Collections

  • Collection |

    From the generation of embryo-like structures to the establishment of cell-based approaches to model or treat disease, the field of stem cell and developmental biology has impressively progressed during the past few months.

    Image: Jacob Hanna and Maayan Visuals – Oldak B. et al. Complete human day 14 post-implantation embryo models from naive ES cells. Nature 622, 562–573 (2023). https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06604-5
  • Collection |

    Rapid advancements into space from many new companies, countries, and space-related entities has enabled a “Second Space Age.”

    Image: Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit, NASA Johnson Space Center.
  • Collection |

    Fraught societal debates, particularly surrounding gender identity, are raising new questions about how to best take account of sex and gender in research, both in human health and elsewhere – even as scientists are increasingly recognizing that they must move beyond paradigms based on extrapolating findings from men or male animals.

    Image: Sophi Gullbrants
  • Collection |

    Understanding the heterogeneities in Earth’s mantle, including their origin, structure, and variability, is crucial for comprehending the long-term history of internal changes that have shaped our planet.

    Image: Dorling Kindersley: Arran Lewis / NASA / Alamy Stock Photo
  • Collection |

    What does a scientist do, where do they work, and what do they look like? Nature marked its 150th anniversary in 2018 by introducing a weekly photo essay profiling a scientist in their workplace. Since then, the Where I Work section has showcased more than 200 scientists from more than 70 countries at work in labs, during fieldwork, running companies, funding agencies, treating patients and teaching children. The photographs, now exhibited in King’s Cross, London, depict and celebrate the diversity of science and scientists.

  • Collection |

    2024 marks 200 years since William Buckland reported his research on Megalosaurus, later recognised as the first non-avian dinosaur genus to be formally named by science.

    Image: The Natural History Museum / Alamy Stock Photo
  • Collection |

    With this Collection, a partnership between Nature, Nature Medicine and Nature Communications, we welcome submissions of primary research papers that focus on neo-adjuvant immunotherapies and related combinatorial approaches (such as radio-immunotherapy or chemo-immunotherapy).

    Image: wildpixel / Getty Images / iStock
    Open for submissions
  • Collection |

    Detailed method reporting is essential for research reproducibility and trust in published results.

    Image: Sam Whitham
  • Collection |

    A little over two years ago we published the first installment of an initiative to identify and catalog the diversity of cell types in mammalian brains.

    Image: Jasiek Krzysztofiak / Nature
  • Collection |

    A collection to highlight an all-too-often overlooked aspect of DEI in chemistry: disability.

    Image: Carl Conway