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Showing 1–50 of 246 results
Advanced filters: Author: Sara Abdulla Clear advanced filters
  • Want your children to eat properly? Start by taking a leaf out of the Waltonsõ book, and sitting your brood down to family dinner every night, says Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • New research shows that a fitness binge may precipitate a fat binge. Moderation, says Sara Abdulla, is a far wiser course.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • For the first time researchers may have pinpointed a taste receptor. Ironically, it detects the most controversial taste of all, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Ultrasound lifts the lid on the earliest weeks of human life. Soon it could take the sting out of some blood tests, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Sara Abdulla explains why for centuries people in China have been shaking male crickets in their hands and throwing them up in the air.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • A newly discovered protein could be the reason why some blind people's body clocks are still susceptible to light. Sara Abdulla reports.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • A new strain of fish may help researchers hook some of the nastier effects of water pollution, Sara Abdulla reports.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Twins, even before they are born, assert their differences, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Researchers may have found a bridge to a lost world at the bottom of a test tube, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Brain scans have revealed that predictability can catch you unawares, warns Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Young boys may learn in the playground that doling out bloody noses is a good way to win friends and influence people, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Migraine brought on by the weather? It sounds crazy, but a new study hints that it might just be true. Sara Abdulla explains.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Many of us feel grim as we crawl to work after the weekend muttering 'I hate Mondays'. But the death statistics tell a more serious story about this reviled weekday, as new research highlights. Sara Abdulla reports.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • 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
  • Plunge into a profusion of brilliant summer reads suggested by regular reviewers and editors, far away from the lab and lecture hall.

    • Nathaniel Comfort
    • Kevin Padian
    • Sara Abdulla
    Books & Arts
    Nature
    Volume: 523, P: 528-530
  • You may think that your nightly tipple helps you cope with stress, but alcohol may actually make your body far more vulnerable to it, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Technology developed for the manufacture of aeroplane parts is being hijacked to produce the next generation of biomedical materials. Sara Abdulla reports.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • A woman's influence is a wonderful thing -- it can even make a man eat more vegetables, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Today's Miss Marples are using maggots to hook murderers. Sara Abdulla lifts the lid on the grisly science of forensic entomology.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • A provocative new study says that there is no decent scientific evidence that acupuncture can help smokers quit. Sara Abdulla reports.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • More evidence has emerged that, for middle aged men, a hairless pate may be a harbinger of heart trouble, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • How can brain cells injected into the fluid of the eye help restore sight? Sara Abdulla finds out.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Evidence that asthmatics and non-asthmatics may actually breathe differently -- rather than simply with more or less difficulty -- could open up a whole new realm of asthma therapy, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • It's a cold, hard world for the baby barn swallow: only the fit get fed, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • El Niño is being blamed again: this time for diarrhoea in Peru. Sara Abdulla reports.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Cancer, the stealthy enemy within, could one day betray its own presence by glowing green, reports Sara Abdulla.

    • Sara Abdulla
    News
    Nature
  • Wastewater-based surveillance tends to focus on specific pathogens. Here, the authors mapped the wastewater virome from 62 cities worldwide to identify over 2,500 viruses, revealing city-specific virome fingerprints and showing that wastewater metagenomics enables early detection of emerging viruses.

    • Nathalie Worp
    • David F. Nieuwenhuijse
    • Miranda de Graaf
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-19
    • Sara Abdulla
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 402, P: C30
  • Antimicrobial resistance genes that have been mobilized between bacterial species represent a subset of the naturally occurring resistome. Here, the authors compare the abundance, diversity and geographical patterns of acquired resistance genes with latent resistance genes in global sewage metagenomes.

    • Hannah-Marie Martiny
    • Patrick Munk
    • Frank M. Aarestrup
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 16, P: 1-12
  • A case–control study investigating the causes of recent cases of acute hepatitis of unknown aetiology in 32 children identifies an association between adeno-associated virus infection and host genetics in disease susceptibility.

    • Antonia Ho
    • Richard Orton
    • Emma C. Thomson
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 617, P: 555-563