■RSS情報源 -- Nature


CREATED: 2006/06/06
REVISED: 2018/02/12


  1. (2026/01/19)Collective intelligence for AI-assisted chemical synthesis
  2. (2026/01/19)Editorial Expression of Concern: <i>En passant</i> neurotrophic action of an intermediate axonal target in the developing mammalian CNS
  3. (2026/01/19)Author Correction: An autonomous laboratory for the accelerated synthesis of inorganic materials
  4. (2026/01/19)Floating science stations: my month on a research vessel looking after buoys
  5. (2026/01/19)‘Greed is the iron cage of our times’ — why nationalism is here to stay
  6. (2026/01/19)Forget formalism: mathematics was built on infighting and emotional turmoil
  7. (2026/01/19)I’m going to halve my publication output. You should consider slow science, too
  8. (2026/01/16)HPV vaccine could help to protect the unvaccinated against cervical cancer
  9. (2026/01/16)Briefing Chat: Can NASA return rocks from Mars? And why dogs have long ears
  10. (2026/01/16)Climate trends influence transatlantic flight times
  11. (2026/01/16)Gifted dogs learn new words by overhearing humans
  12. (2026/01/16)My PI is not offering any support or guidance on my PhD project, what should I do?
  13. (2026/01/16)How do vaccine cutbacks affect public health? Ask Japan
  14. (2026/01/16)Daily briefing: Symbols on ancient pottery could be earliest evidence of mathematics
  15. (2026/01/16)Humanoid robots step up their game: how useful are the latest droids?
  16. (2026/01/15)Nationwide genetic screening proves effective at catching disease risk early
  17. (2026/01/15)Daily briefing: Cancer cells stay hidden using stolen mitochondria
  18. (2026/01/15)During the course of my PhD, I’ve been relearning how to rest
  19. (2026/01/15)Making progress on global health will need high-quality evidence
  20. (2026/01/15)PhD students’ taste for risk mirrors their supervisors’
  21. (2026/01/15)A ‘time capsule for cells’ stores the secret experiences of their past
  22. (2026/01/15)Campus protests and civil disobedience: does academia have a problem with activism?
  23. (2026/01/14)Ancient pottery reveals early evidence of mathematical thinking
  24. (2026/01/14)What the future holds for AI – from the people shaping it
  25. (2026/01/14)Do you have a side hustle alongside your PhD studies? Take <i>Nature</i>’s poll
  26. (2026/01/14)AI can turbocharge scientists’ careers — but limit their scope
  27. (2026/01/14)Retraction Note: Antibodies against endogenous retroviruses promote lung cancer immunotherapy
  28. (2026/01/14)Mosaic lateral heterostructures in two-dimensional perovskite
  29. (2026/01/14)Dominant contribution of Asgard archaea to eukaryogenesis
  30. (2026/01/14)Microbiota-induced T cell plasticity enables immune-mediated tumour control
  31. (2026/01/14)Exciplex-enabled high-efficiency, fully stretchable OLEDs
  32. (2026/01/14)Direct observation of the Migdal effect induced by neutron bombardment
  33. (2026/01/14)Training large language models on narrow tasks can lead to broad misalignment
  34. (2026/01/14)Coherent nonlinear X-ray four-photon interaction with core-shell electrons
  35. (2026/01/14)A foundation model for continuous glucose monitoring data
  36. (2026/01/14)3D-printed low-voltage-driven ciliary hydrogel microactuators
  37. (2026/01/14)Ligand-specific activation trajectories dictate GPCR signalling in cells
  38. (2026/01/14)Disease tolerance and infection pathogenesis age-related tradeoffs in mice
  39. (2026/01/14)Global subsidence of river deltas
  40. (2026/01/14)Enriching African genome representation through the AGenDA project
  41. (2026/01/14)Trapping of single atoms in metasurface optical tweezer arrays
  42. (2026/01/14)A nowhere-to-hide mechanism ensures complete piRNA-directed DNA methylation
  43. (2026/01/14)The ubiquitin ligase KLHL6 drives resistance to CD8<sup>+</sup> T cell dysfunction
  44. (2026/01/14)<i>N</i><sup>1</sup>-Methylpseudouridine directly modulates translation dynamics
  45. (2026/01/14)Little red dots as young supermassive black holes in dense ionized cocoons
  46. (2026/01/14)Ultra-high-throughput mapping of genetic design space
  47. (2026/01/14)Language model-guided anticipation and discovery of mammalian metabolites
  48. (2026/01/14)CFAP20 salvages arrested RNAPII from the path of co-directional replisomes
  49. (2026/01/14)An electrically injected solid-state surface acoustic wave phonon laser
  50. (2026/01/14)Predictive coding of reward in the hippocampus
  51. (2026/01/14)Artificial intelligence tools expand scientists’ impact but contract science’s focus
  52. (2026/01/14)Sub-zero Celsius elastocaloric cooling via low-transition-temperature alloys
  53. (2026/01/14)Polyamine-dependent metabolic shielding regulates alternative splicing
  54. (2026/01/14)AI tools boost individual scientists but could limit research as a whole
  55. (2026/01/14)Three tips for scientific writing: a guide for graduate students
  56. (2026/01/14)Why is flu so bad this year? Highly mutated variant offers answers
  57. (2026/01/14)LLMs behaving badly: mistrained AI models quickly go off the rails
  58. (2026/01/14)Predicting the fate of tropical forests under intensifying heat
  59. (2026/01/14)Cancer might evade immune defences by stealing mitochondria
  60. (2026/01/14)How ageing harms the body’s response to raging infection
  61. (2026/01/14)Ice age wolf pup’s stomach yields rare DNA from woolly rhino
  62. (2026/01/14)Stretchy organic LED devices with an ‘exciplex’ state are highly efficient
  63. (2026/01/14)Daily briefing: Why ‘harmless’ germs can be deadly for some people
  64. (2026/01/14)US science in 2026: five themes that will dominate Trump’s second year
  65. (2026/01/14)Six steps to protect researchers’ digital security
  66. (2026/01/14)Mysterious ‘little red dots’ could be black holes in disguise
  67. (2026/01/14)Ageing rewires the body’s tolerance to infection
  68. (2026/01/14)Credit in research goes hand in hand with responsibility
  69. (2026/01/14)Genomic clues to the origin of eukaryotic cells
  70. (2026/01/14)Beneath acid skies
  71. (2026/01/14)Biosensors characterize the routes taken by receptors to different active states
  72. (2026/01/14)Memories of items and their contexts are encoded by separate groups of human brain cells
  73. (2026/01/14)The infection enigma: why some people die from typically harmless germs
  74. (2026/01/13)No world-changing discoveries without biodiversity
  75. (2026/01/13)Don’t assume that women’s low retraction rates reflect male ‘boldness’

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