Nature News
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[:eu]Promising cancer drugs may speed tumours in some patients[:]
[:eu]Early studies fuel scientists’ determination to understand how immunotherapy may sometimes make disease worse.[:]
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[:eu]DNA typos to blame for most cancer mutations[:]
[:eu]Environment and heredity might not contribute as much to cancer risk as researchers thought.[:]
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[:eu]Gender bias distorts peer review across fields[:]
[:eu]Editors are more likely to select reviewers of the same gender.[:]
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[:eu]Hidden HIV reservoirs exposed by telltale protein[:]
[:eu]The discovery helps to identify dormant infected cells and could one day lead to a cure.[:]
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[:eu]A makeover for the world’s most hated crop[:]
[:eu]Oil palm has a reputation as an environmental menace. Can the latest genetic research change that?[:]
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[:eu]The quest to reveal science’s hidden female faces[:]
[:eu]Campaign on Wikipedia seeks to track down photos of female scientists and those from minority ethnic groups.[:]
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[:eu]Patchy progress on fixing global gender disparities in science[:]
[:eu]‘Leaky pipeline’ stands the test of time, with overall progress for women in research continuing at a crawl.[:]
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[:eu]How rival bots battled their way to poker supremacy[:]
[:eu]Artificial-intelligence programs harness game-theory strategies and deep learning to defeat human professionals in two-player hold’em.[:]
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[:eu]The drug-resistant bacteria that pose the greatest health threats[:]
[:eu]World Health Organization publishes list that it hopes will focus development of antibiotics[:]