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Showing 1–50 of 2958 results
Advanced filters: Author: Kevin Power Clear advanced filters
  • Models of turbulent flows are often simulated in the laboratory, in sampling areas with dimensions <1 m. Here, the authors exploit a natural snowstorm to quantify turbulent flows, exploring the complex dynamics of the atmospheric boundary layer around a 2.5-MW utility-scale wind turbine.

    • Jiarong Hong
    • Mostafa Toloui
    • Fotis Sotiropoulos
    Research
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 5, P: 1-9
  • Native top-down proteomics reveals epidermal growth factor receptor–estrogen receptor-alpha (EGFR–ER) signaling crosstalk in breast cancer cells and dissociation of nuclear transport factor 2 (NUTF2) dimers to modulate ER signaling and cell growth.

    • Fabio P. Gomes
    • Kenneth R. Durbin
    • John R. Yates III
    Research
    Nature Chemical Biology
    Volume: 21, P: 1205-1213
  • Sleep-active physiological processes enhance overnight glymphatic clearance of Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers into plasma in humans, supporting the critical role of glymphatic function in Alzheimer’s pathophysiology and its potential as a therapeutic target.

    • Paul Dagum
    • Donald L. Elbert
    • Jeffrey J. Iliff
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • This meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials indicates that social safety nets can improve women’s economic achievements and agency. Pooled treatment effects are largest for unconditional cash transfers, public work programmes, social care services and asset transfers.

    • Amber Peterman
    • Jingying Wang
    • Janina Isabel Steinert
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Human Behaviour
    P: 1-17
  • Spatiotemporal insight into photoactivation of the prototypical B12 photoreceptor CarH is revealed across nine orders of magnitude in time, identifying a transient adduct that distinguishes it from thermally activated B12 enzymes.

    • Ronald Rios-Santacruz
    • Harshwardhan Poddar
    • Giorgio Schirò
    Research
    Nature
    P: 1-8
  • The authors report an integrated triply-resonant superconducting electro-optic transducer combining a 107 GHz NbTiN resonator with a thin-film lithium niobate optical racetrack at telecom wavelengths. Achieving ηOE ≈ 0.82 × 10−6 and g0/2π ≈ 0.7 kHz, this work analyzes mm-wave resonator design challenges and proposes strategies for improved quantum transduction.

    • Kevin K. S. Multani
    • Jason F. Herrmann
    • Amir H. Safavi-Naeini
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-11
  • In patients with acute heart failure, personalized dosing of a diuretic led to treatment intensification in the majority of patients and improved natriuresis, but had no effects on time to all-cause mortality or heart failure rehospitalization.

    • Jozine M. ter Maaten
    • Iris E. Beldhuis
    • Kevin Damman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 29, P: 2625-2632
  • Energy demand and intensive computation limit the use of machine learning on-device for wearables. Here, the authors deploy edge AI in a wearable form factor to provide clinical-grade gait-based frailty assessment over weeks with no interaction required from the wearer at any point.

    • Kevin Albert Kasper
    • Ryan Thien
    • Philipp Gutruf
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-12
  • Certifying multipartite entanglement can benchmark quantum devices. Here, authors introduce versatile tests that can certify genuine multipartite entanglement and k-inseparability using only few-body measurements, enabling noise-robust benchmarking of large photonic and superconducting graph states.

    • Nicky Kai Hong Li
    • Xi Dai
    • Nicolai Friis
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-12
  • A cluster-randomized trial in rural Lesotho showed that uncontrolled hypertension diagnosis and management delivered by minimally trained lay persons in the community using a mobile decision support tool was superior to facility referral for improving clinical outcomes.

    • Felix Gerber
    • Giuliana Sanchez-Samaniego
    • Niklaus Daniel Labhardt
    Research
    Nature Medicine
    P: 1-9
  • Fungal cryptochromes are photoreceptors that regulate DNA damage, cell development, and the circadian clock. Here, Landmark et al. show that a fungal cryptochrome-like photolyase regulates light- and stress-activated genes and relocates from nuclei to mitochondria in response to oxidative stress.

