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Chimpanzees are not more aggressive than bonobos but target sexes differently Chimpanzees and bonobos differ in aggression distribution but not magnitude.

Bonobos bully as much as chimpanzees—but their victims differ by sex, according to new #ScienceAdvances research. scim.ag/40YdJw7

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Contents | Science Advances 12, 11

A new study shows that trained dogs exploit indecisiveness to herd sheep and divide the flock.

Based on this, the authors developed an Indecisive Swarm Algorithm that can more efficiently control time-varying networks. Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: scim.ag/40n4e9J

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A new study shows that trained dogs exploit indecisiveness to herd sheep and divide the flock.

Based on this, the authors developed an Indecisive Swarm Algorithm that can more efficiently control time-varying networks. Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/4boe8Nm

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Original post on fediscience.org

Another study showing that interacting with #biased #AI assistants can change one's views, even when people are aware of interacting with a biased algorithm.

#ScienceAdvances
#OpenAccess

Biased AI writing assistants shift users’ attitudes on #societal issues […]

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Chimpanzees are not more aggressive than bonobos but target sexes differently Chimpanzees and bonobos differ in aggression distribution but not magnitude.

Bonobos bully as much as chimpanzees—but their victims differ by sex, according to new #ScienceAdvances research. https://scim.ag/4sgXciX

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Picoeukaryote-based biohybrid microrobots for active delivery in the kidney A biohybrid microrobot is created for active delivery within ultrasmall complex biological environments in the kidney.

Researchers in #ScienceAdvances last year developed a biohybrid microrobot based on picoeukaryotes, tiny planktonic organisms, that delivers drugs to the kidney in mice through autonomous navigation and deep tissue penetration.

Learn more on #WorldKidneyDay: scim.ag/3U0qumj

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Picoeukaryote-based biohybrid microrobots for active delivery in the kidney A biohybrid microrobot is created for active delivery within ultrasmall complex biological environments in the kidney.

Researchers in #ScienceAdvances last year developed a biohybrid microrobot based on picoeukaryotes, tiny planktonic organisms, that delivers drugs to the kidney in mice through autonomous navigation and deep tissue penetration.

Learn more on #WorldKidneyDay: https://scim.ag/4ukTztQ

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Direct detection of an asteroid’s heliocentric deflection: The Didymos system after DART NASA’s DART mission changed the orbit of the Didymos system, revealing insights into the physical traits of its two asteroids.

Researchers in #ScienceAdvances have determined that NASA’s 2022 Double Asteroid Redirection Test (DART) mission is the first to cause a deliberate change in the heliocentric orbit of a celestial body. https://scim.ag/4aNL1ny

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Multi-isotope analysis of mammal bones provides environmental context for the adoption of agriculture in the Tehuacan Valley of Mexico Isotopic values of animal bones reflect environmental conditions during the origins of agriculture in south-central Mexico.

Animal bones reveal that maize cultivation in ancient Mexico began during a relatively wet period in the Holocene and intensified centuries later.

Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/4rNpEZt

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Science Advances’ special issue on women’s health highlights a growing wave of research focusing on women’s unique biological and psychological experiences. Articles cover a range of studies from the interplay between menopause and Alzheimer’s risk to the menstrual cycle’s influence on the brain-heart connection. It also describes the opportunities pregnancy provides to research aspects of both physical and mental health. By prioritizing women’s unique physiological and psychological experiences, research can expand the frontiers of knowledge in ways that benefit everyone.

Science Advances’ special issue on women’s health highlights a growing wave of research focusing on women’s unique biological and psychological experiences. Articles cover a range of studies from the interplay between menopause and Alzheimer’s risk to the menstrual cycle’s influence on the brain-heart connection. It also describes the opportunities pregnancy provides to research aspects of both physical and mental health. By prioritizing women’s unique physiological and psychological experiences, research can expand the frontiers of knowledge in ways that benefit everyone.

In #ScienceAdvances last year, a special issue on #WomensHealth highlighted a growing wave of research focusing on women’s unique biological and psychological experiences.

Learn more on #InternationalWomensDay: https://scim.ag/4b5vlLq

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Contents | Science Advances 11, 10

A special issue of #ScienceAdvances last year highlighted some of the most exciting areas of discovery in women’s health science. The group of articles also explored psychological, systemic, and policy issues that shape women’s well-being.

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Archeological data with AI- and physics-based modeling explain typhoon-induced disasters in inland China around 3000 yr B.P. Intensified typhoons caused extreme rainfall and floods in inland China, threatening cultural development, around 3000 yr B.P.

During the Bronze Age in China, intensifying typhoons contributed to population decline in the inland “Cradle of Civilization,” according to new #ScienceAdvances research involving ancient scripts, paleoclimate radiocarbon data, and additional archaeological evidence. scim.ag/4svm4n0

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Contents | Science Advances 12, 10

Using volume electron microscopy in the warty comb jelly, researchers reveal that the aboral organ forms synaptic connections between cells in the nerve net—and may use both synaptic and nonsynaptic forms of communication.

Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: scim.ag/4cXQfOU

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Sensory aboral organ of an adult comb jelly.

Sensory aboral organ of an adult comb jelly.

Using volume electron microscopy in the warty comb jelly, researchers reveal that the aboral organ forms synaptic connections between cells in the nerve net—and may use both synaptic and nonsynaptic forms of communication.

Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/4rOAmPz

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Archeological data with AI- and physics-based modeling explain typhoon-induced disasters in inland China around 3000 yr B.P. Intensified typhoons caused extreme rainfall and floods in inland China, threatening cultural development, around 3000 yr B.P.

During the Bronze Age in China, intensifying typhoons contributed to population decline in the inland “Cradle of Civilization,” according to new #ScienceAdvances research involving ancient scripts, paleoclimate radiocarbon data, and additional archaeological evidence. https://scim.ag/4boOGID

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The key to attacking “undruggable” proteins: @irbbarcelona.org researchers reveal a breakthrough drug mechanism

💡The discovery forms the scientific foundation for the #SpinOff #NuageTherapeutics

📝 Published in #ScienceAdvances
#BISTCommunity

bist.eu/the-key-to-a...

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Lightning-generated waves detected at Mars Direct detection of a whistler on Mars shows that lightning-like discharges occur in its thin atmosphere.

Using data from NASA’s MAVEN spacecraft, a new #ScienceAdvances study identifies low-frequency electromagnetic whistler signals in Mars’s ionosphere, providing compelling evidence of lightning activity on the planet. https://scim.ag/4tSpD7V

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Bees flexibly adjust decision strategies to information content in a foraging task Bumblebees flexibly adjust their learning strategies to the sensory challenge, balancing costs and benefits of multicue learning.

A new #ScienceAdvances study finds bees balance the costs and benefits of learning different flower visual cues when foraging. https://scim.ag/46k1RrC

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Deciding for others alters metacognition leading to responsibility aversion Making decisions on behalf of other people reduces decision confidence, which leads to responsibility aversion.

When we have to make a decision that affects other individuals—parents making decisions for children, for instance—our confidence in our decisions declines, making us averse to the responsibility.

Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: scim.ag/4qWNfWi

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Metal nanoparticles on a metal mirror (NPoM) create well-defined plasmonic nanogaps with extreme light confinement.

Metal nanoparticles on a metal mirror (NPoM) create well-defined plasmonic nanogaps with extreme light confinement.

Researchers introduce a platform that merges the sub-two-nanometer optical confinement with active mass transport.

Learn more in this week’s issue of #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/3MEdPWl

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Deciding for others alters metacognition leading to responsibility aversion Making decisions on behalf of other people reduces decision confidence, which leads to responsibility aversion.

When we have to make a decision that affects other individuals—parents making decisions for children, for instance—our confidence in our decisions declines, making us averse to the responsibility.

Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/4cMK5ky

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This week on the @science.org podcast -- a look at direct electrical stimulation of the brain during surgery w/ Raouf Belkhir #ScienceAdvances

Listen here: www.science.org/content/podc...

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Diverse database and machine learning model to narrow the generalization gap in RNA structure prediction Length matters—secondary structures of long, diverse RNAs in RNAndria and deep learning model eFold improve prediction accuracy.

From #AAAS 's #scienceadvances journal | Diverse #database and machine learning model to narrow the generalization gap in #RNA structure prediction | #Bioinformatics #ML #Genomics #OpenScience #StructurePrediction #RNAStructurePrediction | 🧬 🖥️ 🧪 🔓
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www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...

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Daily consumption rates of cadmium in rice in China can lead to potentially dangerous bioaccumulation, a new #ScienceAdvances study finds. https://scim.ag/4rUCG76

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A new heart valve stent can expand on its own, offering the potential to keep up with the rapidly growing hearts of babies and toddlers with relevant congenital conditions.

Learn more in #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/4aAf14T

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Multiple southward migrations of Neolithic Chinese farmers into Southeast Asia revealed from large-scale Y-chromosome sequences Large-scale East Asian Y-chromosomes reveal multiple waves of Neolithic farmer contributions to Southeast Asian patrilineages.

More reading tips from #ScienceAdvances: Multiple southward #migrations of #Neolithic #Chinese #farmers into #SoutheastAsia revealed from large-scale #Y-chromosome sequences www.science.org/doi/10.1126/... #genetics #humanpast

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The oldest in situ Homo erectus crania in eastern Asia: The Yunxian site dates to ~1.77 Ma Isochron 26Al/10Be burial dates at 1.77 Ma make Yunxian the oldest in situ–discovered Homo erectus fossil site in eastern Asia.

A new #ScienceAdvances analysis amends the age of three Homo erectus crania from China—dating them to the early Pleistocene roughly 1.77 million years ago, establishing the fossils as the oldest from this species in eastern Asia.

Learn more: scim.ag/4s20kPn

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New research provides insight into how division orientation is controlled to ensure robust tissue architecture during plant growth.

Learn more in this week’s issue of #ScienceAdvances: https://scim.ag/3Okfjp7

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New lab paper in #ScienceAdvances: we identify a modality-common selective-attention signal in noncholinergic #BasalForebrain (BF) “bursting” neurons, distinct from the modality-specific attention signals typically described in corticothalamic circuits. 1/n
www.science.org/doi/full/10....

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A new #ScienceAdvances analysis amends the age of three Homo erectus crania from China—dating them to the early Pleistocene roughly 1.77 million years ago, establishing the fossils as the oldest from this species in eastern Asia.

Learn more: https://scim.ag/4s20kPn

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