Một số bài viết từ Scientific American ( English)

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1. Blockbuster Dreams. ? By: Stix, Gary. Scientific American, May 2006, Vol. 294 Issue 5, p60, 4p; New understanding of the biology behind a successful cancer therapy may lead to a drug that can treat an array of solid tumors [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 20424159)
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2. Reviews: From Surmise to Sunrise. ? By: Weiner, Jonathan. Scientific American, March 2006, Vol. 294 Issue 3, p98, 3p; Two modern biology giants, James Watson and E. O. Wilson, weigh the genius of a third from the past, Charles Darwin [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 19804829)
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3. Mastery of Emotions. ?By: Dobbs, David. Scientific American Mind, Feb/Mar2006, Vol. 17 Issue 1, p44, 6p; Joseph E. LeDoux discovered how fear arises. Now he is showing that the biology of emotions is what gives life meaning [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 19804845)
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4. Insights: Scoping Out the Planet. ? By: West, Krista. Scientific American, November 2005, Vol. 293 Issue 5, p40, 2p; Greg van der Vink hopes that EarthScope yields unprecedented data about faults and plates. It may do for geoscience what human genome sequencing did for biology [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 18513805)
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5. Insights: In the Business of Synthetic Life. ?By: Jaffe, Sam. Scientific American, April 2005, Vol. 292 Issue 4, p40, 2p; Synthetic biology might someday lead to artificial organisms. To James J. Collins, it already offers pharmaceutical promise, like turning a person's cells into custom drug factories [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; DOI: 0405040.pdf; (AN 16379770)
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6. Reviews: Evo Devo Is the New Buzzword…. ? By: Hall, Brian K.; Staff Editors. Scientific American, April 2005, Vol. 292 Issue 4, p102, 2p; Endless Forms Most Beautiful describes how a deeper appreciation of developmental biology clears up many enigmas of evolution. Also, The Editors Recommend [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; DOI: 0405102.pdf; (AN 16379780)
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7. Dying to See. ? By: Dahm, Ralf. Scientific American, October 2004, Vol. 291 Issue 4, p82, 8p; Studies of the lens of the eye not only could reveal ways to prevent cataracts but also might illuminate the biology of Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and other diseases in which cells commit suicide [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14405390)
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8. Reviews: The Major Unsolved Problem in Biology. ? By: Shermer, Michael; Staff Editors, Michael. Scientific American, March 2004, Vol. 290 Issue 3, p103, 3p; Three new books by brain researchers tackle the hard problem of explaining consciousness. Also, The Editors Recommend [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14387641)
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9. Your Personal Pathology. ? By: Sapolsky, Robert M.. Scientific American Special Edition, Scientific American Mind, Vol. 14 Issue 1, p94, 2p; How will we feel when biology can name what makes each of us who we are? [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]; (AN 13063217)
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10. Innovations: Reverse-Engineering Clinical Biology. ?By: Stix, Gary. Scientific American, February 2003, Vol. 288 Issue 2, p28, 3p; A peacetime dividend yields drug trials on virtual patients [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 13052736)
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11. Nanoinspirations: The Once and Future Nanomachine.