    • Alexander Landmark
    • Tim Rudolf
    • Reinhard Fischer
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • MedHELM, an extensible evaluation framework including a new taxonomy for classifying medical tasks and a benchmark of many datasets across these categories, enables the evaluation of large language models on real-world clinical tasks.

    • Suhana Bedi
    • Hejie Cui
    • Nigam H. Shah
    Research
    Nature Medicine
    P: 1-9
  • The identification of cellular targets for natural products that potently inhibit the growth of cancer cell lines implicates oxysterol-binding proteins in the growth of cancer cells. These natural products, termed ORPphilins, also affect sphingomyelin biosynthesis.

    • Anthony W G Burgett
    • Thomas B Poulsen
    • Matthew D Shair
    Research
    Nature Chemical Biology
    Volume: 7, P: 639-647
  • FACED 2.0 builds on and expands the capabilities of the free-space angular-chirp-enhanced delay microscopy approach. Its high speed, large field of view and volumetric coverage enable two-photon voltage imaging of hundreds of neurons or calcium imaging of thousands of neurons in the mouse or zebrafish brain.

    • Jian Zhong
    • Ryan G. Natan
    • Na Ji
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Methods
    P: 1-11
  • A flexible micro-electrocorticography brain–computer interface that integrates a 256 × 256 array of electrodes, signal processing, data telemetry and wireless powering on a single complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor substrate can provide stable, chronic in vivo recordings.

    • Taesung Jung
    • Nanyu Zeng
    • Kenneth L. Shepard
    Research
    Nature Electronics
    Volume: 8, P: 1272-1288
  • Genomic analyses applied to 14 childhood- and adult-onset psychiatric disorders identifies five underlying genomic factors that explain the majority of the genetic variance of the individual disorders.

    • Andrew D. Grotzinger
    • Josefin Werme
    • Jordan W. Smoller
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 649, P: 406-415
  • The authors implement on-chip Rydberg exciton-polaritons by coupling WS2 monolayers to a photonic crystal. Rydberg polaritons exhibit a nonlinearity of 8.0 ± 2.3 times larger than that of the ground polaritonic states due mostly to their extended exciton radii and photonic crystal-induced spatially localized electric field distribution.

    • Qiuyu Shang
    • Kevin Dini
    • Weibo Gao
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-9
  • Asthma exacerbations remain hard to predict with routine tests. Here, the authors show that simple blood sphingolipid-to-steroid ratios predict five-year exacerbation risk and can underpin a practical, low-cost assay that outperforms standard clinical measures.

    • Yulu Chen
    • Pei Zhang
    • Jessica A. Lasky-Su
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-16
  • EGFR inhibitors are standard of care in patients with EGFR-mutant non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) but resistance often develops. Here the authors report that the evolution of EGFR inhibitor resistance in EGFR-mutant NSCLC results in a sensitivity to the compound, MCB-613, and investigate the underlying mechanism of action.

    • Christopher F. Bassil
    • Kerry Dillon
    • Kris C. Wood
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-20
  • The R21/Matrix-M vaccine, but not the ME-TRAP vaccine, was protective against intradermal challenge with Plasmodium falciparum sporozoites, while neither was protective against direct venous inoculation, potentially explaining previously observed differences in protection.

    • Melissa C. Kapulu
    • Francesca Orenge
    • Philip Bejon
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 32, P: 178-185
  • Here, the authors document the evolutionary dynamics of angiosperm pollen, using pollen morphology and time calibrated phylogeny. They identify two surges in pollen disparity in the mid-Cretaceous and Paleogene that are associated with environmental changes and important pollen adaptations.

    • Yang Luo
    • Hong-Tao Li
    • De-Zhu Li
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-15
  • Neurocognitive impairment and premature aging often occur in childhood survivors of cancer. Here, the authors investigate the link between biological markers of age and neurocognitive functioning in survivors of childhood cancer who received either central nervous system (CNS)-targeted or non-CNS-targeted therapy.

    • AnnaLynn M. Williams
    • Nicholas S. Phillips
    • Kevin R. Krull
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-12
  • Between 2016 and 2022, 83 previously approved oncology drugs were covered and reimbursed in China through a value-based pricing negotiation programme, which resulted in substantial price cuts but did not improve the correlation between drug cost and clinical benefit. Herein, we call for an improved, transparent value-based pricing model to better account for high-value innovation in oncology drugs.

