Science Advances

@ScienceAdvances

Science Advances is an open access journal from AAAS that publishes innovative original research across all disciplines of science freely to a global audience.

AAAS - Washington, DC
Joined February 2014

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  1. Nov 30

    An analysis of stylistic differences between plays attributed to French playwright and actor Molière (Jean-Baptiste Poquelin) and plays written by his contemporaries suggests that Molière did, in fact, write his own masterpieces.

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  2. Nov 29

    “Evidence [in the studies in this collection] suggests that the negative impacts of can be kept under control if we collectively act and, critically, use biodiversity as part of the solutions we invent.” Read the editorial:

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  3. Nov 28

    Under a 2°C warming scenario, 80 to 83% of language areas in New Guinea—home to the greatest biological and linguistic diversity of any tropical island on Earth—will experience decreases in the diversity of plant species by 2070, according to a new study.

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  4. Nov 27

    Did Molière write his own plays? Did early Puerto Ricans use ceramic vessels to boil clams? New research in Science Advances looks at these questions—as well as a Special Collection on research.

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  5. Nov 26

    The primitive meteorite Acfer 049 contains porous silicate, sulfide and organic aggregates that appear to be the remnants of fluffy icy-dust formed in the solar nebula during the early days of the . Read more in Science Advances:

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  6. Nov 25

    The human may process speech similar to how an analog signal is converted into digital code—by taking specific pieces of data from a continuous signal—a new analysis of neural recordings suggests.

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  7. Nov 24

    A new study demonstrates that a peptide found in Drosophila melanogaster sperm boosts long-term in female fruit flies after mating.

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  8. Nov 23

    People with “ anxiety” ignore high rewards to avoid solving tricky problems, according to a new Science Advances study.

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  9. Nov 23

    One-third of tropical ’s plants face , a new assessment method finds. Read more in Science Advances:

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  10. Nov 22

    New skulls reveal that didn’t lose their hindlimbs for about 70 million years. Read the research in Science Advances:

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  11. Nov 21

    Converting already-degraded pasture to oil palm plantations avoids the large loss of stored carbon associated with clearing to make way for these plantations, according to a long-term, Colombia-based study.

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  12. Nov 20

    A sustainable alternative for oil palm plantations, the threat of for one-third of tropical Africa’s plants, and more on when lost their hindlimbs. Read what’s new in Science Advances!

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  13. Nov 19

    In a new study, synthetic hydroxyapatite nanocrystals used to repair bone damage initially bonded with bone tissue in rabbits but were ultimately treated as “foreign material” by the body, breaking down after six months.

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  14. Nov 18

    Pinpointing the sources of nitrogen oxide pollution, even in regions cloaked by extreme urban air pollution, just got easier, thanks to a novel method. Read more:

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  15. Nov 16

    Extending previous studies that identified a sleep-promoting role for EGFR signaling in invertebrates, a new study in zebrafish provides perhaps the first evidence that this pathway is also used by vertebrates.

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  16. Nov 15

    Nanoparticles containing chemotherapeutic drugs and “hitchhiking” on red blood cells treat cancerous lung tumors more successfully than nanoparticles delivered alone, a new mouse study shows.

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  17. Nov 14

    Changes in climate may have contributed to both the rise and collapse of the Neo-Assyrian Empire in northern Iraq, which was considered the most powerful empire of its time, according to a new study.

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  18. Nov 13

    Improving targeted tumor treatment, how vertebrates and invertebrates may share the same sleep regulation pathway, and how climate influenced the rise and fall of northern Iraq’s Neo-Assyrian Empire. Read what’s new in Science Advances!

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  19. Nov 12

    Scientists have created an electronic-skin (e-skin) that mimics the sensitivity, stretchability and self-healing properties of real skin.

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  20. Nov 11

    A wearable, flexible patch made from a silk fabric-derived carbon textile can simultaneously detect six different biomarkers in sweat, providing a simple and cost-effective strategy to monitor in real time.

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