Catálogo de publicaciones - revistas

Compartir en
redes sociales


Science

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

No disponibles.

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Período Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada desde mar. 1997 / hasta dic. 2023 Science Journals

Información

Tipo de recurso:

revistas

ISSN impreso

0036-8075

ISSN electrónico

1095-9203

Editor responsable

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

País de edición

Estados Unidos

Fecha de publicación

Cobertura temática

Tabla de contenidos

In Science Journals

Michael Funk (eds.)

<jats:p> Highlights from the <jats:italic>Science</jats:italic> family of journals </jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 936-937

In Other Journals

Caroline Ash; Jesse Smith (eds.)

<jats:p>Editors’ selections from the current scientific literature</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 937-938

A genetic probe into the ancient and medieval history of Southern Europe and West Asia

Iosif LazaridisORCID; Songül Alpaslan-RoodenbergORCID; Ayşe AcarORCID; Ayşen AçıkkolORCID; Anagnostis Agelarakis; Levon AghikyanORCID; Uğur Akyüz; Desislava AndreevaORCID; Gojko AndrijaševićORCID; Dragana AntonovićORCID; Ian ArmitORCID; Alper Atmaca; Pavel AvetisyanORCID; Ahmet İhsan AytekORCID; Krum Bacvarov; Ruben BadalyanORCID; Stefan Bakardzhiev; Jacqueline BalenORCID; Lorenc BejkoORCID; Rebecca BernardosORCID; Andreas BertsatosORCID; Hanifi BiberORCID; Ahmet BilirORCID; Mario BodružićORCID; Michelle Bonogofsky; Clive BonsallORCID; Dušan BorićORCID; Nikola BorovinićORCID; Guillermo Bravo Morante; Katharina Buttinger; Kim CallanORCID; Francesca CandilioORCID; Mario CarićORCID; Olivia CheronetORCID; Stefan Chohadzhiev; Maria-Eleni ChovalopoulouORCID; Stella Chryssoulaki; Ion CiobanuORCID; Natalija Čondić; Mihai ConstantinescuORCID; Emanuela CristianiORCID; Brendan J. CulletonORCID; Elizabeth CurtisORCID; Jack Davis; Tatiana I. Demcenco; Valentin DergachevORCID; Zafer DerinORCID; Sylvia Deskaj; Seda Devejyan; Vojislav Djordjević; Kellie Sara Duffett CarlsonORCID; Laurie R. Eccles; Nedko Elenski; Atilla EnginORCID; Nihat Erdoğan; Sabiha Erir-PazarcıORCID; Daniel M. FernandesORCID; Matthew FerryORCID; Suzanne FreilichORCID; Alin FrînculeasaORCID; Michael L. GalatyORCID; Beatriz GamarraORCID; Boris Gasparyan; Bisserka GaydarskaORCID; Elif GençORCID; Timur GültekinORCID; Serkan GündüzORCID; Tamás HajduORCID; Volker Heyd; Suren Hobosyan; Nelli HovhannisyanORCID; Iliya Iliev; Lora IlievORCID; Stanislav Iliev; İlkay İvginORCID; Ivor JankovićORCID; Lence Jovanova; Panagiotis KarkanasORCID; Berna Kavaz-KındığılıORCID; Esra Hilal KayaORCID; Denise KeatingORCID; Douglas J. KennettORCID; Seda Deniz KesiciORCID; Anahit KhudaverdyanORCID; Krisztián KissORCID; Sinan KılıçORCID; Paul KlostermannORCID; Sinem Kostak Boca Negra ValdesORCID; Saša KovačevićORCID; Marta Krenz-NiedbałaORCID; Maja Krznarić ŠkrivankoORCID; Rovena Kurti; Pasko KuzmanORCID; Ann Marie LawsonORCID; Catalin LazarORCID; Krassimir Leshtakov; Thomas E. LevyORCID; Ioannis LiritzisORCID; Kirsi O. Lorentz; Sylwia ŁukasikORCID; Matthew MahORCID; Swapan Mallick; Kirsten MandlORCID; Kristine Martirosyan-OlshanskyORCID; Roger MatthewsORCID; Wendy MatthewsORCID; Kathleen McSweeneyORCID; Varduhi Melikyan; Adam MiccoORCID; Megan MichelORCID; Lidija Milašinović; Alissa MittnikORCID; Janet M. MongeORCID; Georgi NekhrizovORCID; Rebecca Nicholls; Alexey G. NikitinORCID; Vassil Nikolov; Mario NovakORCID; Iñigo OlaldeORCID; Jonas OppenheimerORCID; Anna OsterholtzORCID; Celal Özdemir; Kadir Toykan Özdoğan; Nurettin Öztürk; Nikos PapadimitriouORCID; Niki PapakonstantinouORCID; Anastasia Papathanasiou; Lujana ParamanORCID; Evgeny G. Paskary; Nick PattersonORCID; Ilian Petrakiev; Levon Petrosyan; Vanya PetrovaORCID; Anna Philippa-Touchais; Ashot PiliposyanORCID; Nada Pocuca KuzmanORCID; Hrvoje PotrebicaORCID; Bianca Preda-BălănicăORCID; Zrinka Premužić; T. Douglas PriceORCID; Lijun QiuORCID; Siniša RadovićORCID; Kamal Raeuf Aziz; Petra Rajić ŠikanjićORCID; Kamal Rasheed Raheem; Sergei RazumovORCID; Amy RichardsonORCID; Jacob Roodenberg; Rudenc Ruka; Victoria RussevaORCID; Mustafa ŞahinORCID; Ayşegül ŞarbakORCID; Emre SavaşORCID; Constanze Schattke; Lynne SchepartzORCID; Tayfun SelçukORCID; Ayla Sevim-ErolORCID; Michel Shamoon-PourORCID; Henry M. ShephardORCID; Athanasios SiderisORCID; Angela SimalcsikORCID; Hakob Simonyan; Vitalij SinikaORCID; Kendra SirakORCID; Ghenadie SirbuORCID; Mario ŠlausORCID; Andrei SoficaruORCID; Bilal SöğütORCID; Arkadiusz SołtysiakORCID; Çilem Sönmez-SözerORCID; Maria StathiORCID; Martin SteskalORCID; Kristin Stewardson; Sharon Stocker; Fadime Suata-AlpaslanORCID; Alexander Suvorov; Anna Szécsényi-NagyORCID; Tamás SzeniczeyORCID; Nikolai TelnovORCID; Strahil TemovORCID; Nadezhda TodorovaORCID; Ulsi Tota; Gilles TouchaisORCID; Sevi TriantaphyllouORCID; Atila TürkerORCID; Marina UgarkovićORCID; Todor Valchev; Fanica Veljanovska; Zlatko Videvski; Cristian ViragORCID; Anna WagnerORCID; Sam WalshORCID; Piotr WłodarczakORCID; J. Noah WorkmanORCID; Aram Yardumian; Evgenii Yarovoy; Alper Yener YavuzORCID; Hakan YılmazORCID; Fatma ZalzalaORCID; Anna ZettlORCID; Zhao ZhangORCID; Rafet ÇavuşoğluORCID; Nadin Rohland; Ron PinhasiORCID; David ReichORCID

