Electrical stimulation improves brain function after severe injury.
doi:10.1038/7153xiiia
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Electrical stimulation improves brain function after severe injury.
doi:10.1038/7153xiiia
doi:10.1038/7153xiiib
doi:10.1038/7153xiiic
The liberation of six foreign health workers, held without cause in Libya, is to be welcomed. Now Libya should face facts — and clear their names.
doi:10.1038/448511a
The way research on human subjects is overseen in the United States requires reform.
doi:10.1038/448511b
Bans on drug enhancement in sport may go the way of earlier prohibitions on women and remuneration.
doi:10.1038/448512a
doi:10.1038/448514a
doi:10.1038/448515a
The first Westerner invited to spend time on a Russian drifting station contemplates his eight-month voyage to the North Pole.
doi:10.1038/448517a
Beijing is attempting to introduce a 'green GDP' accounting scheme as a way of ranking local governments' success in achieving economic growth that does not cost the environment. But the scheme is faltering at the pilot stage due to political infighting, says Jane Qiu.
Jane Qiu
doi:10.1038/448518a
doi:10.1038/448520a
Countries battle over ownership of lucrative seabed.
Daniel Cressey
doi:10.1038/448520b
US starts work on its first mixed-oxide plant.
Geoff Brumfiel
doi:10.1038/448520c
Deep-brain stimulation offers hope for minimally conscious patients.
Michael Hopkin
doi:10.1038/448522a
Biologists hope insight into cell differentiation and communication will transfer to humans.
Heidi Ledford
doi:10.1038/448522b
Washington has reached an easy consensus on the need to train more scientists and engineers but, argues David Goldston, the United States needs to consider a broader approach to combat global competition.
David Goldston
doi:10.1038/448524a
Smart investors who know the drugs business well are helping to make Zurich's stock market a popular place for biotechnology firms to raise money. Andrea Chipman reports.
doi:10.1038/448525a
Rising carbon dioxide levels should increase crop yields. But what if their effect on the nutritional value of our food is less benign, asks Ned Stafford.
Ned Stafford
doi:10.1038/448526a
The ethics committees that oversee research done in humans have been attacked from all sides. Heidi Ledford recounts the struggle to come up with alternatives.
Heidi Ledford
doi:10.1038/448530a
Does a baboon's success in social situations depend solely on learning the rules of the game?
doi:10.1038/448535a
doi:10.1038/448536a
doi:10.1038/448537a
Peter Randall-Page's massive granite sculpture for the Eden Project emulates natural form.
Martin Kemp
doi:10.1038/448538a
Neuroscientists and engineers are developing ways to help patients overcome paralysis and stroke. But what about mental function itself? Can medical intervention restore consciousness?
Michael N. Shadlen & Roozbeh Kiani
doi:10.1038/448539a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (233K)
Solid particles suspended in the atmosphere have long played second fiddle to greenhouse gases as agents of climate change. A study of atmospheric heating over the Indian Ocean could provoke a rethink.
Peter Pilewskie
doi:10.1038/448541a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (210K)
The human intestine is home to trillions of bacteria. Investigation of the colonization of the infant gut by these microorganisms is a prelude to understanding how they may act in both health and disease.
Laurie E. Comstock
doi:10.1038/448542a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (241K)
When two 'bits' of magnetic information race around a nanoscale wire, two factors determine whether or not they survive the course: the condition of the track, and how fast they respond to the starting signal.
Russell P. Cowburn
doi:10.1038/448544a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (601K)
Mutations that cause portions of two genes to fuse together and form a hybrid gene are frequent in blood-related cancers. New findings implicate one such fusion gene in the most common type of lung cancer.
Matthew Meyerson
doi:10.1038/448545a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (513K)
doi:10.1038/448546a
The presence of non-magnetic atoms can create a random internal field in magnetic crystals. Tuning that field from outside allows the intrinsic magnetic properties of the material to be precisely controlled.
Zachary Fisk
doi:10.1038/448546b
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (205K)
Signals induced by sex hormones and inflammation have been viewed as different aspects of tumour development. But a three-way interaction between these two classes of signal and carcinogenesis has emerged.
Alberto Mantovani
doi:10.1038/448547a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (292K)
Readout of information from the genome depends on intricate regulation of how DNA is packaged by proteins. The great endeavour to reveal how this packaging operates pan-genomically is now under way.
Stephen B. Baylin & Kornel E. Schuebel
doi:10.1038/448548a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (725K)
The evidence for rapid climate change now seems overwhelming. Global temperatures are predicted to rise by up to 4 °C by 2100, with associated alterations in precipitation patterns. Assessing the consequences for biodiversity, and how they might be mitigated, is a Grand Challenge in ecology.
