Browsing University of Bergen Library by Journals "Science"
Now showing items 1-7 of 7
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Autoantibodies against type I IFNs in patients with life-threatening COVID-19
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)Interindividual clinical variability in the course of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection is vast. We report that at least 101 of 987 patients with life-threatening coronavirus disease ... -
The genetic architecture of the human cerebral cortex
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)INTRODUCTION The cerebral cortex underlies our complex cognitive capabilities. Variations in human cortical surface area and thickness are associated with neurological, psychological, and behavioral traits and can be ... -
Global acceleration in rates of vegetation change over the past 18,000 years
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)Global vegetation over the past 18,000 years has been transformed first by the climate changes that accompanied the last deglaciation and again by increasing human pressures; however, the magnitude and patterns of rates ... -
The human dimension of biodiversity changes on islands
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)Islands are among the last regions on Earth settled and transformed by human activities, and they provide replicated model systems for analysis of how people affect ecological functions. By analyzing 27 representative ... -
Last Interglacial Iberian Neandertals as Fisher-Hunter-Gatherers
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)Marine food–reliant subsistence systems such as those in the African Middle Stone Age (MSA) were not thought to exist in Europe until the much later Mesolithic. Whether this apparent lag reflects taphonomic biases or ... -
Syncytial nerve net in a ctenophore adds insights on the evolution of nervous systems
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2023)A fundamental breakthrough in neurobiology has been the formulation of the neuron doctrine by Santiago Ramón y Cajal, which stated that the nervous system is composed of discrete cells. Electron microscopy later confirmed ... -
Temperature controls carbon cycling and biological evolution in the ocean twilight zone
(Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)Theory suggests that the ocean’s biological carbon pump, the process by which organic matter is produced at the surface and transferred to the deep ocean, is sensitive to temperature because temperature controls photosynthesis ...