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  • The ethical challenges of memory-dampening drugs are likely to be manageable and the pay-offs considerable, says Adam Kolber.

    • Adam Kolber
    Comment
  • Chemistry needs new female role models and a less macho culture to appeal more to the next generation of young women, says Carol V. Robinson.

    • Carol V. Robinson
    Comment
  • Paul Ginsparg, founder of the preprint server, reflects on two decades of sharing results rapidly online — and on the future of scholarly communication.

    • Paul Ginsparg
    Comment
  • On the twentieth anniversary of the World Wide Web's public release, Oren Etzioni calls on researchers to think outside the keyword box and improve Internet trawling.

    • Oren Etzioni
    Comment
  • There could be unexpected consequences if greater understanding of disease genetics gives parents more choice in what they pass to their children, says David B. Goldstein.

    • David B. Goldstein
    Comment
  • International agreements are not enough. Interlinked national and regional tools are also needed to reduce carbon emissions, say Mark Maslin and Joanne Scott.

    • Mark Maslin
    • Joanne Scott
    Comment
  • Researchers like to work on projects that start small and slowly scale up. They must think bigger and faster, says Sandy J. Andelman, to tackle today's problems in time.

    • Sandy J. Andelman
    Comment
  • Jason Clay identifies eight steps that, taken together, could enable farming to feed 10 billion people and keep Earth habitable.

    • Jason Clay
    Comment
  • Medical genomics has focused almost entirely on those of European descent. Other ethnic groups must be studied to ensure that more people benefit, say Carlos D. Bustamante, Esteban González Burchard and Francisco M. De La Vega.

    • Carlos D. Bustamante
    • Francisco M. De La Vega
    • Esteban G. Burchard
    Comment
  • Peter Rowlett introduces seven little-known tales illustrating that theoretical work may lead to practical applications, but it can't be forced and it can take centuries.

    Comment
  • Basing regulations on a term with no scientific justification will do more harm than good, argues Andrew D. Maynard.

    • Andrew D. Maynard
    Comment
  • A consortium of researchers, advocates and clinicians announces here research priorities for improving the lives of people with mental illness around the world, and calls for urgent action and investment.

    • Pamela Y. Collins
    • Vikram Patel
    • Mark Walport
    Comment
  • Eight years ago, physicist Neil Turok set up the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences in South Africa. The initiative is now set to expand across the continent.

    • Neil Turok
    Comment
  • Sub-Saharan Africa's most densely peopled mainland nation is determined to head off a population crisis. Others should take note, say Josh Ruxin and Antoinette Habinshuti.

    • Josh Ruxin
    • Antoinette Habinshuti
    Comment
  • Bassirou Bonfoh and others offer lessons from a West African institute that has survived ten years of conflict.

    • Bassirou Bonfoh
    • Giovanna Raso
    • Marcel Tanner
    Comment
  • A staggering lack of undersea data hampers our understanding of earthquakes and tsunamis. Geophysicists must put more instruments offshore, says Andrew V. Newman.

    • Andrew V. Newman
    Comment
  • Our brains are hard-wired to make poor choices about harm prevention in today's world. But we can fight it, says Daniel Gilbert.

    • Daniel Gilbert
    Comment
  • Keith Lloyd and Jo White commend a way for patients, clinicians and scientists to set priorities jointly.

    • Keith Lloyd
    • Jo White
    Comment