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How personalized cancer vaccines could keep tumours from coming back

Angela Evatt lay face down under anaesthesia as surgeons removed a malignant mole from her back and a lymph node

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How restorative justice could help to heal science communities torn apart by harassment misconduct

When a scientist is found to have harassed a colleague or student, it can reverberate through the research community —

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Elite researchers in China say they had ‘no choice’ but to commit misconduct

“I had no choice but to commit [research] misconduct,” admits a researcher at an elite Chinese university. The shocking revelation

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Alzheimer’s drug with modest benefits wins backing of FDA advisers

Superimposed scans show the brain of a person with Alzheimer’s disease. Credit: Zephyr/Science Photo Library A drug for Alzheimer’s disease

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How to figure out which climate-change policies really work

Hello Nature readers, would you like to get this Briefing in your inbox free every day? Sign up here. Takao

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Do elephants have names for each other?

Elephants seem to use personalized calls to address members of their group, providing a rare example of naming in animals

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what they mean for climate goals

France’s Rassemblement National (pictured at a campaign meeting last week) was one of a handful of far-right parties that saw

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Most nearby young star clusters formed in three massive complexes

Lindblad, P. O., Grape, K., Sandqvist, A. & Schober, J. On the kinematics of a local component of the interstellar

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I raise delicate butterflies on the mean streets of New York

“Monarch butterflies (Danaus plexippus) are complex creatures, which is part of what makes them so interesting to me. Every breeding

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What the science of elections can reveal in this super-election year

By the end of this year, voters in some 65 countries and regions will have gone to the polls. That