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  • Severe pediatric malaria remains a concern in many countries. Here, the authors use an individual-based modeling approach to evaluate the relationship between malaria prevalence and incidence of malaria pediatric hospitalizations, and show how unsteady transmission patterns affect hospitalization rates.

    • Pablo M. De Salazar
    • Alice Kamau
    • Melissa A. Penny
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Alcohol use is commonplace and ischemic heart disease (IHD) the leading cause of death globally, yet their relationship is unclear. Here we show that study type determines whether research finds alcohol reduces IHD risk or is unrelated, arguing for new approaches to settle this critical debate.

    • Sinclair Carr
    • Dana Bryazka
    • Emmanuela Gakidou
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Intestinal homeostasis is maintained by interactions between the gut-associated lymphoid tissue and the resident flora. Here Montorsi et al use multiplexed single cell omics to describe double negative type 2 B cells and DNASE1L3-expressing dendritic cells that interact and associate with microbiota on the human gut antigenic front line.

    • Lucia Montorsi
    • Michael J. Pitcher
    • Jo Spencer
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The authors analyze the frequency, duration and intensity of stratospheric intrusions to the surface in China over 2015-2022 and find that such intrusions enhance surface ozone pollution, especially in spring and autumn, followed by summer.

    • Zhixiong Chen
    • Jane Liu
    • Zhou Zang
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Visualising the structure of museum objects is a crucial step in understanding the origin, state, and composition of cultural heritage artifacts. Here the authors present an approach for creating computed tomography reconstructions using only standard 2D radiography equipment already available in most larger museums.

    • Francien G. Bossema
    • Willem Jan Palenstijn
    • K. Joost Batenburg
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Using recurrent neural networks, here the authors show that learning the same task through different experiences can lead to important differences in how neural activity is structured. These differences can play a crucial role for subsequent adaptation, with networks that are equally good at the initial task showing opposing trends in adaptation.

    • Joanna C. Chang
    • Matthew G. Perich
    • Claudia Clopath
    ArticleOpen Access
  • By 2050 > 23% of the global population aged 69 + will live in climates with acute heat exposure– the 95th percentile of the distribution of maximum daily temperatures–greater than the critical threshold of 37.5C, compared with 14% in 2020, an increase of 177–246 million older adults exposed to dangerous acute heat.

    • Giacomo Falchetta
    • Enrica De Cian
    • Deborah Carr
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Traders of financial options bet that firms’ stock prices will be affected by forecasts of seasonal climate produced by the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Firms are exposed throughout the economy, and traders spend more to hedge the news from more skillful forecasts

    • Derek Lemoine
    • Sarah Kapnick
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Esophageal adenocarcinoma is characterised by frequent amplifications in oncogenes. Here, the authors use short- and long-read sequencing approaches to analyze primary tumor samples and tumour-derived organoids and to investigate the mechanisms underlying complex amplifications.

    • Alvin Wei Tian Ng
    • Dylan Peter McClurg
    • Rebecca C. Fitzgerald
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The Sargasso Sea is a natural laboratory for understanding future conditions of warmer oceans and associated nutrient limitation. Here, the authors combined short- and long-read sequencing to survey Sargasso Sea viral communities.

    • Joanna Warwick-Dugdale
    • Funing Tian
    • Ben Temperton
    ArticleOpen Access
  • The relationship between the structural configurations of M-N-C electrocatalysts and their performances in neutral environments has been insufficiently investigated. Here the authors demonstrate that an ultralow metal-loaded Co-N-C electrocatalyst, featuring the asymmetric Co-C/N/O configuration, exhibit exceptional efficiency in electrochemically producing hydrogen peroxide under neutral conditions.

    • Longxiang Liu
    • Liqun Kang
    • Guanjie He
    ArticleOpen Access
  • Adaptive laboratory evolution provides a real-time record of physiological change. In bacteria adapted to glucose over 40 000 generations, this study finds an apparent increase in enzyme efficiency consistent with increased substrate saturation due to loss of a flux sensing mechanism early in adaptation.

    • Matteo Mori
    • Vadim Patsalo
    • Matthew Scott
    ArticleOpen Access