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【Science】Science20100101全刊下载

发布于 2010-01-04 · 浏览 362 · IP 湖南湖南
这个帖子发布于 15 年零 133 天前,其中的信息可能已发生改变或有所发展。
Science20100101全刊下载
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Editorial:
Promoting Scientific Standards
Bruce Alberts
Science 1 January 2010: 12.
Science Podcast Science 1 January 2010: 100.
The show includes masquerading caterpillars, an influential Russian astrophysicist, cancer in Tasmanian devils, and more.
News of the Week U.S. Space Policy
Obama Backs New Launcher And Bigger NASA Budget Andrew Lawler
Science 1 January 2010: 18.
President Barack Obama plans to ask Congress to cancel work on a new rocket and instead fund a heavy-lift launcher to take humans to the moon, asteroids, and the moons of Mars.
Climate Change
Senate Looms as Bigger Hurdle After Copenhagen Eli Kintisch
Science 1 January 2010: 19-21.
As hard as it was to negotiate a deal in Denmark, President Barack Obama faces an even tougher time in Washington trying to convince the U.S. Senate to pass cap-and-trade legislation. And he's up against a ticking clock: the November 2010 elections that will decide whether his party retains control of Congress.
Research Management
Protests by Staff, Advisers Rattle Australian Synchrotron Elizabeth Finkel
Science 1 January 2010: 20-21.
Australian Synchrotron (AS) Director Robert Lamb and board members have refused to discuss details of his recent firing. But many observers say that a gaping rift developed between the board of directors on one hand and AS staff and the international scientific advisory committee on the other over the slow pace of developing long-term plans.
ScienceNOW.org
From Science's Online Daily News Site Science 1 January 2010: 21.
ScienceNOW reported last week that hand size, not sex, determines sense of touch; chimps can keep their cool around forest fires; controlling breathing can control seasickness; and bacteria can transform minerals electrically; among other stories.
Research Funding
U.K. Physicists Cry Foul At Major Budget Cuts Daniel Clery
Science 1 January 2010: 22-23.
Administrative changes and the ravages of the economy have left the Science and Technology Facilities Council, the British body responsible for particle physics, astronomy, nuclear physics, and space science, with a gaping hole in its finances. In the 5-year funding plan announced in mid-December, nuclear physics has been pared to the bone, with just £30 million for the next 5 years, amounting to a cut of 29% over that period.
Scientific Publishing
Errors in Chemistry Claims Cast Doubt on Reactome Paper John Travis
Science 1 January 2010: 22-23.
Last week, Science published online an "Editorial Expression of Concern" noting that "serious questions have been raised about the methods and data presented" in the description of a newly developed research tool called a reactome array, which was published in the 9 October issue of Science.
ScienceInsider
From the Science Policy Blog Science 1 January 2010: 23.
ScienceInsider reported last week that Merck has hired the former director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Julie Gerberding, as its head of vaccine development and Henrik Thomsen, a Danish clinician who alerted patients and regulators to potential risks of Omniscan, a drug used to improve MRI scans, is facing a libel suit, among other stories.
Higher Education
Recession Hits Some Sciences Hard At Florida State University Richard A. Kerr
Science 1 January 2010: 24-25.
At Florida State University—one of the "big four" Florida state schools—a statewide fiscal crisis has turned into a ravaging torrent for a few departments, most of them in the sciences.
Ireland
Embryo Ruling Keeps Stem Cell Research Legal Gretchen Vogel
Science 1 January 2010: 25.
A ruling from the Irish Supreme Court has reignited that country's debate over the legal status of human embryos, confirming the legality of research with human embryonic stem cells but leaving such work in a regulatory limbo that may not be resolved soon. Random Samples Science 1 January 2010: 17. News Focus In the Afterglow Of the Big Bang Yudhijit Bhattacharjee
Science 1 January 2010: 26-29.
Toiling behind the Iron Curtain under a tough mentor, a Russian astrophysicist uncovered secrets of the universe that have led to discoveries 4 decades later. Letters
Bushmeat Hunting and Climate: An Indirect Link Patrick A. Jansen, Helene C. Muller-Landau, and S. Joseph Wright
Science 1 January 2010: 30.

Gray Wolves Not Out of the Woods Yet Jeremy T. Bruskotter, Eric Toman, Sherry A. Enzler, and Robert H. Schmidt
Science 1 January 2010: 30-31.

