Science - USA (2021-11-12)

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greater than other diseases for which
vaccination is now routine. Surveys by
the Kaiser Family Foundation suggest
about 30% of parents plan to vaccinate
their children immediately.


Asian languages’ origin pinpointed


LINGUISTICS |For more than 100 years,
linguists have debated when, where,
and how a group of languages spoken
today across central and eastern Asia,
including those in the Japanese, Korean,
Tungusic, Mongolic, and Turkic fami-
lies, emerged. A new study combining
linguistic, genetic, and archaeological data
suggests these Transeurasian languages
share a common origin and spread early
with agriculture. Researchers compared
ancient DNA from 23 individuals, stretch-
ing back to 7500 B.C.E., representing
populations across Eurasia, to modern
reference genomes to construct a rough
family tree. The team mapped those
relations onto data from hundreds of
archaeological sites as well as etymo-
logical similarities in modern languages to
puzzle out the evolution of these ancient
people’s material culture and language.
Taken together, the researchers report this


week in Nature, the evidence indicates the
Transeurasian languages originated about
9000 years ago with millet farmers in
the West Liao River Valley in present-day
northeastern China, then spread and split
apart throughout the continent.

Octogenarian earns physics Ph.D.
PHYSICS |Manfred Steiner finally has the
degree he always wanted. This fall, the
89-year-old hematologist earned a doctor-
ate in theoretical physics from Brown
University. As a young man, Steiner
dreamed of pursing physics, but his
mother and uncle persuaded him to focus
on medicine. He obtained his M.D. in 1955
and a Ph.D. in biochemistry in 1967 before
serving on the medical faculty at Brown
from 1968 to 1994. Steiner began taking
physics courses there in 2000 and success-
fully defended his thesis in September, the
university announced last week. The work
describes how the boundary between the
two broad classes of quantum particles,
bosons and fermions, might be blurred
depending on whether the particles are
confined to 1D or 2D spaces. In 2020,
only 1.2% of recipients of doctorates from
U.S. institutions in the physical and earth

sciences was over age 45, according to the
National Science Foundation’s Survey of
Earned Doctorates. The median age
was 29.6 years.

U.S. drops firm after bad doses
COVID19 |Emergent BioSolutions
announced last week the termination of
its $600 million contract with the U.S.
government under which the Maryland
company would have manufactured
millions of doses of a COVID-19 vaccine
developed by AstraZeneca. The cancel-
lation comes 8 months after 15 million
doses of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-
vaccine, also being made at Emergent’s
Baltimore plant, were contaminated with
an ingredient of the AstraZeneca vaccine,
and production there was temporar-
ily halted. Since then, the company has
struggled to meet U.S. Food and Drug
Administration requirements for produc-
ing either vaccine. Emergent will continue
to produce anthrax vaccine for the United
States at its Lansing, Michigan, facility,
and recently signed a contract to pro-
duce a messenger RNA COVID-19 vaccine
for the Canadian company Providence
Therapeutics at its Winnipeg facility.

78%
Share of U.S. adults who believe or are
unsure of at least one of eight false
COVID-19 statements tested in a survey.
About one-third believe or are unsure
about at least half. The false statements
include that pregnant women should
not get the COVID-19 vaccine and that
it has been shown to cause infertility.
(Kaiser Family Foundation)

18%
Share of scientific journal articles
that showed evidence of plagiarism,
according to a meta-analysis.
Eight percent exhibited signs of
“major” plagiarism, such as reusing
ideas and findings. In a 2014 study
combining multiple surveys,
just 2% of scientists confessed to
the practice. (Scientometrics)

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798 12 NOVEMBER 2021 • VOL 374 ISSUE 6569


IMAGING

Intense x-ray beams offer
new views inside organs
Scientists have used an x-ray synchrotron
to produce some of the most detailed
images ever made of whole human
organs. By combining extremely bright
x-ray and more laserlike beams from the
recently upgraded European Synchrotron
Radiation Facility with a scanning method
called hierarchical phase contrast
tomography, researchers from ESRF
and University College London traced
anatomical details as small as
5 microns in postmortem organs.
In an image of a lung from a
54-year-old (left), blue limns the
airways, red traces unobstructed
blood vessels, and yellow marks
clogged ones. Researchers used
the technique to show how
COVID-19 damages blood ves-
sels in the lung, ESRF said last
week. The synchrotron’s x-rays,
up to 100 billion times brighter
than a conventional hospital
x-ray, are too intense to be
used to examine living tissue.

IMAGING

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