Nature News
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[:es]The power of prediction markets[:]
[:es]Scientists are beginning to understand why these ‘mini Wall Streets’ work so well at forecasting election results — and how they sometimes fail.[:]
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[:en]The dark side of the human genome[:]
[:en] Scientists are uncovering the hidden switches in our genome that dial gene expression up and down, but much work lies ahead to peel back the many layers of regulation. […]
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[:es]Can we open the black box of AI?[:]
[:es]Artificial intelligence is everywhere. But before scientists trust it, they first need to understand how machines learn.[:]
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[:es]US left with just one working fusion reactor — for now[:]
[:es]Design flaw may have doomed machine at Princeton Plasma Physics Lab.[:]
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[:es]Psychologists fail to replicate well-known behaviour linked to learning[:]
[:es]Numerous failed attempts to replicate the ‘blocking effect’ cast doubt on its scope.[:]
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[:es]Elephant history rewritten by ancient genomes[:]
[:es]DNA from extinct species forces rethink of elephants’ family tree.[:]
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[:es]Secrets of life in the soil[:]
[:es]Diana Wall has built a career on overturning assumptions about underground ecosystems. Now she is seeking to protect this endangered world.[:]
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Venerable brain-cancer cell line faces identity crisis
Samples of the cell line do not match its 50-year-old source ― but how the mix-up occurred is a mystery.
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How DNA could store all the world’s data
Modern archiving technology cannot keep up with the growing tsunami of bits. But nature may hold an answer to that problem already.