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    Subscribe Previous Editions Online Exclusive 2022 Neuroscience How neuroscientists are addressing diseases of the brain: Science, Simplified Online Exclusive 2022 Immunology The search for universal vaccines: Coronavirus Online Exclusive 2022 Immunology What is a universal vaccine? Science, Simplified Spring/Summer 2022 Chemistry Six ways chemistry impacts everyday life: Science,…

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    • Take an animated journey along the neuron, and learn how neuroscientists at Scripps Research are addressing some of the most pressing diseases of the nervous system. #ScienceSimplified in less than 2 minutes https://t.co/z6O6dtwddD https://t.co/NJa1v4Tfum

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    Although growing older comes with a number of major life changes, science can help inform the things we do in the here in and now to forestall the most serio…

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    • What can we do in the here & now to forestall the serious features of #aging? In our latest explainer video, adapted from the #ScrippsResearchMagazine, discover 6 actionable steps we can take to live a long, healthy life https://t.co/3jI66Wnr0z #ScienceSimplified #healthyaging

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    Mutations are a common occurrence in most viruses. As a virus replicates inside a host, random errors while copying its genetic code can lead to mutations. M…

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    • How/why does a virus mutate? And what do the new #coronavirus #variants mean for the #pandemic and the available #vaccines? Learn all this and more in under 2 minutes with our latest #ScienceSimplified video https://t.co/FwXbvyQVZq @HaileePerrett @WardLab1 #scicomm #sciart

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    The scientists at Scripps research are answering the most complex questions about the coronavirus. NBC 7’s Ramon Galindo introduces us to a graduate student who has helped create a video series about COVID that is going viral.

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    • Scripps Research video series goes viral! Thanks to graduate student @HaileePerrett, artistic illustrations of #SARSCoV2 have formed the popular #ScienceSimplified video series to improve #scicomm to the wider world https://t.co/pSoI6DZKVG @WardLab1 @nbcsandiego

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    How a graduate student’s scientific illustrations have gone viral, leading to an award-winning video series. January 20, 2021 LA JOLLA, CA—A picture is worth a thousand words. When those words are dense scientific terms for the nature of viruses, that picture is invaluable. This is the thought process behind Science, Simplified, an animated video series focused on COVID-19…

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    • The story behind Science, Simplified – how one grad student’s artistic genius led to an award-winning educational video series on #SARSCoV2 https://t.co/PNyOV7E3kp @HaileePerrett from @WardLab1 #ScienceSimplified #sciart https://t.co/9xrC1mRdUl

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    After we have been exposed to an infection, our immune system remembers the threat, in particular by producing antibodies. These are proteins that circulate …

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    • How do #COVID19 vaccines work? What is an “mRNA vaccine?” And what steps must a #vaccine go through before it can be approved? Learn all about it visually in 2 minutes with our latest edition of #ScienceSimplified https://t.co/yV2qH8Olgu @HaileePerrett @WardLab1

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    An animated look at how the novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 enters the body and infects cells. Illustrated by a Scripps Research scientist, this insta…

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    • With #COVID19 cases once again surging, we take a deep dive into how the novel #coronavirus enters the body and infects our cells. Check out the next edition of our animated #ScienceSimplified series, which outlines the entire infection process https://t.co/xN8E8uHIzO

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    Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses, some of which infect humans. The coronavirus at the root of COVID-19 is the newest known member of this family. And like other coronaviruses that infect people, the new coronavirus causes respiratory disease, among other symptoms. Illustrations by Hailee Perrett, Ward Lab, Scripps Research. At their core, coronaviruses contain a genetic blueprint…

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    • Wrapping up this #ScienceSimplified with the #coronavirus spike proteins (red-orange). The fringe of spike proteins act as grappling hooks that allow the virus to latch onto host cells for infection. Learn more https://t.co/8OmU1CjpmI https://t.co/p5tsozSKf9

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    Coronaviruses are a large family of viruses, some of which infect humans. The coronavirus at the root of COVID-19 is the newest known member of this family. And like other coronaviruses that infect people, the new coronavirus causes respiratory disease, among other symptoms. Illustrations by Hailee Perrett, Ward Lab, Scripps Research. At their core, coronaviruses contain a genetic blueprint…

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    • #ScienceSimplified Friday! Today’s morsel focuses on the viral envelope (teal), which protects the #coronavirus outside of a host & helps anchor structural proteins. Embedded envelope proteins (blue dots) aid the assembly of new virus particles. Learn more https://t.co/8OmU1C1Ova https://t.co/shn29Kxslm