Researchers from King’s College London and the University of Surrey have developed a new technique to measure the content of individual human cells infected with bacteria that model tuberculosis – and it is already revealing…
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Cross-robot behavior adaptation through intention alignment | Science Robotics
Intention-level alignment enables robust behavior adaptation across robots and scales to heterogeneous multirobot teams.
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Patient-derived xenograft models of primary breast cancer for preclinical evaluation of neoadjuvant therapies | Science Translational Medicine
A cohort of 60 mouse-intraductal patient-derived xenograft models of primary invasive breast cancer was developed to develop neoadjuvant treatments.
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Neurorobotics may make a smarter, but not happier, robot | Science Robotics
In Luminous, two generations of a Korean family use neurorobotics to build sentient robot friends.
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Blood-brain barrier disruption, traumatic encephalopathy, and cognitive decline in retired athletes | Science Translational Medicine
Blood-brain barrier disruption is associated with cognitive decline and complement system activation in retired athletes.
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Amyloid-β as a target to suppress tonic PTH hypersecretion in hyperparathyroidism due to vitamin D deficiency | Science Translational Medicine
Blocking aberrant signaling of Aβ, GABAB1R/CaSR dimer, and Tau suppresses tonic PTH hypersecretion in hyperparathyroidism due to vitamin D deficiency.
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Frontier justice: navigating the future legal landscape for private actors in space law
At the dawn of the Space Age, then President-elect John F. Kennedy spoke to the American people of “a new frontier” of unknown opportunities and perils, unfulfilled hopes and unfilled threats, uncharted science and unsolved problems. Six…
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Challenging a 300-year-old law of friction
Researchers at the University of Konstanz have uncovered a new mechanism of sliding friction: resistance to motion that arises without any mechanical contact, driven purely by collective magnetic dynamics. The study, published in Nature…
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Sharks are ingesting drugs in the Bahamas
Sharks off the coast of the Bahamas are getting into drugs like cocaine, caffeine and painkillers — or rather, drugs are getting into them. The contaminated blood of species including nurse sharks and Caribbean reef sharks reveals the…
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Scientists Take a Major Step Toward Solving the Mystery of the Universe’s Rarest Isotopes
A new experiment using rare-isotope beams has provided new insight into the origin of proton-rich isotopes known as p-nuclei. Researchers have taken an important step toward solving one of astrophysics’ oldest isotope mysteries: where the rare…
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