Julia: Come for the Syntax, Stay for the Speed [pdf]

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

Deception and Self-Deception

Why are people so often overconfident? Schwardmann and van der Weele show that people self-deceive into higher confidence if they have the opportunity to persuade others for profit and that higher confidence aides persuasion. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

China feels the heat over rogue CFC emissions

The government plans to build a monitoring network in the wake of a study that attributed a spike in an ozone-depleting chemical to two Chinese provinces. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Looking Back on Primo Levi’s the Periodic Table

Tim Radford celebrates chemist Primo Levi’s extraordinary short-story collection. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Revolutionary technique got people with spinal-cord injuries back on their feet

Electrical stimulation has promised huge gains for people with paralysis. Now comes the hard part — getting beyond those first steps. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Alarming surge in drug-resistant HIV uncovered

The drug-resistant form of the virus has been detected at unacceptable levels across Africa, Asia and the Americas. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Harvard creates advisory panel to oversee solar geoengineering project

Scientists will inject particles of calcium carbonate into the atmosphere and study their effects on incoming sunlight. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Three pitfalls to avoid in machine learning

As scientists from myriad fields rush to perform algorithmic analyses, Google’s Patrick Riley calls for clear standards in research and reporting. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Julia: Come for the Syntax, Stay for the Speed

Researchers often find themselves coding algorithms in one programming language, only to have to rewrite them in a faster one. An up-and-coming language could be the answer. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Deeper well drilling an unsustainable stopgap to groundwater depletion

Groundwater wells in the United States are under more stress than ever before due to drought conditions and rising demand, but the extensive nature of deeper drilling has been unreported. This analysis compiles nearly 12 million groundwater wells across the United States to deter … | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Understanding malaria with data-efficient Bayesian modelling

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

Evidence of the connection between human gut microbiota and depression

Correlation of microbiome features with host quality of life and depression identified specific taxa and microbial pathways in two independent, large population cohorts, identifying links between microbial neuroactive potential and depression. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Privatization of public goods can cause population decline

By creating synthetic strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae that differ in their sucrose metabolism strategies, the authors show that private-metabolizers may outcompete communities of public-metabolizers and cheater-strains, but their lower growth rate ultimately causes instabilit … | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Transcriptome of spider silk glands predicts dragline silk toughness proteins

Jessica Garb et al. report the transcriptome of the major ampullate silk gland of Darwin’s bark spider, known for its extraordinarily tough silk. They identify a novel predicted protein, MaSp4, which is highly divergent compared to related proteins in other species and has proper … | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Strong magnetophonon oscillations in extra-large graphene

Increasing the size of mesoscopic devices based on van der Waals heterostructures triggers additional quantum effects. Here, the authors observe distinct magnetoresistance oscillations in graphene/h-BN Hall bars only in devices wider than 10 μm due to resonant scattering of charg … | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Networks of Topological Neighborhoods in β-Strand and Amyloid β-Sheet Structures

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

Current global warming is unparalleled in 2k years

For more than 98% of the globe, the warmest period in 2,000 years has been in the past century. Plus, how virtual-reality mazes are unlocking brain mysteries and why opponents to a telescope in Hawaii are not anti-science. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

The biosynthetic origin of psychoactive kavalactones in kava

Kava (Piper methysticum), an ethnomedicinal shrub native to the Polynesian islands, produces psychoactive kavalactones and anticancer flavokavains. Structures of key enzymes in their biosynthetic network may enable heterologous production. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

The Part of Memory

Long thought to be a glitch of memory, researchers are coming to realize that the ability to forget is crucial to how the brain works. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

The Brain

This supremely complex organ is slowly giving up its valuable secrets. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Japan approves first human-animal embryo experiments

The research could eventually lead to new sources of organs for transplant, but ethical and technical hurdles need to be overcome. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Depression researchers rethink popular mouse swim tests

Animal-rights group’s campaign to end forced-swim tests comes amid debate over whether method is overused. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

