Nature News
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[:es]The quest to decipher how the body’s cells sense touch[:]
[:es] From a painful pinch to a soft caress, scientists are zooming in on the pressure-sensitive proteins that allow cells to detect tension and pressure. [:]
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[:es]The huge scientific effort to study Notre-Dame’s ashes[:]
[:es] Last year’s fire at Paris’s beloved cathedral shocked the world. Now, researchers are making use of the unprecedented opportunity to study its innards. [:]
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[:es]Quest to use CRISPR against disease gains ground[:]
[:es] As the first clinical trial results trickle in, researchers look ahead to more sophisticated medical applications for genome editing. [:]
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[:es]Magnetic and topological order united in a crystal[:]
[:es] A material that has electrically conducting surfaces has been found to show, when cooled, a type of magnetic ordering that reduces conduction at the surfaces. Such remarkable behaviour could […]
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[:es]The scientific events that shaped the 2010s[:]
[:es] The past decade has seen breakthroughs in frontiers from gene editing to gravitational waves. The coming one must focus on climate change. [:]
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[:es]What’s next for psychology’s embattled field of social priming[:]
[:es] A promising field of research on social behaviour struggled after investigators couldn’t repeat key findings. Now researchers are trying to establish what’s worth saving. [:]
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[:es]The gene-based hack that is revolutionizing epidemiology[:]
[:es] Mendelian randomization offers a simple way to distinguish causation from correlation. But are scientists overusing it? [:]
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[:es]Electrons in graphene go with the flow[:]
[:es] Scattering between electrons in the material graphene can cause these particles to flow like a viscous liquid. Such flow, which has previously been detected using measurements of electrical resistance, […]
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[:es]E. coli bacteria engineered to eat carbon dioxide[:]
[:es] Feat could turn bacteria into biological factories for energy and even food. [:]