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Showing 1–50 of 909 results
Advanced filters: Author: Lawrence W. Wu Clear advanced filters
  • The CMS experiment at CERN reports one of the highest-precision measurements of the W boson mass, finding it in line with standard model predictions and at odds with recent anomalous measurements.

    • V. Chekhovsky
    • A. Hayrapetyan
    • D. Druzhkin
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 652, P: 321-327
  • Electrochemical CO2 reduction to multicarbon products is hindered by difficulties in microenvironment control at high current densities. Here the authors demonstrate that biopolymer coatings on electrocatalysts enhance local conditions, achieving high Faradaic efficiencies and challenging assumptions about the need for hydrophobic materials in such systems.

    • Chaolong Wei
    • Suhwan Yoo
    • Andrew Barnabas Wong
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Energy
    P: 1-15
  • High-latitude soils are future soil organic carbon loss hotspots, with losses dominated by particulate organic carbon (POC). The fraction of POC in total SOC (fPOC) is a key indicator, emphasizing the climate importance of preserving POC.

    • Siyi Sun
    • M. Francesca Cotrufo
    • Ji Chen
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    P: 1-12
  • The authors from the ALICE collaboration identify multiple species of mesons and baryons and measure the anisotropic flow with non-flow removal techniques in pp and p-Pb collisions at the LHC, identifying the hallmark of quark flow associated with an expanding quark-gluon plasma.

    • S. Acharya
    • A. Agarwal
    • N. Zurlo
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-14
  • The Human Development Multiomic Atlas catalogues single-cell accessibility and gene expression data from human fetal cells across 12 organs, enabling the inference of syntactic rules for motifs that govern cell-type-specific transcription factor binding and chromatin accessibility during human development.

    • Betty B. Liu
    • Selin Jessa
    • William J. Greenleaf
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    P: 1-14
  • The response of soil carbon to warming is critical feedback that has been difficult to constrain. This study uses a long-term experiment to show that precipitation modulates microbial and therefore carbon dynamics; drought leads to carbon loss with warming, but wet conditions increase soil carbon.

    • Xue Guo
    • Zhifeng Yang
    • Jizhong Zhou
    Research
    Nature Climate Change
    Volume: 16, P: 485-493
  • Identifying jets originating from heavy quarks plays a fundamental role in hadronic collider experiments. In this work, the ATLAS Collaboration describes and tests a transformer-based neural network architecture for jet flavour tagging based on low-level input and physics-inspired constraints.

    • G. Aad
    • E. Aakvaag
    • L. Zwalinski
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-22
  • Mechanical response of semiconducting polymers affects their electrical properties, yet the detail remains elusive. Zhong et al. examine the multiscale structural evolution of conjugated polymer thin films during uniaxial deformation and link it to mechanical resilience and solar cell performance.

    • Wenkai Zhong
    • Guillaume Freychet
    • Feng Liu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-11
  • Analysis of cancer genome sequencing data has enabled the discovery of driver mutations. Here, as part of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium the authors present DriverPower, a software package that identifies coding and non-coding driver mutations within cancer whole genomes via consideration of mutational burden and functional impact evidence.

    • Shimin Shuai
    • Federico Abascal
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-12
  • Two-dimensional metal halide perovskites exhibit diverse structures, but tuning their intralayer structure is challenging. Now, ammonium-terminated bidentate linkers have been used to develop 2D perovskites. These materials exhibit superior thermal resistance and improved photovoltaic performance compared with their Ruddlesden–Popper and Dion–Jacobson counterparts.

    • Chenjian Lin
    • Yuanhao Tang
    • Letian Dou
    Research
    Nature Chemistry
    Volume: 18, P: 275-282
  • The APOE-ε4 allele is the strongest genetic risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer’s disease, but it is not deterministic. Here, the authors show that common genetic variation changes how APOE-ε4 influences cognition.

    • Alex G. Contreras
    • Skylar Walters
    • Timothy J. Hohman
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-17
  • Analyses of 2,658 whole genomes across 38 types of cancer identify the contribution of non-coding point mutations and structural variants to driving cancer.

    • Esther Rheinbay
    • Morten Muhlig Nielsen
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 102-111
  • The current known two-dimensional topological insulators with small band gaps limit the potential for room temperature applications. Here, Chen et al. observe a sizable gap of 129 meV in a 1T'-WSe2 single layer grown on bilayer graphene with in-gap edge state near the layer boundary.

    • P. Chen
    • Woei Wu Pai
    • T.-C. Chiang
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 9, P: 1-7
  • The electrostatic interactions in aqueous ionic media are screened by mobile charge carriers, limiting device design and operation speed. Here the built-in electric field is leveraged to dope ions into vanadium dioxide, triggering a surface insulator-to-metal transition, further enabling high-speed in-memory sensing in aqueous solutions.

    • Ruihan Guo
    • Qixin Feng
    • Junqiao Wu
    Research
    Nature Materials
    Volume: 25, P: 18-25
  • This study reports on an AI-powered autonomous experimentation platform that overcomes data scarcity in electronic materials discovery by using an AI advisor for real-time progress monitoring, data analysis and interactive human–AI collaboration. Applied to mixed ion–electron conducting polymers, it rapidly optimized performance in 64 experimental trials, revealing morphology–property relationships and an unreported polymer polymorph.

    • Yahao Dai
    • Henry Chan
    • Jie Xu
    Research
    Nature Chemical Engineering
    Volume: 2, P: 760-770
  • The development of three-dimensional (3D) covalent organic frameworks (COFs) with novel topologies is of both fundamental and practical interest but the construction of highly crystalline 3D COF remains challenging. Here, the authors report highly crystalline 3D COFs with pto and mhq-z topologies by rationally selecting rectangular-planar and trigonal-planar building blocks with appropriate conformational strains.