How to Map the Brain

As efforts to chart the brain’s neurons gather pace, researchers must find a way to make the accumulating masses of data useful. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Journey to the 248th Dimension: Nature News

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

The Great Climate Conundrum

The end of pre-industrial climate — the baseline for assessing the extent of human-induced warming today — is not easy to pinpoint in time. Regardless, the past decades stand out from two millennia of climate fluctuations. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Ebola researchers fight to test drugs and vaccines in a war zone

Violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has interrupted clinical trials and forced scientists to change how they immunize people. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Write rules for deep-sea mining before it’s too late

The International Seabed Authority must commit the mining industry to a sustainable future. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Disinformation’s spread: bots, trolls and all of us

Misconceptions about disinformation leave us vulnerable to manipulation online, says Kate Starbird. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Decoding the Neuroscience of Consciousness

A growing understanding of consciousness could lead to fresh treatments for brain injuries and phobias. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

The aberrant global synchrony of present-day warming

A reconstruction of Earth’s climate history over the past 2,000 years. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

The reward and risk of social media for academics

Three academics who are active on social media explore the motivations for and benefits of engaging with social media, as well as its costs and risks. Overall, they conclude there is a net benefit for themselves, their employers and wider society. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Marine Heatwaves in a Changing Climate

The drivers of acute periods of abnormal warmth in the ocean. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Estimating the success of re-identifications in incomplete datasets

Anonymization has been the main means of addressing privacy concerns in sharing medical and socio-demographic data. Here, the authors estimate the likelihood that a specific person can be re-identified in heavily incomplete datasets, casting doubt on the adequacy of current anony … | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Crispr: Strict European court ruling leaves food-testing labs without a plan

Scientists struggle to detect the unauthorized sale of gene-edited crops whose altered DNA can mimic natural mutations. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Exogenous testosterone increases sensitivity to moral norms in moral dilemmas

Whether testosterone changes responses in moral dilemmas is a long-standing question. In a Registered Report, Brannon and colleagues show that unexpectedly, exogenous testosterone increased sensitivity to norms in moral dilemmas. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Bird embryos perceive vibratory cues of predation risk from clutch mates

Exposing the eggs of yellow-legged gulls to adult conspecific predator alarm calls, the authors show that this information can be socially transmitted to other embryos in the clutch, even when they are naive to these calls. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Thick ice deposits in shallow simple craters on the Moon and Mercury

Ice deposits up to around 50 m thick infill some craters near the Moon’s south pole and Mercury’s north pole, as inferred from the poleward shallowing of simple craters. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

A data detective exposed suspicious medical trials

Anaesthetist John Carlisle has spotted problems in hundreds of research papers — and spurred a leading medical journal to change its practice. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

An Innovative Way to Publish

The research community needs to find ways to reward study design and methodology as much as the final result. A publishing format called Registered Reports offers a means of addressing this challenge. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Towards integrated tunable all-silicon free-electron light sources

Extracting light from silicon is a longstanding challenge. Here, the authors report an experimental demonstration of free-electron-driven light emission from silicon nanogratings and investigates the feasibility of a compact, all-silicon tunable light source integrated with a sil … | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Performances of ML for classifying Crohn Disease patients using genotyping data

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

India launches mission to land on the Moon

Chandrayaan-2 is India’s second Moon mission and its first to attempt a soft landing. Plus: artificial intelligence takes on protein folding and what not to do in graduate school. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

AI protein-folding algorithms solve structures faster than ever

Deep learning makes its mark on protein-structure prediction. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Scandal-weary Swedish government takes over research-fraud investigations

The Research Misconduct Board is one of the first national agencies tasked with investigating serious research misconduct. | Continue reading


@nature.com | 5 years ago

Solving the Rubik’s cube with deep reinforcement learning and search [pdf]

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

Arrow of time and its reversal on the IBM quantum computer

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

A direct tissue-grafting approach to increasing endogenous brown fat

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@nature.com | 5 years ago

Thermal conductance of single-molecule junctions

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@nature.com | 5 years ago