News Feature in 2011

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  • Ten people who mattered this year.

    • Declan Butler
    • Ewen Callaway
    • Mohammed Yahia
    News Feature
  • South Africa is vying fiercely with Australia to host a giant radio telescope that may never be built — but the competition itself is changing the country's science landscape.

    • Michael Cherry
    News Feature
  • Oliver Brüstle fought for more than a decade to pursue and patent human embryonic stem-cell research in Germany. Now his efforts have backfired.

    • Alison Abbott
    News Feature
  • Nations are racing to establish marine protected areas, but it's not clear whether many are living up to the name.

    • Daniel Cressey
    News Feature
  • A menagerie of intriguing cell structures, some long-neglected and others newly discovered, is keeping biologists glued to their microscopes.

    • Roberta Kwok
    News Feature
  • The US government says that a huge earthquake risk lurks in the heart of the country, where a series of large shocks hit 200 years ago. Seth Stein says that kind of warning is dead wrong.

    • Richard Monastersky
    News Feature
  • Convinced by the evidence that vaccines do not cause autism, Alison Singer started a research foundation that pledges to put science first.

    • Meredith Wadman
    News Feature
  • Shifting diagnoses and heightened awareness explain only part of the apparent rise in autism. Scientists are struggling to explain the rest.

    • Karen Weintraub
    News Feature
  • Psychologist Simon Baron-Cohen thinks scientists and engineers could be more likely to have a child with autism. Some researchers say the proof isn't there.

    • Lizzie Buchen
    News Feature
  • Asking parents to donate a child's brain to research is emotionally fraught. Some researchers say that it is time to put aside the taboos.

    • Alison Abbott
    News Feature