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Dementia
Dementia is a progressive, irreversible and currently incurable clinical syndrome with cognitive and behavioural symptoms that range from loss of memory to impairment of judgement and reasoning.
Image: Valentina Galata. Cover design: Lauren Heslop -
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Reproductive aging
Reproductive aging is an important determinant of fertility span and overall health and wellbeing in older age. In this special issue, Nature Aging presents a series of reviews and opinion pieces on recent advances and future directions in reproductive aging research.
Image: Alex Whitworth -
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The Beijing Declaration: 30 years of progress
Journals from the Nature Portfolio wish to celebrate the achievements that have been made since the Beijing declaration for women's rights, emphasize areas where progress is needed and bring to the fore ideas offering a path forward.
Image: © [M] discan/Digital VisionVectors/Gettyimages -
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The Human Cell Atlas: towards a first draft atlas
Established in 2016, the Human Cell Atlas (HCA) consortium set out to create a comprehensive biological map of cells within the human body.
Image: Claire Agosti/SayoStudio; Concept: Ania Hupalowska -
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Dementia
This cross-journal Collection welcomes submissions that explore all aspects of dementia, including incidence, prevention, diagnosis and treatment of dementia and the impact on carers and society.
Image: © Atlas / stock.adobe.comOpen for submissions -
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Multimorbidity
This joint collection welcomes clinical, epidemiological, and public health research focused on multimorbidity.
Image: © [M] D3Damon / Getty Images / iStock -
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Cancer and aging
This cross-journal Collection invites original research that explicitly explores the role of aging in cancer and vice versa, from the bench to the bedside.
Image: © [M] vitanovski / Fotolia -
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Progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals
The year 2023 marks the mid-point of the 15-year period envisaged to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals, targets for global development adopted in September 2015 by all United Nations Member States.
Image: © Springer NatureOpen for submissions -
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FinnGen
It is the age of large biobanks in human genetics.
Image: Federico Simeoni, Małgorzata Nowicka, Nicola Cerioli, Rupesh Vyas -
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Aging, longevity and age-related diseases
Our understanding of the biology of aging and longevity has grown tremendously over the past two decades.