Nature News
-
[:es]A new way to capture the brain’s electrical symphony[:]
[:es]How voltage readings from individual neurons could power the next revolution in neuroscience.[:]
-
[:es]Reducing neuronal inhibition restores locomotion in paralysed mice[:]
[:es]Spinal-cord injury can render intact neuronal circuits functionally dormant. Targeted reduction of neuronal inhibition in the injured region has now enabled reactivation of these circuits in mice, restoring basic locomotion. […]
-
[:es]The landmark lectures of physicist Erwin Schrödinger helped to change attitudes in biology[:]
[:es]Influence of his book ‘What is Life?’ celebrated and discussed 75 years on. [:]
-
[:es]Radical open-access plan could spell end to journal subscriptions[:]
[:es]Eleven research funders in Europe announce ‘Plan S’ to make all scientific works free to read as soon as they are published.[:]
-
[:es]LHC physicists finally uncover Higgs ‘bottom’ decay[:]
[:es]A signal indicating that the boson decays into bottom quarks had been difficult to pick out from data. [:]
-
[:es]Autism and DDT: What one million pregnancies can — and can’t — reveal[:]
[:es]Analysis finds that prenatal exposure to the pesticide is associated with a higher risk of severe autism with intellectual impairment. [:]
-
[:es]CRISPR ‘barcodes’ map mammalian development in exquisite detail [:]
[:es]Genome-editing technique enables researchers to trace lineage of cells in developing mice. [:]
-
[:es]Thousands of exotic ‘topological’ materials discovered through sweeping search[:]
[:es]Haul thrills physicists, who previously knew of just a few hundred of these peculiar materials. [:]
-
[:es]Diverse genome study upends understanding of how language evolved[:]
[:es]Research casts doubt on the idea that the FOXP2 gene — linked to language evolution — is special to modern humans. [:]