the body processes pain through its effects on inflammation and the immune system.