Wilfried Thuiller
doi:10.1038/448550a
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (517K)
Tarjei S. Mikkelsen, Manching Ku, David B. Jaffe, Biju Issac, Erez Lieberman, Georgia Giannoukos, Pablo Alvarez, William Brockman, Tae-Kyung Kim, Richard P. Koche, William Lee, Eric Mendenhall, Aisling O'Donovan, Aviva Presser, Carsten Russ, Xiaohui Xie, Alexander Meissner, Marius Wernig, Rudolf Jaenisch, Chad Nusbaum, Eric S. Lander & Bradley E. Bernstein
doi:10.1038/nature06008
Manabu Soda, Young Lim Choi, Munehiro Enomoto, Shuji Takada, Yoshihiro Yamashita, Shunpei Ishikawa, Shin-ichiro Fujiwara, Hideki Watanabe, Kentaro Kurashina, Hisashi Hatanaka, Masashi Bando, Shoji Ohno, Yuichi Ishikawa, Hiroyuki Aburatani, Toshiro Niki, Yasunori Sohara, Yukihiko Sugiyama & Hiroyuki Mano
doi:10.1038/nature05945
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (1,261K) | Supplementary information
D. M. Silevitch, D. Bitko, J. Brooke, S. Ghosh, G. Aeppli & T. F. Rosenbaum
doi:10.1038/nature06050
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (327K)
Nikolaos Tombros, Csaba Jozsa, Mihaita Popinciuc, Harry T. Jonkman & Bart J. van Wees
doi:10.1038/nature06037
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (479K)
Veerabhadran Ramanathan, Muvva V. Ramana, Gregory Roberts, Dohyeong Kim, Craig Corrigan, Chul Chung & David Winker
doi:10.1038/nature06019
Justin L. Rubinstein, John E. Vidale, Joan Gomberg, Paul Bodin, Kenneth C. Creager & Stephen D. Malone
doi:10.1038/nature06017
日本語要約 | Full Text | PDF (1,058K) | Supplementary information
Hector Botella, Henning Blom, Markus Dorka, Per Erik Ahlberg & Philippe Janvier
doi:10.1038/nature05989
Alistair P. McGregor, Virginie Orgogozo, Isabelle Delon, Jennifer Zanet, Dayalan G. Srinivasan, François Payre & David L. Stern
doi:10.1038/nature05988
Hakon Hakonarson, Struan F. A. Grant, Jonathan P. Bradfield, Luc Marchand, Cecilia E. Kim, Joseph T. Glessner, Rosemarie Grabs, Tracy Casalunovo, Shayne P. Taback, Edward C. Frackelton, Margaret L. Lawson, Luke J. Robinson, Robert Skraban, Yang Lu, Rosetta M. Chiavacci, Charles A. Stanley, Susan E. Kirsch, Eric F. Rappaport, Jordan S. Orange, Dimitri S. Monos, Marcella Devoto, Hui-Qi Qu & Constantin Polychronakos
doi:10.1038/nature06010
Scott A. Tomlins, Bharathi Laxman, Saravana M. Dhanasekaran, Beth E. Helgeson, Xuhong Cao, David S. Morris, Anjana Menon, Xiaojun Jing, Qi Cao, Bo Han, Jindan Yu, Lei Wang, James E. Montie, Mark A. Rubin, Kenneth J. Pienta, Diane Roulston, Rajal B. Shah, Sooryanarayana Varambally, Rohit Mehra & Arul M. Chinnaiyan
doi:10.1038/nature06024
N. D. Schiff, J. T. Giacino, K. Kalmar, J. D. Victor, K. Baker, M. Gerber, B. Fritz, B. Eisenberg, J. O'Connor, E. J. Kobylarz, S. Farris, A. Machado, C. McCagg, F. Plum, J. J. Fins & A. R. Rezai
doi:10.1038/nature06041
Kathryn Miller-Jensen, Kevin A. Janes, Joan S. Brugge & Douglas A. Lauffenburger
doi:10.1038/nature06001
Hideo Ago, Yoshihide Kanaoka, Daisuke Irikura, Bing K. Lam, Tatsuro Shimamura, K. Frank Austen & Masashi Miyano
doi:10.1038/nature05936
Daniel Martinez Molina, Anders Wetterholm, Andreas Kohl, Andrew A. McCarthy, Damian Niegowski, Eva Ohlson, Tove Hammarberg, Said Eshaghi, Jesper Z. Haeggström & Pär Nordlund
doi:10.1038/nature06009
Climate science buzz doesn't necessarily translate into climate science jobs.
Gene Russo
doi:10.1038/nj7153-617a
Awareness about climate change is at an all-time high. Will this surge of attention translate into more jobs for climate scientists? Amanda Haag reports.
Amanda Haag
doi:10.1038/nj7153-618a
doi:10.1038/nj0166
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