<jats:p>Literary and archaeological sources have preserved a rich history of Southern Europe and West Asia since the Bronze Age that can be complemented by genetics. Mycenaean period elites in Greece did not differ from the general population and included both people with some steppe ancestry and others, like the Griffin Warrior, without it. Similarly, people in the central area of the Urartian Kingdom around Lake Van lacked the steppe ancestry characteristic of the kingdom’s northern provinces. Anatolia exhibited extraordinary continuity down to the Roman and Byzantine periods, with its people serving as the demographic core of much of the Roman Empire, including the city of Rome itself. During medieval times, migrations associated with Slavic and Turkic speakers profoundly affected the region.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 940-951

A sustainable mouse karyotype created by programmed chromosome fusion

Li-Bin WangORCID; Zhi-Kun LiORCID; Le-Yun WangORCID; Kai XuORCID; Tian-Tian JiORCID; Yi-Huan Mao; Si-Nan Ma; Tao Liu; Cheng-Fang Tu; Qian Zhao; Xu-Ning Fan; Chao Liu; Li-Ying Wang; You-Jia Shu; Ning Yang; Qi ZhouORCID; Wei LiORCID

<jats:p>Chromosome engineering has been attempted successfully in yeast but remains challenging in higher eukaryotes, including mammals. Here, we report programmed chromosome ligation in mice that resulted in the creation of new karyotypes in the lab. Using haploid embryonic stem cells and gene editing, we fused the two largest mouse chromosomes, chromosomes 1 and 2, and two medium-size chromosomes, chromosomes 4 and 5. Chromatin conformation and stem cell differentiation were minimally affected. However, karyotypes carrying fused chromosomes 1 and 2 resulted in arrested mitosis, polyploidization, and embryonic lethality, whereas a smaller fused chromosome composed of chromosomes 4 and 5 was able to be passed on to homozygous offspring. Our results suggest the feasibility of chromosome-level engineering in mammals.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 967-975

Growth rules for irregular architected materials with programmable properties

Ke LiuORCID; Rachel SunORCID; Chiara DaraioORCID

<jats:p>Biomaterials display microstructures that are geometrically irregular and functionally efficient. Understanding the role of irregularity in determining material properties offers a new path to engineer materials with superior functionalities, such as imperfection insensitivity, enhanced impact absorption, and stress redirection. We uncover fundamental, probabilistic structure–property relationships using a growth-inspired program that evokes the formation of stochastic architectures in natural systems. This virtual growth program imposes a set of local rules on a limited number of basic elements. It generates materials that exhibit a large variation in functional properties starting from very limited initial resources, which echoes the diversity of biological systems. We identify basic rules to control mechanical properties by independently varying the microstructure’s topology and geometry in a general, graph-based representation of irregular materials.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 975-981

Ancient DNA from Mesopotamia suggests distinct Pre-Pottery and Pottery Neolithic migrations into Anatolia

