RECENT HIGHLIGHTS
- SOCIOLOGYThe end of privacy
- From big data to ubiquitous Internet connections, technology empowers researchers and the public—but makes traditional notions of privacy obsolete
- PHYSIOLOGYDefining necessary circadian clock elements
- Control of negative circadian elements in the simple fungus Neurosporagoes beyond targeted proteolysis. [Also see Perspective by Kramer]
- APPLIED PHYSICSLarge-crystal perovskite films
- Solution processing techniques enable the growth of high-quality, large-area perovskite crystals for solar cells.
- ANATOMYEven chicks may count from left to right
- Baby chicks also “count” from left to right. [Also see Perspective by Brugger]
- GEOCHEMISTRYBecause the rain falls and the wind blows
- A more intense hydrological cycle in a warmer world might make atmospheric circulation less energetic. [Also see Perspective by Pauluis]
SCIENCE EXPRESS IN ADVANCE OF PRINT
- APPLIED PHYSICSElectron-hole diffusion lengths >175 μm in solution grown CH3NH3PbI3 single crystals
- MATERIALS SCIENCEProbing Johnson noise and ballistic transport in normal metals with a single-spin qubit
- IMMUNOLOGYPhosphorylation of innate immune adaptor proteins MAVS, STING, and TRIF induces IRF3 activation
- IMMUNOLOGYApoptosis and antigen affinity limit effector cell differentiation of a single naïve B cell
- PHYSICSObservation of optical polarization Möbius strips
MOST DOWNLOADED ARTICLES FROM SCIENCE
- Credit card study blows holes in anonymity
- Breach of trust
- Unique in the shopping mall: On the reidentifiability of credit card metadata
- The end of privacy
- Another cause of climate change is developing
- The downside of living a longer life
- Engineering cancer cell metastasis
- Privacy and human behavior in the age of information
- An education that closed doors
- What the "right to be forgotten" means for privacy in a digital age
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