In Gambian infants, positive growth from 0 to 5 months of age predicted more mature brain networks, which in turn predicted cognitive outcomes at 3-5 years.
Interaction between LFA-1 on natural killer cells and GBP-130 on infected erythrocytes enables immune recognition and killing of Plasmodium falciparum-infected red blood cells.
Glycolytic activation directly drives Kupffer cell loss in early metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, highlighting a targetable metabolic vulnerability.
The ability of newborns to distinguish between different voices helps them to establish verbal memories from a very early age.
A navigational model exploring social learning strategies differing in cognitive complexity in homing pigeons shows that simple averaging sufficiently explains collective route improvements, without ...
Recurrent population dynamics in the anterior claustrum provide a candidate mechanism for integrating task-relevant signals across time.
ITCH is an important regulator of SARS-CoV-2 life cycle, coordinating ubiquitination, assembly, autophagosome-mediated secretion, and spike stability, highlighting ITCH as a promising therapeutic ...
Hearing impairment selectively disrupts neural tracking of speech at both short and long temporal scales during multi-speaker listening, while preserving intermediate linguistic processing.
A Bayesian particle Gibbs framework enables unbiased spike time inference with millisecond resolution and jointly estimates uncertainties in both spike timing and model parameters from fast calcium ...
Centre for Culture and Technology, School of Media, Creative Arts and Social Inquiry, Curtin University, Australia; Curtin Institute for Computation, Curtin University, Australia; ...
Nanometer-scale properties of the extracellular matrix influence many biological processes, including cell motility. While much information is available for single-cell migration, to date, no ...
If H. naledi is more than 2 million years old, which Berger et al. suggest could be possible, the species might lie close to the very origin of the genus Homo. However, if the H. naledi fossils are ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results