Iosif LazaridisORCID; Songül Alpaslan-RoodenbergORCID; Ayşe AcarORCID; Ayşen AçıkkolORCID; Anagnostis Agelarakis; Levon AghikyanORCID; Uğur Akyüz; Desislava AndreevaORCID; Gojko AndrijaševićORCID; Dragana AntonovićORCID; Ian ArmitORCID; Alper Atmaca; Pavel AvetisyanORCID; Ahmet İhsan AytekORCID; Krum Bacvarov; Ruben BadalyanORCID; Stefan Bakardzhiev; Jacqueline BalenORCID; Lorenc BejkoORCID; Rebecca BernardosORCID; Andreas BertsatosORCID; Hanifi BiberORCID; Ahmet BilirORCID; Mario BodružićORCID; Michelle Bonogofsky; Clive BonsallORCID; Dušan BorićORCID; Nikola BorovinićORCID; Guillermo Bravo Morante; Katharina Buttinger; Kim CallanORCID; Francesca CandilioORCID; Mario CarićORCID; Olivia CheronetORCID; Stefan Chohadzhiev; Maria-Eleni ChovalopoulouORCID; Stella Chryssoulaki; Ion CiobanuORCID; Natalija Čondić; Mihai ConstantinescuORCID; Emanuela CristianiORCID; Brendan J. CulletonORCID; Elizabeth CurtisORCID; Jack Davis; Tatiana I. Demcenco; Valentin DergachevORCID; Zafer DerinORCID; Sylvia Deskaj; Seda Devejyan; Vojislav Djordjević; Kellie Sara Duffett CarlsonORCID; Laurie R. Eccles; Nedko Elenski; Atilla EnginORCID; Nihat Erdoğan; Sabiha Erir-PazarcıORCID; Daniel M. FernandesORCID; Matthew FerryORCID; Suzanne FreilichORCID; Alin FrînculeasaORCID; Michael L. GalatyORCID; Beatriz GamarraORCID; Boris Gasparyan; Bisserka GaydarskaORCID; Elif GençORCID; Timur GültekinORCID; Serkan GündüzORCID; Tamás HajduORCID; Volker Heyd; Suren Hobosyan; Nelli HovhannisyanORCID; Iliya IlievORCID; Lora Iliev; Stanislav Iliev; İlkay İvginORCID; Ivor JankovićORCID; Lence Jovanova; Panagiotis KarkanasORCID; Berna Kavaz-KındığılıORCID; Esra Hilal KayaORCID; Denise KeatingORCID; Douglas J. KennettORCID; Seda Deniz KesiciORCID; Anahit KhudaverdyanORCID; Krisztián KissORCID; Sinan KılıçORCID; Paul KlostermannORCID; Sinem Kostak Boca Negra ValdesORCID; Saša KovačevićORCID; Marta Krenz-NiedbałaORCID; Maja Krznarić ŠkrivankoORCID; Rovena Kurti; Pasko KuzmanORCID; Ann Marie LawsonORCID; Catalin LazarORCID; Krassimir Leshtakov; Thomas E. LevyORCID; Ioannis LiritzisORCID; Kirsi O. Lorentz; Sylwia ŁukasikORCID; Matthew MahORCID; Swapan Mallick; Kirsten MandlORCID; Kristine Martirosyan-OlshanskyORCID; Roger MatthewsORCID; Wendy MatthewsORCID; Kathleen McSweeneyORCID; Varduhi Melikyan; Adam MiccoORCID; Megan MichelORCID; Lidija Milašinović; Alissa MittnikORCID; Janet M. MongeORCID; Georgi NekhrizovORCID; Rebecca Nicholls; Alexey G. NikitinORCID; Vassil Nikolov; Mario NovakORCID; Iñigo OlaldeORCID; Jonas OppenheimerORCID; Anna OsterholtzORCID; Celal Özdemir; Kadir Toykan Özdoğan; Nurettin