Nature News
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[:es]Mini-tumours turn immune cells into cancer fighters[:]
[:es]Personalized white blood cells attack tumours after incubation with cancer tissue. [:]
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[:es]The microscope revolution that’s sweeping through materials science[:]
[:es]Technological advances are transforming what researchers can study at the atomic scale. [:]
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[:es]Ban on ‘gene drives’ is back on the UN’s agenda — worrying scientists[:]
[:es]Research is moving fast on the divisive genetic technology, which could help to eradicate diseases but also risks altering ecosystems in unpredictable ways. [:]
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[:es]Lab-grown ‘mini brains’ produce electrical patterns that resemble those of premature babies[:]
[:es]Structures could help researchers to study the early stages of brain development disorders, including epilepsy. [:]
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[:es]Quenching our thirst for universality[:]
[:es]Understanding the dynamics of quantum systems far from equilibrium is one of the most pressing issues in physics. Three experiments based on ultracold atomic systems provide a major step forward. […]
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[:es]How biologists are creating life-like cells from scratch[:]
[:es]Built from the bottom up, synthetic cells and other creations are starting to come together and could soon test the boundaries of life. [:]
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[:es]Machine learning spots natural selection at work in human genome[:]
[:es]Scientists are using artificial intelligence to identify genetic sequences molded by evolutionary pressures. [:]
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[:es]The world’s strongest MRI machines are pushing human imaging to new limits[:]
[:es]Researchers look to scanners with 10.5-tesla magnets and beyond for unprecedented detail about the brain. [:]
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[:es]Rare genetic sequences illuminate early humans’ history in Africa[:]
[:es]Little-studied ethnic groups on the continent are helping researchers to understand the movements of people who lived there tens of thousands of years ago. [:]