Nature News
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[:es]Speedy Ebola tests help contain Africa’s latest outbreak[:]
[:es]Health workers battling Ebola in the Democratic Republic of the Congo can diagnose the virus in hours, instead of days. [:]
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[:es]Sucking carbon dioxide from air is cheaper than scientists thought[:]
[:es]Estimated cost of geoengineering technology to fight climate change has plunged since a 2011 analysis. [:]
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[:es]These labs are remarkably diverse — here’s why they’re winning at science[:]
[:es]Being inclusive gives research groups a competitive edge. It also happens to be the right thing to do. [:]
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[:es]The researchers who study alien linguistics[:]
[:es]Nature speaks to linguist Sheri Wells-Jensen who co-hosted a workshop about the challenges of communicating with extraterrestrials.[:]
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[:es]Money for nothing: the truth about universal basic income[:]
[:es]Several projects are testing the idea of doling out funds that people can use however they want. [:]
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[:es]Muons: the little-known particles helping to probe the impenetrable[:]
[:es]The ubiquitous particles are helping to map the innards of pyramids and volcanoes, and spot missing nuclear waste. [:]
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[:es]How gut microbes are joining the fight against cancer[:]
[:es]The intestinal microbiome seems to influence how well some cancer drugs work. But is the science ripe for clinical trials? [:]
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[:es]What Is Spacetime?[:]
[:es]Physicists believe that at the tiniest scales, space emerges from quanta. What might these building blocks look like? [:]
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[:es]Harassment should count as scientific misconduct[:]
[:es]Scientific integrity needs to apply to how researchers treat people, not just to how they handle data, says Erika Marín-Spiotta. [:]