How COVID Might Sow Chaos in the Brain

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November 10, 2021

Neurology

How COVID Might Sow Chaos in the Brain

SARS-CoV-2 appears to travel widely across the cerebral cortex

By Gary Stix

Extraterrestrial Life

How Scientists Could Tell The World if They Find Alien Life

Sparked by major advances in their field, astrobiologists are grappling with how to best discuss possible breakthrough discoveries with the public

By Jonathan O'Callaghan

Politics

The Anti–Critical Race Theory Movement Will Profoundly Affect Public Education

The election of Glenn Youngkin and other anti-CRT candidates demonstrates how exploiting white fear continues to galvanize voters

By Daniel Kriess,Alice Marwick,Francesca Bolla Tripodi

Climate Change

Draft Text at Climate Talks Pushes Nations to Act Faster

Negotiators have tentatively agreed to ask countries to ratchet up their emissions reduction efforts again next year

By Sara Schonhardt,E&E News

Arts

How an Award-Winning Illustrator Weaves Emotion into Science

Award-winning science illustrator Fatinha Ramos creates intimate artwork that brings science stories to life

By Nikk Ogasa

Astrophysics

Astrophysicists Unveil Glut of Gravitational-wave Detections

The latest bounty of 35 events features oddball black holes and a miniature neutron star

By Davide Castelvecchi,Nature magazine

Vaccines

How Immunocompromised People Without Strong Vaccine Protection Are Coping with COVID

People with diseases or treatments that suppress their immune system cannot count on the same protection most vaccinated people have

By Tanya Lewis

Cancer

Engineered Bacteria Use Air Bubbles as Acoustically Detonated Tumor TNT

Ultrasound triggered cells home in on tumors and then self destruct to deliver damage or therapeutics from inside.

By Sarah Vitak | 08:03

Evolution

Sponge Cells Hint at Origins of Nervous System

Synapse genes help cells to communicate in a sponge's digestive chambers

By Max Kozlov,Nature magazine

Climate Change

Dispatch from the Glasgow Climate Summit as Talks Intensify

A former U.N. official on the ground breaks down where negotiations are at in the second week of talks

By Rachel Kyte,The Conversation US

Neuroscience

The Brain Has a Special Kind of Memory for Past Infections

This form of recall may control immune responses beyond the central nervous system

By Raleigh McElvery
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FROM THE ARCHIVE

What We Know So Far about How COVID Affects the Nervous System

Neurological symptoms might arise from multiple causes. But does the virus even get into neurons?

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