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Directly probing the carrier transfer length in 2D-material transistors
Targeted enzyme discovery using metal-coordination mining
Identification of cross-stage, cross-species malaria CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell antigens
Replication-stress-induced chromatin loops protect fork stability
A secreted endosymbiont protein essential for colonizing host cells
Isomeric multi-hydrogen-bonding enables blue perovskite LEDs
Towards the construction of a virtual yeast
Harmonizing standards and resources for the medical genome
Backreaction of stimulated Hawking radiation in an optical analogue
Togetherness: How co-operation built the world
Have people stopped trusting science? The data tell a surprising story
Six ways to put the public at the heart of science and policy
The complex truth about trust in science
RS-232 and other forms of grief
Why paying peer reviewers works, according to a journal’s editor-in-chief
How FAIR data are helping to build trust in science
Scientists should recognize their own political biases to build public trust
Scientists discover a surprising link between vitamin C and brain health
Could something as simple as vitamin C help support a healthier aging brain? In a study of more than 2,000 older adults in Japan, researchers found that people with lower vitamin C levels in their blood also tended to have less gray matter and weaker connections in a key brain network involved in memory, attention, and other cognitive functions.
Paleontologist Neil Shubin vows to keep National Academy of Sciences relevant
New NAS president discusses the future of the beleaguered institution and the precarious state of U.S. science under Trump
Melanoma's secret to cheating death has finally been revealed
Scientists have solved a long-standing mystery by discovering the missing genetic ingredient that helps melanoma cells become effectively immortal. The breakthrough could open the door to new treatments aimed at disrupting one of cancer's most important survival strategies.