Patents: A Threat to Innovation? Merlina Manocaran
Science 1 January 2010: 31-32.
Patents: A Threat to Innovation?—Response Stuart J. H. Graham and Matthew J. Higgins
Science 1 January 2010: 32.

Let Top Students Go Forth and Prosper Guruprasad Madhavan and Barbara Ann Oakley
Science 1 January 2010: 32. Books et al. Ecology and Evolution
Leaping Lizards Rosemary G. Gillespie
Science 1 January 2010: 33-34.
Losos offers a comprehensive synthesis of research on the adaptive radiation of anoline lizards in the Caribbean.
Communicating Science
If Our Messages Are To Be Heard Peter Kareiva
Science 1 January 2010: 34-35.
Olson and Dean present two rather different approaches scientists can take to improve their ability to communicate with the public.
Browsings Barbara Jasny
Science 1 January 2010: 34.

Books Received Science 1 January 2010: 34.
Policy Forum Research Agenda
Opportunities for Research and NIH Francis S. Collins
Science 1 January 2010: 36-37.
The promise of fundamental advances in diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of disease has never been greater. Perspectives Chemistry
Molecular Donuts and Donut Holes Kenton H. Whitmire
Science 1 January 2010: 38-39.
A transient template steers the self-assembly of a "giant" metal oxide wheel.

Astronomy
Serendipitous Astronomy Kenneth R. Lang
Science 1 January 2010: 39-40.
Many of the seminal discoveries in astronomy have been unanticipated.
Chemistry
Janus Catalysts Direct Nanoparticle Reactivity David J. Cole-Hamilton
Science 1 January 2010: 41-42.
Metal oxide nanoparticles decorated with carbon nanotubes can be turned into readily recovered catalysts that function at the interface between oil and water phases.
Biochemistry
Some Enzymes Just Need a Space of Their Own Sebyung Kang and Trevor Douglas
Science 1 January 2010: 42-43.
Protein shells that sequester enzymatic reactions are found in diverse organisms and may provide blueprints for nanoparticle design.
Neuroscience
Brain Activity to Rely On? D. Sam Schwarzkopf and Geraint Rees
Science 1 January 2010: 43-44.
The characteristics of neuronal activity that mark whether consciousness arises include how reproducible neuronal response patterns are to a sensory stimulus.
Retrospective
Rossiter H. Crozier (1943–2009) Jacobus J. Boomsma and Pekka Pamilo
Science 1 January 2010: 45.
A geneticist's fascination with ants and other social insects yielded deep insights into the evolution of animal societies. Review Lipid Rafts As a Membrane-Organizing Principle Daniel Lingwood and Kai Simons
Science 1 January 2010: 46-50.
Brevia Masquerade: Camouflage Without Crypsis John Skelhorn, Hannah M. Rowland, Michael P. Speed, and Graeme D. Ruxton
Science 1 January 2010: 51.
Caterpillars masquerading as twigs are misidentified by chick predators as inanimate objects, rather than remaining undetected. Research Article Dendritic Mechanisms Underlying Rapid Synaptic Activation of Fast-Spiking Hippocampal Interneurons Hua Hu, Marco Martina, and Peter Jonas
Science 1 January 2010: 52-58.
Published online 3 December 2009 [DOI: 10.1126/science.science.1177876] (in Science Express Research Articles)
Potassium channel enrichment in the dendrites of hippocampal basket cells defines a mechanism of neural network function. Reports An Unusually Fast-Evolving Supernova Dovi Poznanski, Ryan Chornock, Peter E. Nugent, Joshua S. Bloom, Alexei V. Filippenko, Mohan Ganeshalingam, Douglas C. Leonard, Weidong Li, and Rollin C. Thomas
Science 1 January 2010: 58-60.
Published online 5 November 2009 [DOI: 10.1126/science.1181709] (in Science Express Reports)
The distinctive properties of this supernova suggest that it is of a kind predicted by theory but not previously observed.
Polarization-Induced Hole Doping in Wide–Band-Gap Uniaxial Semiconductor Heterostructures John Simon, Vladimir Protasenko, Chuanxin Lian, Huili Xing, and Debdeep Jena
Science 1 January 2010: 60-64.
A compositional gradient of two semiconductors creates an electronic polarization that ionizes and activates dopant atoms.

















































































































最后编辑于 2022-10-09 · 浏览 362

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