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    • Glen Weyl.

      Rethinking — and reframing — superintelligence

    • Stock science image.

      Break in the case for long COVID investigators

    • Nicholas Bellono (from left), a professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Wendy Valencia Montoya, a junior fellow of the Society of Fellows, and Naomi Pierce, the Sidney A. and John H. Hessel Professor of Biology, are seen near a cycad plant in the Biological Laboratory greenhouse. New research from the group, which will be published in the journal Science, revealed how the plant heats up its reproductive organs to attract beetles, which in turn facilitate pollination. Bellono and Pierce served as advisors for Montoya’s doctoral work, which she recently completed. Pierce is also a senior fellow of the Society of Fellows and curator of lepidoptera. Bellono serves as principal investigator of the Bellono Lab. Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer

      First, male gets heated up, then female, and then, you know

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  • Nicholas Bellono (from left), a professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Wendy Valencia Montoya, a junior fellow of the Society of Fellows, and Naomi Pierce, the Sidney A. and John H. Hessel Professor of Biology, are seen near a cycad plant in the Biological Laboratory greenhouse. New research from the group, which will be published in the journal Science, revealed how the plant heats up its reproductive organs to attract beetles, which in turn facilitate pollination. Bellono and Pierce served as advisors for Montoya’s doctoral work, which she recently completed. Pierce is also a senior fellow of the Society of Fellows and curator of lepidoptera. Bellono serves as principal investigator of the Bellono Lab. Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer
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