NATURE
-
How South Africa can move on from power cuts
South Africa is caught in an energy bind. From sunlight to wind and biomass, the country has an abundance of…
Read More » -
biologist who shaped genetic engineering and fought discrimination
Credit: National Institutes of Health The US molecular biologist Maxine Singer made discoveries about the role of enzymes in assembling…
Read More » -
Your nose has its own army of immune cells — here’s how it protects you
The nose knows: immune cells in the nasal passageways stand ready to produce antibodies against incoming pathogens.Credit: Getty The nose…
Read More » -
Meet the retired scientists who collaborate with younger colleagues
Julie Gould 00:09 Hello and welcome to Working Scientist, a Nature Careers podcast. I’m Julie Gould. This is the sixth…
Read More » -
AI is vulnerable to attack. Can it ever be used safely?
In 2015, computer scientist Ian Goodfellow and his colleagues at Google described what could be artificial intelligence’s most famous failure.…
Read More » -
A dumpster full of mercury and other things to avoid: lab closures made simple
Julie Gould 00:09 Hello, and welcome to Working Scientist, a Nature Careers podcast. I’m Julie Gould. This is the fifth…
Read More » -
China–US research collaborations are in decline — this is bad news for everyone
Researchers at Georgia Institute of Technology in the US and Tianjin University in China collaborated to create the world’s first…
Read More » -
Can H5N1 spread through cow sneezes? Experiment offers clues
H5N1 was first identified in cattle in Texas in March and has spread to herds in more than a dozen…
Read More » -
What Twisters gets right — and wrong — about tornado science
When Hollywood producers showed up a few years ago at Sean Waugh’s office, he couldn’t wait to show them his…
Read More » -
Tumour vasculature at single-cell resolution
Chung, A. S., Lee, J. & Ferrara, N. Targeting the tumour vasculature: insights from physiological angiogenesis. Nat. Rev. Cancer 10,…
Read More »