Öztürk; Nikos PapadimitriouORCID; Niki PapakonstantinouORCID; Anastasia Papathanasiou; Lujana ParamanORCID; Evgeny G. Paskary; Nick PattersonORCID; Ilian Petrakiev; Levon Petrosyan; Vanya PetrovaORCID; Anna Philippa-Touchais; Ashot PiliposyanORCID; Nada Pocuca KuzmanORCID; Hrvoje PotrebicaORCID; Bianca Preda-BălănicăORCID; Zrinka Premužić; T. Douglas PriceORCID; Lijun QiuORCID; Siniša RadovićORCID; Kamal Raeuf Aziz; Petra Rajić ŠikanjićORCID; Kamal Rasheed Raheem; Sergei RazumovORCID; Amy RichardsonORCID; Jacob Roodenberg; Rudenc Ruka; Victoria RussevaORCID; Mustafa ŞahinORCID; Ayşegül ŞarbakORCID; Emre SavaşORCID; Constanze Schattke; Lynne SchepartzORCID; Tayfun SelçukORCID; Ayla Sevim-ErolORCID; Michel Shamoon-PourORCID; Henry M. ShephardORCID; Athanasios SiderisORCID; Angela SimalcsikORCID; Hakob Simonyan; Vitalij SinikaORCID; Kendra SirakORCID; Ghenadie SirbuORCID; Mario ŠlausORCID; Andrei SoficaruORCID; Bilal SöğütORCID; Arkadiusz SołtysiakORCID; Çilem Sönmez-SözerORCID; Maria StathiORCID; Martin SteskalORCID; Kristin Stewardson; Sharon Stocker; Fadime Suata-AlpaslanORCID; Alexander Suvorov; Anna Szécsényi-NagyORCID; Tamás SzeniczeyORCID; Nikolai TelnovORCID; Strahil TemovORCID; Nadezhda TodorovaORCID; Ulsi Tota; Gilles TouchaisORCID; Sevi TriantaphyllouORCID; Atila TürkerORCID; Marina UgarkovićORCID; Todor Valchev; Fanica Veljanovska; Zlatko Videvski; Cristian ViragORCID; Anna WagnerORCID; Sam WalshORCID; Piotr WłodarczakORCID; J. Noah WorkmanORCID; Aram Yardumian; Evgenii Yarovoy; Alper Yener YavuzORCID; Hakan YılmazORCID; Fatma ZalzalaORCID; Anna ZettlORCID; Zhao ZhangORCID; Rafet ÇavuşoğluORCID; Nadin Rohland; Ron PinhasiORCID; David ReichORCID

<jats:p>We present the first ancient DNA data from the Pre-Pottery Neolithic of Mesopotamia (Southeastern Turkey and Northern Iraq), Cyprus, and the Northwestern Zagros, along with the first data from Neolithic Armenia. We show that these and neighboring populations were formed through admixture of pre-Neolithic sources related to Anatolian, Caucasus, and Levantine hunter-gatherers, forming a Neolithic continuum of ancestry mirroring the geography of West Asia. By analyzing Pre-Pottery and Pottery Neolithic populations of Anatolia, we show that the former were derived from admixture between Mesopotamian-related and local Epipaleolithic-related sources, but the latter experienced additional Levantine-related gene flow, thus documenting at least two pulses of migration from the Fertile Crescent heartland to the early farmers of Anatolia.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 982-987