    • Jing Yuan
    • Minghui Li
    • Z. Kevin Lu
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology
    Volume: 20, P: 501-502
  • Ionic liquid additives increase the power conversion efficiency of perovskite solar cells, but their effect on perovskite crystallization remains unclear. Xu et al. provide mechanistic insights and demonstrate improved operational stability under continous illumination and 90 °C thermal stress.

    • Wenzhan Xu
    • Wenhao Shao
    • Letian Dou
    Research
    Nature Energy
    Volume: 11, P: 209-218
  • So far, a continuous time crystal has only been implemented on a quantum system. Optically driven many-body interactions in a nanomechanical photonic metamaterial now allow the realization of a classical continuous time crystal.

    • Tongjun Liu
    • Jun-Yu Ou
    • Nikolay I. Zheludev
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Physics
    Volume: 19, P: 986-991
  • The researchers showcase a microwave-integrated circuit, operating across 1.5–3.0 GHz at micro-Watt power levels, that can perform universal unitary matrix transformations.

    • Rasool Keshavarz
    • Kevin Zelaya
    • Mohammad-Ali Miri
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-8
  • Weak value amplification in a compact format can lead to improved measurement capabilities in practical applications. Here the authors demonstrate weak value amplification in an integrated photonic chip with a multimode interferometer.

    • Meiting Song
    • John Steinmetz
    • Jaime Cardenas
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 12, P: 1-7
  • Breather solitons can be found in both physical and biological nonlinear systems. Here, Yuet al. demonstrate this type of soliton in silicon and silicon nitride microresonators, which advances the understanding of soliton-based comb-generation in microresonators.

    • Mengjie Yu
    • Jae K. Jang
    • Alexander L. Gaeta
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 8, P: 1-7
  • Understanding others’ emotions is central to human connection. Here, the authors show that people systematically overestimate others’ emotional intensity, especially for negative emotions, a tendency that may promote empathy and relationship satisfaction.

    • Shir Genzer
    • Matan Rubin
    • Anat Perry
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • Telomerase recruitment to telomeres is a tightly regulated process which is stimulated by replication stress. Here, the authors identify that nuclear filamentous actin is important for interaction between telomerase and telomeres, ultimately facilitating productive telomere extension by telomerase.

    • Ashley Harman
    • Melissa Kartawinata
    • Tracy M. Bryan
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-21
  • Wireless large-scale recordings of neural activity in freely flying fruit bats reveal that hippocampal ensemble properties are associated with sensorimotor rhythms, and that previous models of replay and sequential dynamics, based on experiments in rodents, might not be applicable to other species.

    • Angelo Forli
    • Wudi Fan
    • Michael M. Yartsev
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 645, P: 974-980
  • An exploratory analysis of the phase 3 ECOSPOR III trial shows that a higher dosage of the oral microbiome therapeutic VOWST led to enhanced pharmacokinetics, increased species engraftment and altered microbiome and metabolite profiles, providing mechanistic insights into how it may prevent Clostridioides difficile infection recurrence.

    • Jessica A. Bryant
    • Marin Vulić
    • Matthew R. Henn
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 32, P: 186-196
  • The anterior cingulate cortex encodes affective pain behaviours modulated by opioids; targeting opioid-sensitive neurons through a new chemogenetic gene therapy replicates the analgesic effects of morphine, providing precise chronic pain relief without affecting sensory detection.

    • Corinna S. Oswell
    • Sophie A. Rogers
    • Gregory Corder
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 649, P: 938-947
  • Analyzing HPV prevalence among 1,524 women in Gabon, the authors show that most cervical abnormalities in Gabonese women are linked to vaccine-preventable HPV types, supporting the introduction of Gardasil-9 ® and strengthened HPV screening to reduce cervical cancer in Gabon.

    • Alfred K. F. Mabika-Obanda
    • Nathalie Ambounda Ledaga
    • Joël Fleury Djoba Siawaya
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-10