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Showing 1–25 of 25 results
Advanced filters: Author: Eörs Szathmary Clear advanced filters
  • Language evolved as part of a uniquely human group of traits, the interdependence of which calls for an integrated approach to the study of brain function, argue Eörs Szathmáry and Szabolcs Számadó.

    • Eörs Szathmáry
    • Szabolcs Számadó
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 456, P: 40-41
  • The anthropic principle has gained much popularity among cosmologists. But, faced with a need for historical explanation, biologists are bound to find it a cop-out.

    • John Maynard Smith
    • Eörs Szathmáry
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 384, P: 107
  • Most multicellular organisms pass through a single-cell stage from which they then develop. This feature may render them more evolvable.

    • Lewis Wolpert
    • Eörs Szathmáry
    Comments & Opinion
    Nature
    Volume: 420, P: 745
  • Top-down, bottom-up; RNA-based, lipid-based; theory, experiment — there are many different ways of investigating what constitutes a ‘minimal cell’. Progress requires finding common themes between them.

    • Eörs Szathmáry
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 433, P: 469-470
    • Eörs Szathma´ry
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 373, P: 570-571
  • The coupling of autocatalysis to compartment growth and division is a key step in the origin of life. Now it has been shown that compartmentalizing the formose reaction in emulsion droplets leads to several crucial properties of living and evolving systems (growth, division, variation, competition, rudimentary heredity and selection).

    • Heng Lu
    • Alex Blokhuis
    • Andrew D. Griffiths
    Research
    Nature Chemistry
    Volume: 16, P: 70-78
  • Body segmentation occurs during the development of many invertebrate animals. Advances are being made by those striving to produce computer models of the genetic networks underlying the process.

    • Eörs Szathmáry
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 411, P: 143-145
  • Does life have an irreducible structure? What constitutes a unit of selection? These questions are under attack from mathematicians and biologists who study the dynamics of populations of cells or viruses, or hosts. Often, spatial variation in these populations leads to complex behaviour, mimicking the movement of slime moulds or the protective membrane of primitive multicellular organisms, for example.

    • Karl Sigmund
    • Eörs Szathmáry
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 392, P: 439-441
  • The question of how life on Earth evolved was the subject of a recent meeting. There are currently three main promising lines of research: that life evolved due to replication of nucleic acids on a surface; that there was in vitro construction of a catalytic RNA (ribozyme); or that the first oligonucleotides were formed by the ligation of smaller nucleic-acid units

    • Eörs Szathmáry
    News & Views
    Nature
    Volume: 387, P: 662-663
  • The functional overlap between different components protects biological systems.

    • Eörs Szathmáry
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 439, P: 19-20
  • Was the Universe destined to lead to the evolution of humans?

    • Eörs Szathmáry
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 419, P: 779-780
  • A neural network model built on stage-specific gene expression data suggests an attractor-based dynamical explanation for the temporal stability of multipotent cell states and signal-driven lineage commitment.

    • Mátyás Paczkó
    • Dániel Vörös
    • András Szilágyi
    ResearchOpen Access
    Communications Biology
    Volume: 7, P: 1-13
  • Self-replicating systems play a central role in the emergence of life. This Review describes the features that self-replicating systems need to acquire to transition from chemistry to biology and surveys the progress made in theoretical and experimental approaches.

    • Paul Adamski
    • Marcel Eleveld
    • Sijbren Otto
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Chemistry
    Volume: 4, P: 386-403