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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Nov 6, 2019

Opinion: Why institutional review boards should have a role in the open science movement

Sean Grant and Kathryn E. Bouskill Open science involves the use of practices across the research life cycle that facilitate the transparency, reproducibility, and availability of scientific products and output. Prominent open science practices include registration of study protocols and preanalysis plans; materials, data, and code sharing; and publication of…

Ethics

6 min read

Opinion: Why institutional review boards should have a role in the open science movement
Opinion: Why institutional review boards should have a role in the open science movement
Ethics

6 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Oct 30, 2019

Core Concept: Blockchain offers applications well beyond Bitcoin but faces its own limitations

Stephen Ornes In 2008, Satoshi Nakamoto introduced the world to Bitcoin, a volatile digital currency that’s untethered to any specific institution or country (1). (Satoshi Nakamoto was quickly revealed to be a pseudonym; the true identity of the inventor or inventors remains unknown.) In the years that followed, the value…

Blockchain

10 min read

Core Concept: Blockchain offers applications well beyond Bitcoin but faces its own limitations
Core Concept: Blockchain offers applications well beyond Bitcoin but faces its own limitations
Blockchain

10 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Oct 23, 2019

News Feature: Fighting a fungal scourge

Amy McDermott More than a decade ago, amphibian microbial ecologist Reid Harris watched a mother salamander as she marched in a figure-eight pattern through her clutch of soft, jellylike eggs. He knew that her strange walk, rubbing up against her brood, transferred beneficial bacteria from her skin onto the eggs…

Health

11 min read

News Feature: Fighting a fungal scourge
News Feature: Fighting a fungal scourge
Health

11 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Oct 16, 2019

Inner Workings: Dwarf galaxies pose new questions about dark matter and the early universe that models are struggling to answer

Adam Mann Late one night in October 2015, Andrew Wetzel was fretting. For 15 days, his cosmological models had been swirling virtual dark matter around cybernetic gas and dust and slowly generating a synthetic galaxy approximately the size of our own Milky Way, and Wetzel was about to receive the…

Science

6 min read

Inner Workings: Dwarf galaxies pose new questions about dark matter and the early universe that…
Inner Workings: Dwarf galaxies pose new questions about dark matter and the early universe that…
Science

6 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Oct 11, 2019

Inner Workings: Lyme disease vaccines face familiar challenges, both societal and scientific

Leah Shaffer Just over 20 years ago, a Lyme disease vaccine called LYMErix was approved for sale in the United States. …

Health

8 min read

Inner Workings: Lyme disease vaccines face familiar challenges, both societal and scientific
Inner Workings: Lyme disease vaccines face familiar challenges, both societal and scientific
Health

8 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Oct 9, 2019

Core Concept: To improve weather and climate models, researchers are chasing atmospheric gravity waves

Adam Mann On September 3, 2018, an unpowered experimental sailplane made history by flying into the stratosphere. After leaving from El Calafate, a town near the Southern Patagonian Ice Field in Argentina, glider pilots Jim Payne and Tim Gardner surfed on enormous airborne waves emanating from the Andes Mountains. They…

Science

8 min read

Core Concept: To improve weather and climate models, researchers are chasing atmospheric gravity…
Core Concept: To improve weather and climate models, researchers are chasing atmospheric gravity…
Science

8 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Oct 2, 2019

News Feature: “Celestial snowman” starts to reveal its secrets

Nola Taylor Redd The distant rock has offered clues about planet formation and the state of the early solar system. Within the cloud of icy rocks at the edge of the solar system lie objects that have remained virtually untouched since their formation more than four billion years ago. Last…

Pluto

9 min read

News Feature: “Celestial snowman” starts to reveal its secrets
News Feature: “Celestial snowman” starts to reveal its secrets
Pluto

9 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Sep 25, 2019

Opinion: Putting all foods on the same table: Achieving sustainable food systems requires full accounting

Benjamin S. Halpern, Richard S. Cottrell, Julia L. Blanchard, Lex Bouwman, Halley E. Froehlich, Jessica A. Gephart, Nis Sand Jacobsen, Caitlin D. Kuempel, Peter B. McIntyre, Marc Metian, Daniel D. Moran, Kirsty L. Nash, Johannes Többen, and David R. Williams Improving global food systems is essential to addressing climate change…

Agriculture

10 min read

Opinion: Putting all foods on the same table: Achieving sustainable food systems requires full…
Opinion: Putting all foods on the same table: Achieving sustainable food systems requires full…
Agriculture

10 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Sep 19, 2019

Core Concept: Cells nibble one another via the under-appreciated process of trogocytosis

Amber Dance Neuroscientists believe that immediately after a mammal is born, brain cells called microglia spring into action, pruning away connections between neurons. This may be a way for the brain to refine its neural networks. Until recently, neurobiologists had assumed the microglia worked by phagocytosis, reaching out a cup-shaped…

Science

7 min read

Core Concept: Cells nibble one another via the under-appreciated process of trogocytosis
Core Concept: Cells nibble one another via the under-appreciated process of trogocytosis
Science

7 min read


Published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

·Sep 17, 2019

Inner Workings: Self-powered biomedical devices tap into the body’s movements

Jyoti Madhusoodanan In early 2017, researchers managed to slip a flexible sliver of polymer next to a pig’s heart. The device — placed between the heart and the fibrous wall that encases it, called the pericardium — squished and expanded with each contraction. It also converted the physical strain of…

Technology

8 min read

Inner Workings: Self-powered biomedical devices tap into the body’s movements
Inner Workings: Self-powered biomedical devices tap into the body’s movements
Technology

8 min read

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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