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Highlights - Week of September 16

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The biweekly newsletter from Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences This week we explore ho

The biweekly newsletter from Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences [Highlights]( [PNAS]( [X]( [Facebook]( [LinkedIn]( [YouTube]( [PNAS Nexus]( [X]( [Facebook]( [LinkedIn]( This week we explore how gene length may play a crucial role in genome aging, assess urban precipitation anomalies on a global scale, and discuss ocean voyages and the spread of disease in the most recent PNAS Science Sessions podcast episode. We also provide the latest groundbreaking research from PNAS and PNAS Nexus. PNAS Front Matter [FRONT MATTER ARTICLES]( [Inner Workings: Gene length could be a critical factor in the aging of the genome]( [Opinion: The limits of doing global, cross-cultural behavioral science research]( [Journal Club: Covert racism is baked into AI language models]( NAS MEMBER FEATURE [Honoring Maxine Singer: A laser-sharp intellect with a passion for science]( SCIENCE SESSIONS [Ocean voyages and disease spread]( Latest Research from PNAS [THIS WEEK'S ISSUE]( [Global scale assessment of urban precipitation anomalies]( [Rethinking livestock encroachment at a protected area boundary]( [Content moderation and suppression of marginalized voices]( Latest Articles from PNAS Nexus [CURRENT ISSUE]( [Influenza virus shedding and symptoms: Dynamics and implications from a multiseason household transmission study]( [Smile variation leaks personality and increases the accuracy of interpersonal judgments]( [Cell-based assays and comparative genomics revealed the conserved and hidden effects of Wolbachia on insect sex determination]( Trending Articles PNAS TRENDING ARTICLE [Comparing crime rates between undocumented immigrants, legal immigrants, and native-born US citizens in Texas]( PNAS NEXUS TRENDING ARTICLE [Soft cells and the geometry of seashells]( PNAS Highlights is a biweekly newsletter, featuring a curated selection of science news and research from the PNAS journals. Have feedback for us? Respond to this email and let us know what you think! Copyright (C) 2024 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved. You are receiving this email because you opted in to PNAS communications on our website. Our mailing address is: National Academy of Sciences 500 5th St NWWashington, DC 20001-2736 [Add us to your address book]( Want to change how you receive these emails? You can [update your preferences]( or [unsubscribe](

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