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- Science | AAAS
Science AAAS peer-reviewed journals deliver impactful research, daily news, expert commentary, and career resources
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Science is the leading multidisciplinary, international journal of peer-reviewed research including analysis and news coverage of breakthroughs and policy
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Science Partner Journals Advanced Devices Instrumentation The Open Access journal Advanced Devices Instrumentation, published in association with BIACD, is a forum to promote breakthroughs and application advances at all levels of electronics and photonics
- Contents | Science 391, 6792
COVER New research shows that artificial intelligence (AI) models overly affirm and validate users, even when users propose harmful or illegal actions The resulting effect on users is notable: Receiving advice from affirming AI made people more self-centered and less able to see the perspectives of others Yet people prefer the overly affirming AI, which may further promote this behavior in
- NEWS FROM SCIENCE - AAAS
Authoritative, up-to-the-minute news and in-depth features on research advances and science policy, from award-winning science journalists
- Targeted MYC2 stabilization confers citrus Huanglongbing . . . - Science
Huanglongbing (HLB) is a devastating citrus disease In this work, we report an HLB resistance regulatory circuit in Citrus composed of an E3 ubiquitin ligase, PUB21, and its substrate, the MYC2 transcription factor, which regulates jasmonate-mediated
- The dispersal of domestic cats from North Africa to Europe . . . - Science
The domestic cat (Felis catus) descends from the African wildcat Felis lybica lybica Its global distribution alongside humans testifies to its successful adaptation to anthropogenic environments Uncertainty remains regarding whether domestic cats
- Science’s 2025 Breakthrough of the Year: The unstoppable rise of . . .
Fittingly, it was named Science ’s 2021 Breakthrough of the Year —and won a share of the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for its creators Few imagined that general-purpose large language models (LLMs), trained on trillions of words and optimized simply to regurgitate humanlike text, might follow suit
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