Nature News
-
[:es]Sex and drugs and self-control: how the teen brain navigates risk[:]
It’s not just about rebellion. Neuroscience is revealing adolescents’ rich and nuanced relationship with risky behaviour.
-
[:es]The quantum internet has arrived (and it hasn’t)[:]
Networks that harness entanglement and teleportation could enable leaps in security, computing and science.
-
[:es]Primitive fish’s sea-floor shuffle illuminates the origins of walking[:]
The little skate walks using the same nerves and genes as mammals.
-
[:es]Physicists harness twisted mathematics to make powerful laser[:]
High-quality beams could be among the first practical applications of the booming field of topological physics.
-
[:es]The serendipity test[:]
Scientists often herald the role of chance in research. A project in Britain aims to test the popular idea with evidence.
-
[:es]Artificial neurons compute faster than the human brain[:]
A computing system that mimics neural processing could make artificial intelligence more efficient — and more human.
-
[:es]Physicists create Star Wars-style 3D projections — just don’t call them holograms[:]
Laser and particle system produces three-dimensional moving images that appear to float in thin air.
-
[:es]The lost art of looking at plants[:]
Advances in genomics and imaging are reviving a fading discipline.
-
[:es]Could baby’s first bacteria take root before birth?[:]
The womb was thought to be sterile, but some scientists argue that it’s where the microbiome begins.