    • Dongyang Zhu
    • Yifan Zhu
    • Rafael Verduzco
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 14, P: 1-9
  • Multi-omics datasets pose major challenges to data interpretation and hypothesis generation owing to their high-dimensional molecular profiles. Here, the authors develop ActivePathways method, which uses data fusion techniques for integrative pathway analysis of multi-omics data and candidate gene discovery.

    • Marta Paczkowska
    • Jonathan Barenboim
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-16
  • Understanding deregulation of biological pathways in cancer can provide insight into disease etiology and potential therapies. Here, as part of the PanCancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) consortium, the authors present pathway and network analysis of 2583 whole cancer genomes from 27 tumour types.

    • Matthew A. Reyna
    • David Haan
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-17
  • The flagship paper of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes Consortium describes the generation of the integrative analyses of 2,658 cancer whole genomes and their matching normal tissues across 38 tumour types, the structures for international data sharing and standardized analyses, and the main scientific findings from across the consortium studies.

    • Lauri A. Aaltonen
    • Federico Abascal
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 82-93
  • The STAR experiment at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory demonstrates evidence of spin correlations in \(\Lambda \bar{\Lambda }\) hyperon pairs inherited from virtual spin-correlated strange quark–antiquark pairs during QCD confinement.

    • B. E. Aboona
    • J. Adam
    • M. Zyzak
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 650, P: 65-71
  • The characterization of 4,645 whole-genome and 19,184 exome sequences, covering most types of cancer, identifies 81 single-base substitution, doublet-base substitution and small-insertion-and-deletion mutational signatures, providing a systematic overview of the mutational processes that contribute to cancer development.

    • Ludmil B. Alexandrov
    • Jaegil Kim
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 578, P: 94-101
  • Here, the authors sample air and surfaces in hospital rooms of COVID-19 patients, detect SARS-CoV-2 RNA in air samples of two of three tested airborne infection isolation rooms, and find surface contamination in 66.7% of tested rooms during the first week of illness and 20% beyond the first week of illness.

    • Po Ying Chia
    • Kristen Kelli Coleman
    • Daniela Moses
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-7
  • Entanglement was observed in top–antitop quark events by the ATLAS experiment produced at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN using a proton–proton collision dataset with a centre-of-mass energy of √s  = 13 TeV and an integrated luminosity of 140 fb−1.

    • G. Aad
    • B. Abbott
    • L. Zwalinski
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 633, P: 542-547
  • Magnetic domain walls can exhibit a variety of different spin textures. Chen et al. show that it is possible to switch these textures between left handed, right handed, cycloidal, helical and mixed domain wall structures by controlling uniaxial strain in iron/nickel bilayer thin films on tungsten.

    • Gong Chen
    • Alpha T. N’Diaye
    • Andreas K. Schmid
    Research
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 6, P: 1-7
  • Large-effect variants in autism remain elusive. Here, the authors use long-read sequencing to assemble phased genomes for 189 individuals, identifying pathogenic variants in TBL1XR1, MECP2, and SYNGAP1, plus nine candidate structural variants missed by short-read methods.

    • Yang Sui
    • Jiadong Lin
    • Evan E. Eichler
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 17, P: 1-16
  • With the generation of large pan-cancer whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing projects, a question remains about how comparable these datasets are. Here, using The Cancer Genome Atlas samples analysed as part of the Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes project, the authors explore the concordance of mutations called by whole exome sequencing and whole genome sequencing techniques.

    • Matthew H. Bailey
    • William U. Meyerson
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-27
  • A trans-ancestry meta-analysis of GWAS of glycemic traits in up to 281,416 individuals identifies 99 novel loci, of which one quarter was found due to the multi-ancestry approach, which also improves fine-mapping of credible variant sets.

    • Ji Chen
    • Cassandra N. Spracklen
    • Cornelia van Duijn
    Research
    Nature Genetics
    Volume: 53, P: 840-860
  • To use skyrmions to store information, an effective method for writing and deleting them is required. Here, Chen et al demonstrate the writing and deleting of skyrmions at room temperature by using hydrogen adsorption to change the magnetic anisotropy of the metallic multilayer hosting the skyrmions.

    • Gong Chen
    • Colin Ophus
    • Kai Liu
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 13, P: 1-8
  • The CMS Collaboration reports the measurement of the spin, parity, and charge conjugation properties of all-charm tetraquarks, exotic fleeting particles formed in proton–proton collisions at the Large Hadron Collider.

    • A. Hayrapetyan
    • V. Makarenko
    • A. Snigirev
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature
    Volume: 648, P: 58-63
  • In this study the authors consider the structural variants (SVs) present within cancer cases of the ICGC/TCGA Pan-Cancer Analysis of Whole Genomes (PCAWG) Consortium. They report hundreds of genes, including known cancer-associated genes for which the nearby presence of a SV breakpoint is associated with altered expression.

    • Yiqun Zhang
    • Fengju Chen
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-14
  • The authors present SVclone, a computational method for inferring the cancer cell fraction of structural variants from whole-genome sequencing data.

    • Marek Cmero
    • Ke Yuan
    • Christian von Mering
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-15
  • The rapid expansion of agricultural irrigation raises concerns about exacerbating water scarcity, but land–atmosphere interactions are often overlooked. This study isolates irrigation impacts from other drivers using a multi-model framework to reveal that historical irrigation expansion substantially reduces net atmospheric water influx, intensifying drying trends and accelerating terrestrial water storage depletion, urging immediate mitigation strategies.

    • Yi Yao
    • Wim Thiery
    • Sonia I. Seneviratne
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Water
    Volume: 3, P: 1424-1435