This new metamaterial was developed in the lab of Eric Mazur, the Balkanski Professor of Physics and Applied Physics and Area Dean for Applied Physics AT SEAS,
lead study author and professor and chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Neuroscience at Nebraska,
Dassarma, Phd, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the school,"GVNPS offer a designer platform for vaccines
"Tkaczyk's co-authors on this research included Rebecca Richards-Kortum, Fellow of The Optical Society and a professor in Rice's Department of Bioengineering.
a professor who specializes in scientific instruments at The Langevin Institute, to develop a new"internal fingerprint"sensor.
Developed by UW-Madison collaborators Zhenqiang"Jack"Ma, professor of electrical and computer engineering and research scientist Jung-Hun Seo, the high-performance phototransistor far and away exceeds all previous flexible phototransistor parameters,
Professor Thirumalai Venkatesan, Director of NUSNNI; Professor Andre K. Geim of the University of Manchester;
and Professor Antonio H. Castro Neto of the NUS Department of physics and Director of CA2DM. More than 200 times more sensitive than commercially available sensors The new sensor, made of graphene
and boron nitride, comprises a few layers of carrier-moving channels, each of which can be controlled by the magnetic field.
"says Alan Jasanoff, an MIT professor of biological engineering and the paper's senior author.""We used the tools of protein engineering to try to boost the magnetic characteristics of this protein."
Study author Professor Carlos Caldas, senior group leader at the Cancer Research UK Cambridge Institute, said:"
Professor Caldas added:""We were able to use the blood tests to map out the disease as it progressed.
"said Stanford university bioengineering professor Christina Smolke, who led the research published in the journal Science.
#said Kevin Mccully, one of the authors of the study and a professor in the UGA College of Education#s kinesiology department.#
Professor of Metabolic Disease at NTU Lee Kong Chian School of medicine and senior principal investigator with the National Cancer Centre Singapore. ur work has important clinical implications,
who is also a Professor of Host-Microbe Interactions at Karolinska Institutet. Dr Parag Kundu, a senior research fellow with Prof Pettersson lab and the first author of the study, said that in their tests,
Professor of Stem Cell Research at Karolinska Institutet, who co-supervised the study. This is beneficial as Ephb receptors also function to keep the tumour intact,
a professor of medicine and cellular biology at Northwestern University who was not part of the research team.
professor of neurosciences and co-director of the Autism Center of Excellence at UC San diego. ome individuals are minimally verbal throughout life.
Joining Kulkarni on the paper are his adviser, professor of brain and cognitive sciences Josh Tenenbaum;
HMS professor of medicine and director of translational therapeutics in the Cancer Research Institute at Beth Israel Deaconess. in1 is a common key regulator in many types of cancer
added co-author Pier Paolo Pandolfi, the HMS George C. Reisman Professor of Medicine and director of the Cancer Genetics Program at Beth Israel Deaconess,
a Curators Professor of Animal Science and a professor of biochemistry, and his colleagues, says these new stem cells can help advance research on preeclampsia and a number of other areas of the human reproductive process. hese new cells,
2015 online issue of Cell Reports, the researchers, under the direction of senior investigator Gabriele Bergers, Phd, UCSF professor of neurological surgery,
Eye on immune therapies and prevention In his lab, professor of immunology Dr. Kevan Herold has used the technology to explore key questions about type 1 diabetes, an autoimmune condition.
which were not possible before says Professor Nini Pryds, head of the research in electro functional materials at DTU Energy and one of the co-authors of this paper.
explains Professor Nini Pryds. Despite the fact that d-Bismuth oxide is made of just 2 elements (bismuth and oxygen),
and our knowledge in ionic and electronic transport mechanism in these films says Professor Nini Pryds.
with applications for everything from fuel cells to biological implants. t a huge step for nanofabrication, said Jan Schroers, professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Yale,
Their faculty advisers are Fathi Ghorbel, professor of mechanical engineering and bioengineering, and Marcia Oalley, professor of mechanical engineering and computer science.
The project won the eople Choiceaward at Rice recent Engineering Design Showcase. The glove (right-handed only at the moment) is designed to be as unobtrusive as possible,
Dr. Brian Schmidt, Professor at New york University college of Dentistry, Director of the Bluestone Center for Clinical Research and a co-author of the study states,
A team of Ph d. students and undergraduate researchers led by UC San diego nanoengineering professor Darren Lipomi demonstrated that the key to generating a smaller nanogap between two nanostructures involves using a graphene spacer,
the principal investigator, Professor Daniela Riccardi, from the School of Biosciences. or the first time we have found a link airways inflammation,
According to Cardiff Professor Paul Kemp, who co-authored the study, the identification of Casr in airway tissue means that the potential for treatment of other inflammatory lung diseases beyond asthma is immense.
