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Single-cell genomics is deepening our understanding of the nervous system and shedding light on the heterogeneity of its cells. This focus issue of Nature Neuroscience celebrates recent methodological and analytical advances in single-cell genomics, highlights principles of study design, and aims to encourage collaboration between cellular, molecular and systems neuroscientists.
In this special issue of Nature Neuroscience, we shine a spotlight on glia. Research into glia has become one of the most exciting and dynamic subfields of neuroscience, yet there is still much to be discovered about the diverse forms and functions of these cells.
In 2022, we began a pilot to facilitate data sharing for manuscripts submitted to Nature Neuroscience. Here, we analyze its effects on research data availability and reflect on the importance of facilitating open science.
As Nature Neuroscience celebrates its 25th anniversary year, we thought this would be a good time to reflect on the value that our journal, and other peer-reviewed journals, provide to our authors, our readers, and society.
This month, Nature Neuroscience celebrates the 25th anniversary of our first issue. To mark the occasion, we reflect on the past quarter of a century of the journal and the field, and look to the future.
Neuroscientists may wish to remain above the fray. But, when policy-makers and judges are deciding on matters that could be informed by their research, neuroscientists must lend their voices to the discussion.
A 2022 paper reported a caveat about brain–behavior relationships emerging from neuroimaging data, which then unintentionally cast an entire field and a neuroscientific method into doubt… again.
As 2021 winds down, we reflect on how our field has progressed with regard to diversity, equity, and inclusion since 2020, and how far we still have to go.
In this special issue, we present a series of reviews, perspectives and commentaries that highlight advances in methods and analytical approaches and provide guidelines and best practices in various areas of neuroscience.
Neuroscience is not spared from wrestling with gender disparity issues. Progress toward more balanced representation has been slow, but improvement is possible with consistent and focused efforts.
Reproducibility initiatives seek to promote greater transparency and sharing of scientific reagents, procedures and data. Less recognized is the need to share data analysis routines. Nature Neuroscience is launching a pilot project to evaluate the efficacy of sharing code.