Tunable light-induced dipole-dipole interaction between optically levitated nanoparticles

Jakob RieserORCID; Mario A. CiampiniORCID; Henning Rudolph; Nikolai KieselORCID; Klaus HornbergerORCID; Benjamin A. SticklerORCID; Markus AspelmeyerORCID; Uroš DelićORCID

<jats:p>Arrays of optically trapped nanoparticles have emerged as a platform for the study of complex nonequilibrium phenomena. Analogous to atomic many-body systems, one of the crucial ingredients is the ability to precisely control the interactions between particles. However, the optical interactions studied thus far only provide conservative optical binding forces of limited tunability. In this work, we exploit the phase coherence between the optical fields that drive the light-induced dipole-dipole interaction to couple two nanoparticles. In addition, we effectively switch off the optical interaction and observe electrostatic coupling between charged particles. Our results provide a route to developing fully programmable many-body systems of interacting nanoparticles with tunable nonreciprocal interactions, which are instrumental for exploring entanglement and topological phases in arrays of levitated nanoparticles.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 987-990

Resonant metasurfaces for generating complex quantum states

Tomás Santiago-CruzORCID; Sylvain D. GennaroORCID; Oleg Mitrofanov; Sadhvikas Addamane; John Reno; Igal BrenerORCID; Maria V. ChekhovaORCID

<jats:p>Quantum state engineering, the cornerstone of quantum photonic technologies, mainly relies on spontaneous parametric downconversion and four-wave mixing, where one or two pump photons spontaneously decay into a photon pair. Both of these nonlinear effects require momentum conservation for the participating photons, which strongly limits the versatility of the resulting quantum states. Nonlinear metasurfaces have subwavelength thickness and allow the relaxation of this constraint; when combined with resonances, they greatly expand the possibilities of quantum state engineering. Here, we generated entangled photons via spontaneous parametric downconversion in semiconductor metasurfaces with high–quality factor, quasi-bound state in the continuum resonances. By enhancing the quantum vacuum field, our metasurfaces boost the emission of nondegenerate entangled photons within multiple narrow resonance bands and over a wide spectral range. A single resonance or several resonances in the same sample, pumped at multiple wavelengths, can generate multifrequency quantum states, including cluster states. These features reveal metasurfaces as versatile sources of complex states for quantum information.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 991-995

Massively degenerate coherent perfect absorber for arbitrary wavefronts

Yevgeny SlobodkinORCID; Gil WeinbergORCID; Helmut HörnerORCID; Kevin PichlerORCID; Stefan RotterORCID; Ori KatzORCID

<jats:p>One of the key insights of non-Hermitian photonics is that well-established concepts such as the laser can be operated in reverse to realize a coherent perfect absorber (CPA). Although conceptually appealing, such CPAs are limited so far to a single, judiciously shaped wavefront or mode. Here, we demonstrate how this limitation can be overcome by time-reversing a degenerate cavity laser based on a unique cavity that self-images any incident light field onto itself. Placing a weak, critically coupled absorber into this cavity, any incoming wavefront, even a complex and dynamically varying speckle pattern, is absorbed with close to perfect efficiency in a massively parallel interference process. These characteristics open up interesting new possibilities for applications in light harvesting, energy delivery, light control, and imaging.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 995-998

A cognitive process occurring during sleep is revealed by rapid eye movements

Yuta SenzaiORCID; Massimo ScanzianiORCID

<jats:p>Since the discovery of rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, the nature of the eye movements that characterize this sleep phase has remained elusive. Do they reveal gaze shifts in the virtual environment of dreams or simply reflect random brainstem activity? We harnessed the head direction (HD) system of the mouse thalamus, a neuronal population whose activity reports, in awake mice, their actual HD as they explore their environment and, in sleeping mice, their virtual HD. We discovered that the direction and amplitude of rapid eye movements during REM sleep reveal the direction and amplitude of the ongoing changes in virtual HD. Thus, rapid eye movements disclose gaze shifts in the virtual world of REM sleep, thereby providing a window into the cognitive processes of the sleeping brain.</jats:p>

Palabras clave: Multidisciplinary.

Pp. 999-1004