? By: Whitesides, George M.. Scientific American, September 2001, Vol. 285 Issue 3, p78, 6p; Biology outmatches futurists' most elaborate fantasies for molecular robots [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14409967)
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12. Cybernetic Cells. ? By: Gibbs, W. Wayt. Scientific American, August 2001, Vol. 285 Issue 2, p52, 6p; The simplest living cell is so complex that supercomputer models may never simulate its behavior perfectly. But even imperfect models could shake the foundations of biology [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14409935)
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13. Shrinking to Enormity. ? By: Gibbs, W. Wayt. Scientific American, February 2001, Vol. 284 Issue 2, p33, 2p; DNA microarrays are reshaping basic biology - but scientists fear they may soon drown in the data [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14409776)
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14. Muscle, Genes and Athletic Performance. ? By: Anderson, Jesper L.; Schjerling, Peter; Saltin, Bengt. Scientific American, September 2000, Vol. 283 Issue 3, p48, 8p; The cellular biology of muscle helps to explain why a particular athlete wins and suggests what future athletes might do to better their odds [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14405153)
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15. Are Your Ready For a New Sensation? ? By: Brown. Scientific American Presents, Your Bionic Future - Fall 1999, p38, 6p; As biology meets engineering, scientists are designing the sensory experiences of a new tomorrow. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14401950)
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16. Stem Cells Come Of Age. ? Scientific American, July 1999, Vol. 281 Issue 1, p30, 2p; Cells that can grow into a range of tissues are initiating a revolution in biology [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14401529)
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17. Measures of Man. ?Scientific American Presents, Men: The Scientific Truth, p6, 2p; Hormones and bluster produce the hero, the cad and the shorter-lived of the sexes. Insights into both male psychology and biology may temper untoward behavior and enhance longevity [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14401919)
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18. Evolution and the Origins of Disease. ? By: Williams. Scientific American, November 1998, Vol. 279 Issue 5, p86, 8p; The principles of evolution by natural selection are finally beginning to inform medicine [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14395784)
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19. Reviews. ? Scientific American, October 1998, Vol. 279 Issue 4, p126, 4p; Reviews [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14395751)
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20. Commentary: Wonders - Field Guide to the New Biology Lab. ? By: Morrison; Morrison. Scientific American, October 1998, Vol. 279 Issue 4, p131, 2p; The guinea pig, still a metaphor for any subject of experiment, is no longer a laboratory fixture. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]; (AN 14395757)
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21. Ten Days under the Sea. ? By: Edmunds. Scientific American, October 1996, Vol. 275 Issue 4, p88, 8p; Living underwater in the world's only habitat devoted to science, six aquanauts studied juvenile corals and fought off "the funk" [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 14371794)
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22. Gay Genes, Revisited. ? By: Horgan. Scientific American, November 1995, Vol. 273 Issue 5, p26, 1p; Doubts arise over research on the biology of homosexuality [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 14331484)
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23. The Benefits of Background Noise. ? By: Moss. Scientific American, August 1995, Vol. 273 Issue 2, p66, 4p; Stochastic resonance, the phenomenon by which background noise boosts weak signals, is creating a buzz in physics, biology and engineering [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 14331679)
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24. Light in the Ocean's Midwaters. ? Scientific American, July 1995, Vol. 273 Issue 1, p50, 6p; Beneath the surface ofthe ocean, sunlight isgradually extinguished,but the resultingdarkness yields to ahost of bioluminescentcreatures [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 14331609)
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25. Big-Time Biology. ? Scientific American, November 1994, Vol. 271 Issue 5, p90, 9p; Molecular biology is - not so quietly - evolving from a science into an industry. Can it survive the transformation? [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 14328011)
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26. Targeted Gene Replacement. ? By: Capecchi. Scientific American, March 1994, Vol. 270 Issue 3, p52, 8p; Researchers can now create mice bearing anychosen mutations in any known gene. The technologyis revolutionizing the study of mammalian biology [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 14328079)
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27. Biocatalysts Turn Rings around the Competition. ? By: Rennie. Scientific American, March 1994, Vol. 270 Issue 3, p107, 1p; When the going gets tough, the tough turn to biology. That is what a number of chemists are doing in an effort to solve some extremely difficult problems in chemical synthesis. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 14328089)
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28. Life, Death and the Immune System. ? Scientific American, September 1993, Vol. 269 Issue 3, p52, 10p; By defining and defending the self, the immune systemmakes life possible; malfunction causes illness and death. Studyof the system provides a unifying view of biology [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 13055144)
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29. Putting a Spin on Parasites. ?Scientific American, July 1993, Vol. 269 Issue 1, p103, 1p; Adrian Parton used to spend his days pondering molecular biology. Then, in 1991, he heard a talk givenby biophysicist Ronald Pethig of the University College of Wales, in which he described how electric fields can be used to manipulate particles. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 13054453)
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30. Modern Humans in the Levant. ?Scientific American, April 1993, Vol. 268 Issue 4, p94, 7p; Modern Homo sapiens preceded Neanderthals on Mount Carmel and followed a similar pattern of life for 60,000 years. Biology thus cannot explain the cultural revolution that then ensued [ABSTRACT FROM PUBL]; (AN 13054074)
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