Nature News
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[:es]Base edit your way to better crops[:]
[:es] Plant scientists are turning to genome-editing techniques to precisely tailor the productivity and consumer appeal of important crops. [:]
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[:es]The brain-reading devices helping paralysed people to move, talk and touch[:]
[:es] Implants are becoming more sophisticated — and are attracting commercial interest. [:]
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[:es]What’s next for AlphaFold and the AI protein-folding revolution[:]
[:es] DeepMind software that can predict the 3D shape of proteins is already changing biology. [:]
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[:es]Your brain expands and shrinks over time — these charts show how[:]
[:es] Based on more than 120,000 brain scans, the charts are still preliminary. But researchers hope they could one day be used as a routine clinical tool by physicians. [:]
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[:es]Crypto and digital currencies — nine research priorities[:]
[:es] To avert privacy breaches, scams and environmental damage, governments and central banks need to know how best to regulate this financial frontier. [:]
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[:es]The race to upcycle CO2 into fuels, concrete and more[:]
[:es] Companies are scrambling to turn the greenhouse gas into useful products — but will that slow climate change? [:]
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[:es]Bizarre space circle captured in unprecedented detail[:]
[:es] Astronomers have sighted only a handful of odd radio circles, and are trying to pin down what causes them. [:]
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[:es]Did astronomers see hints of first stars? Experiment casts doubt on bold claim[:]
[:es] Radioastronomers suggest that a signal reported to be from the cosmic dawn could have been caused by instrument error. [:]
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[:es]Atomic changes can map subterranean structures[:]
[:es] A quantum device uses ultracold atoms to sense gravitational changes that can detect a tunnel under a city street. Here, scientists discuss the advance from the viewpoints of quantum […]