Nature News
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[:es]Ancient stone tools hint at settlers’ epic trek to North America[:]
[:es] 16,000-year-old artefacts discovered in Idaho could be the oldest ever found on the continent. [:]
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[:es]Alarming surge in drug-resistant HIV uncovered[:]
[:es] The drug-resistant form of the virus has been detected at unacceptable levels across Africa, Asia and the Americas. [:]
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[:es]Japan approves first human-animal embryo experiments[:]
[:es] The research could eventually lead to new sources of organs for transplant, but ethical and technical hurdles need to be overcome. [:]
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[:es]How a data detective exposed suspicious medical trials[:]
[:es] Anaesthetist John Carlisle has spotted problems in hundreds of research papers — and spurred a leading medical journal to change its practice. [:]
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[:es]The plan to mine the world’s research papers[:]
[:es] A giant data store quietly being built in India could free vast swathes of science for computer analysis — but is it legal? [:]
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[:es]Hallucinations implanted in mouse brains using light[:]
[:es] Behavioural evidence suggests that targeting just 20 neurons prompted animals to ‘see’ an image. [:]
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[:es]How fast is the Universe expanding? Cosmologists just got more confused[:]
[:es] Hotly anticipated technique fails to resolve disagreement over how fast cosmos is expanding — for now. [:]
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[:es]No limit: AI poker bot is first to beat professionals at multiplayer game[:]
[:es] Triumph over five human opponents at Texas hold’em brings bots closer to solving complicated real-world problems. [:]
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[:es]Self-destructing mosquitoes and sterilized rodents: the promise of gene drives[:]
[:es] Altering the genomes of entire animal populations could help to defeat disease and control pests, but researchers worry about the consequences of unleashing this new technology. [:]