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Showing 1–35 of 35 results
Advanced filters: Author: Ann Finkbeiner Clear advanced filters
  • Ann Finkbeiner praises a history of an era when research and science education seemed to toe a government line.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 563, P: 32-33
  • Ann Finkbeiner assesses a study of DARPA, the agency that readies US technologies for coming conflicts.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 525, P: 451-452
  • Ann Finkbeiner reviews a study weighing up whether Mileva Marić contributed to her husband’s epochal theories.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 567, P: 28-29
  • As the wild blue yonder beckons and labs and classrooms empty, Nature's regular reviewers share their holiday reads.

    • Callum Roberts
    • Ann Finkbeiner
    • Colin Sullivan
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 511, P: 152-154
  • Ann Finkbeiner scrutinizes a biography of supremely inventive particle physicist Richard Garwin.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 542, P: 292-293
  • Ann Finkbeiner delves into a collection reappraising the hippy tech-heads, agronomic groovers and far-out ecodesigners of the 'long 1970s'.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 534, P: 36
  • Werner Heisenberg's wartime letters to his wife record scientific and personal privations, finds Ann Finkbeiner.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 538, P: 35-36
  • Ann Finkbeiner ponders a script inspired by the 1945 internment of eminent German physicists in England.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 503, P: 466-467
  • The authors find that TDP-43 loss of function—the pathology defining the neurodegenerative conditions ALS and FTD—induces novel mRNA polyadenylation events, which have different effects, including an increase in RNA stability, leading to higher protein levels.

    • Sam Bryce-Smith
    • Anna-Leigh Brown
    • Pietro Fratta
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Neuroscience
    Volume: 28, P: 2190-2200
  • Ann Finkbeiner explains JASON, the autonomous group of academics that has been reporting to the US government on military matters for more than 50 years.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 477, P: 397-399
  • Inclusions containing TDP43 are linked to pathologies in several neurodegenerative diseases such as ALS and FTD. Pathogenic TDP43 mutations are now found to shorten the protein's half-life in individual neurons. Stimulating autophagy with inhibitors improves TDP43 clearance and localization.

    • Sami J Barmada
    • Andrea Serio
    • Steven Finkbeiner
    Research
    Nature Chemical Biology
    Volume: 10, P: 677-685
  • A secure framework that harmonizes storage and querying of clinical and genetic data using blockchain technology was developed to support combined genotype–phenotype queries, improving transparency into how and when health information is used.

    • Ahmed Elhussein
    • Ulugbek Baymuradov
    • Gamze Gürsoy
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Medicine
    Volume: 30, P: 3578-3589
  • The discovery of thousands of star systems wildly different from our own has demolished ideas about how planets form. Astronomers are searching for a whole new theory.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 511, P: 22-24
  • By firing lasers into the sky, Claire Max has transformed the capabilities of current — and future — telescopes.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 517, P: 430-432
  • As an early adopter of astronomical technology, Andrea Ghez is revealing secrets about the giant black hole at the Galaxy's centre.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 495, P: 296-298
  • Adipose tissue expansion occurs via enlargement of adipocytes as well as the generation of new fat cells, the latter being associated with more favorable metabolic outcomes. Here, the authors show that activation of adipocyte Piezo1 results in release of FGF1 and stimulates the differentiation of adipocyte precursor cells.

    • ShengPeng Wang
    • Shuang Cao
    • Stefan Offermanns
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-13
  • Regulation of gene expression and splicing are thought to be tissue-specific. Here, the authors obtain genomic and transcriptomic data from putamen and substantia nigra of 117 neurologically healthy human brains and find that splicing eQTLs are enriched for neuron-specific regulatory information.

    • Sebastian Guelfi
    • Karishma D’Sa
    • Mina Ryten
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-16
  • The global rush to develop the ‘blue economy’ risks harming both the marine environment and human wellbeing. Bold policies and actions are urgently needed. We identify five priorities to chart a course towards an environmentally sustainable and socially equitable blue economy.

    • Nathan J. Bennett
    • Andrés M. Cisneros-Montemayor
    • U. Rashid Sumaila
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature Sustainability
    Volume: 2, P: 991-993
  • Cryptographers condemn US National Security Agency’s tapping and tampering, but mathematicians shrug.

    • Ann Finkbeiner
    News
    Nature
    Volume: 502, P: 152