Curated News: Nature (journal)

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Newswise:Video Embedded the-cause-of-recent-cold-waves-over-east-asia-and-north-america-was-in-the-mid-latitude-ocean-fronts
VIDEO
Released: 23-Jan-2024 12:00 AM EST
The cause of recent cold waves over East Asia and North America was in the mid-latitude ocean fronts
National Research Council of Science and Technology

The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) announced that senior researcher Mi-Kyung Sung of the Sustainable Environment Research Center and professor Soon-Il An of the Center for Irreversible Climate Change at Yonsei University have jointly discovered the role of mid-latitude oceans as a source of anomalous waves that are particularly frequent in East Asia and North America, paving the way for a mid- to long-term response to winter climate change.

Released: 22-Jan-2024 4:05 PM EST
New candidate for universal memory is fast, low-power, stable and long-lasting
Stanford University

We are tasking our computers with processing ever-increasing amounts of data to speed up drug discovery, improve weather and climate predictions, train artificial intelligence, and much more.

Released: 22-Jan-2024 1:05 PM EST
New Reagent Improves the Process of Making Sulfur-Containing Compounds that May Be Used in Medicines
Moffitt Cancer Center

In a new article published in Nature Chemistry, Moffitt Cancer Center researchers describe their development of a new reagent that allows a more efficient approach to make sulfoximines, sulfonimidoyl fluorides and sulfonimidamides that may be used in medicines.

Newswise: Look out Spider-Man: Naturalistic silk spun from artificial spider gland
Released: 22-Jan-2024 11:05 AM EST
Look out Spider-Man: Naturalistic silk spun from artificial spider gland
RIKEN

Researchers led by Keiji Numata at the RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science in Japan, along with colleagues from the RIKEN Pioneering Research Cluster, have succeeded in creating a device that spins artificial spider silk that closely matches what spiders naturally produce.

Newswise: Cedars-Sinai Develops New Tools to Improve Pancreatic Cancer Patient Care
Released: 22-Jan-2024 11:05 AM EST
Cedars-Sinai Develops New Tools to Improve Pancreatic Cancer Patient Care
Cedars-Sinai

Cedars-Sinai Cancer investigators have used a unique precision medicine and artificial intelligence (AI) tool called the Molecular Twin Precision Oncology Platform to identify biomarkers that outperform the standard test for predicting pancreatic cancer survival.

Released: 22-Jan-2024 10:05 AM EST
New sustainable method for creating organic semiconductors
Linkoping University

Researchers at Linköping University, Sweden, have developed a new, more environmentally friendly way to create conductive inks for use in organic electronics such as solar cells, artificial neurons, and soft sensors. The findings, published in the journal Nature Communications, pave the way for future sustainable technology.

Released: 22-Jan-2024 10:05 AM EST
Strategy to Boost Prostate Cancer Treatment Efficacy Devised at Rutgers Health
Rutgers University-New Brunswick

Research shows why prostate cancer cells grow and spread in only some patients.

Newswise: Enable distributed quantum sensors for simultaneous measurements in distant places
Released: 22-Jan-2024 12:00 AM EST
Enable distributed quantum sensors for simultaneous measurements in distant places
National Research Council of Science and Technology

The Korea Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) announced that Dr. Hyang-Tag Lim and his team at the Center for Quantum Information have succeeded in implementing a distributed quantum sensor that can measure multiple spatially-distributed physical quantities with high precision beyond the standard quantum limit with few resources.

Newswise: Antibiotics highjack bacterial immunity
Released: 19-Jan-2024 12:05 PM EST
Antibiotics highjack bacterial immunity
Cluster of Excellence “Controlling Microbes to Fight Infections” (CMFI)

Molecular defense system protects bacteria from viruses and at the same time makes them susceptible to antibiotics.

18-Jan-2024 10:05 AM EST
McMaster researchers create instruction manual to detect rare cells that could unlock secrets to allergies
McMaster University

Researchers with McMaster University have created the instruction manual that will help scientists across the globe find hard to detect B cells.

Newswise: Rice study unveils quantum interaction insights.
Released: 19-Jan-2024 7:05 AM EST
Rice study unveils quantum interaction insights.
Rice University

Quantum technologies bring the promise of faster computing, enhanced drug development and new sensing applications.

18-Jan-2024 10:15 AM EST
Generative AI helps to explain human memory and imagination
University College London

Recent advances in generative AI help to explain how memories enable us to learn about the world, re-live old experiences and construct totally new experiences for imagination and planning, according to a new study by UCL researchers.

     
Released: 18-Jan-2024 2:05 PM EST
Researchers discover potentially cancer-fighting T cells within some pediatric brain tumor patients
La Jolla Institute for Immunology

"These patients may be candidates in whom immunotherapy has the potential to show clinical benefit."

Newswise: Wireless Drug Patch Shows Promise as Chronic Disease Treatment Delivery System
Released: 18-Jan-2024 11:30 AM EST
Wireless Drug Patch Shows Promise as Chronic Disease Treatment Delivery System
University of North Carolina School of Medicine

This research from UNC-Chapel Hill, published in the journal Nature Communications, opens the door to researching this wirelessly controlled patch to deliver on-demand treatments for neurodegenerative disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease.

Released: 18-Jan-2024 8:05 AM EST
Tests can reveal whether an antibody can turn into a killer
Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

A promising antibody failed testing. This is good news for developing a broad-spectrum antidote against the world’s most dangerous snake venoms.

Released: 18-Jan-2024 8:05 AM EST
Africa’s chance for green electricity
Tübingen University

A joint study by the University of Tübingen, the Senckenberg Society for Nature Research, the University of Osnabrück and the University of Rwanda has found that 80 percent of the energy required in Africa could come from renewable sources by 2040 – if the capacity of existing power plants were fully utilized and all the plants currently on the drawing-board were built.

Released: 18-Jan-2024 8:05 AM EST
Astronomers detect oldest black hole ever observed
University of Cambridge

Researchers have discovered the oldest black hole ever observed, dating from the dawn of the universe, and found that it is ‘eating’ its host galaxy to death.

Released: 18-Jan-2024 7:05 AM EST
What’s stopping US climate policies from working effectively
University of Colorado Boulder

In an effort to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and curb global warming, the U.S. has enacted several ambitious federal laws, such as the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) passed in 2022 and the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA) of 2021.

Released: 17-Jan-2024 10:05 AM EST
Researchers Identify Key Characteristics Associated with Improved CAR T Outcomes in Large B Cell Lymphoma
Moffitt Cancer Center

Axi-cel CAR T targets the CD19 molecule on large B-cell lymphoma cells. The ZUMA-7 trial demonstrated that axi-cel reduced the risk of disease progression, the need for new therapy, or death by 60% compared to standard therapy. Despite these positive outcomes in event-free survival and overall survival, some patients did not respond well to therapy or relapsed quickly after treatment. Researchers wanted to assess if there were specific tumor characteristics associated with improved outcomes that could better inform treatment selection. Their findings were published today in Nature Medicine.

Newswise: Transforming Clinical Recording of Deep Brain Activity with a New Take on Sensor Manufacturing
14-Jan-2024 5:00 AM EST
Transforming Clinical Recording of Deep Brain Activity with a New Take on Sensor Manufacturing
University of California San Diego

Sensors built with a new manufacturing approach are capable of recording activity deep within the brain from large populations of individual neurons--with a resolution of as few as one or two neurons--in humans as well as a range of animal models, according to a study published in the Jan. 17, 2024 issue of the journal Nature Communications.



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