Skip to main content
Advertisement
Table of Contents

April 2004

Robert Sapolsky and Lisa Share show that olive baboons (Papio anubis) can acquire a more pacific culture and that females, such as this one, help maintain the peaceful behavior of males (see article). Frans de Waal explores whether such studies can shed light on human aggression (see article).

Image Credit: Photograph by Frans de Waal

Editorial

Who Pays for Open Access?

Helen Doyle, Andy Gass, Rebecca Kennison

Related Articles

Journal Club

The Cytoskeleton In Vivo

Beatriz García Fernández

Community Page

Research Articles

Sequence-Specific Inhibition of Small RNA Function

György Hutvágner, Martin J Simard, Craig C Mello, Phillip D Zamore

Related Articles

A Nuclear Function for Armadillo/β-Catenin

Nicholas S Tolwinski, Eric Wieschaus

Related Articles

Calcium Dynamics of Cortical Astrocytic Networks In Vivo

Hajime Hirase, Lifen Qian, Peter Barthó, György Buzsáki

Related Articles

Neural Activity When People Solve Verbal Problems with Insight

Mark Jung-Beeman, Edward M Bowden, Jason Haberman, Jennifer L Frymiare, Stella Arambel-Liu, Richard Greenblatt, Paul J Reber, John Kounios

Related Articles

Mimotopes for Alloreactive and Conventional T Cells in a Peptide–MHC Display Library

Frances Crawford, Eric Huseby, Janice White, Philippa Marrack, John W Kappler

Related Articles

Correspondence and Other Communications

Avoiding URL Reference Degradation in Scientific Publications

Desiree P Kelly, Eric J Hester, Kathryn R Johnson, Lauren F Heilig, Amanda L Drake, Lisa M Schilling, Robert P Dellavalle

Related Articles

Book Review%2FScience in the Media

When Food Kills

John Krebs