Professor Riccardi and her collaborators are now seeking funding to determine the efficacy of calcilytic drugs in treating asthmas that are especially difficult to treat,
and potentially stop asthma from happening in the first place, added Professor Riccardi. The study was part-funded by Asthma UK
The work was led by Professor John Sader at the University of Melbourne School of Mathematics and Statistics and Professor Michael Roukes of the California Institute of technology.
California Institute of technology Professor Michael Roukes says NEMS and inertial imaging could prove very useful for biological scientists. ou can imagine situations where you don know exactly what you are looking for,
Phd, the Laura and Isaac Perlmutter Professor of Cell biology at NYU Langone and a Howard hughes medical institute investigator.
Engineering professor Jeffrey La Belle use of biomarkers in saliva could replace current tests that require individuals with TYPE II DIABETES to draw blood samples each day.
ASU Engineering professor Jeffrey La Belle use of biomarkers in saliva could replace current tests that require individuals with TYPE II DIABETES to draw blood samples each day.
Now, research from an ASU professor is being used in the quest for a noninvasive alternative. Arizona State university engineering professor Jeffrey La Belle use of biomarkers measurable indicators of wellness or disease in body fluids to diagnose
and monitor individualshealth is finding a new application through a commercialization agreement with a United kingdom-based technology development company.
Professor Dietmar Hutmacher Professor Dietmar Hutmacher In an article published in Nature Communications, the biomedical engineers outlined how they had reinforced soft hydrogels via a 3d printed scaffold.
Professor Dietmar W. Hutmacher, from QUT Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation, said nature often used fibre reinforcement to turn weak structures into outstanding mechanically robust ones. uch
Professor Hutmacher said. y bringing this natural design perspective of fibre reinforcement into the field of tissue engineering (TE),
Professor Hutmacher said hydrogels were favoured because they had excellent biological properties, however, the hydrogels currently available for tissue regeneration of the musculoskeletal system couldn meet the mechanical and biological requirements for successful outcomes. ur international biofabrication research team has found a way to reinforce these soft hydrogels via a 3d printed scaffold structure
Professor Hutmacher said the team had introduced organised high-porosity microfiber networks that are printed using a new technique called elt electrospinning writing e found that the stiffness of the gel/scaffold composites increased synergistically up to 54 times,
a professor of physics who joined the University of California, San diego this year. o the question was,
and Head of the School Professor Walter Thomas said the team would investigate the phenomenon,
Professor Thomas said. his is quite remarkable, as the human genome only has 25 of these bitter taste receptors,
Professor Thomas said. ut a common end result of this compensatory growth is eventual heart failure, a major cause of death in Australia. uring laboratory tests,
Professor Thomas said the project progressed from animal studies to human investigations through collaborations with the Prince Charles Hospital in Brisbane. sing heart tissue from humans undergoing heart surgery
Professor Takeshi Iwatsubo, graduate students Kaoru Yamamoto and Zen-ichi Tanei, Assistant professor Tadafumi Hashimoto and Professor Haruhiko Bito at the University of Tokyo Graduate school of Medicine, Professor
and Professor David Holtzman at Washington University chronically increased the activity of a neuronal pathway projecting to the hippocampus,
says study lead author Andrés Finzi, researcher at the CRCHUM and a professor at the University of Montreal.
a professor of materials science at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. hey have found a way to significantly shrink the optics,
Distinguished Professor of Materials science and engineering at NC State and corresponding author of a paper describing the work.
a professor of aeronautics and astronautics at MIT, and principal developer of the mission-planning system. ith this system, we were showing we could safely zigzag all the way around the reef,
said Daniel Fletcher, an associate chair and professor of bioengineering, whose UC Berkeley lab pioneered the Cellscope. he video Cellscope provides accurate,
said aquatic ecologist Vincent Resh, a professor in UC Berkeley Department of Environmental science, Policy and Management. he research offering a phone-based app is ingenious,
a professor of physics at NYU and chair of the Chemical and Bioengineering Department at NYU Polytechnic School of engineering. ur research shows that this be done
a professor of cognitive science and co-author of the paper. e though it was probably true more widely,
says David Temperley, a professor at the University of Rochester, who along with his Rochester colleague Daniel Gildea has authored co a study comparing dependency length in English
Church is the Robert Winthrop Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical school and Professor of Health Sciences and Technology at Harvard and MIT.
M d.,Ph d.,who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical school and Boston Children Hospital,
and Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of engineering and Applied sciences o
#Bend me, shape me, any way you want me: Scientists curve nanoparticle sheets into complex forms Scientists have been making nanoparticles for more than two decades in two-dimensional sheets, three-dimensional crystals and random clusters.
professor of chemical physics at the Imperial College in London and a leading theorist on soft matter physics. hey advance significantly our ability to make new nanostructures with controlled shapes. n principle,
the David H. Koch (1962) Professor in Engineering in the Department of Materials science and engineering and a Koch Institute investigator who oversaw the sensor development. ather than waiting months to see
a research group led by Harold kipgarner, a professor in the departments of biological science, computer science, and basic science at Virginia Tech Carilion Medical school, analyzed an often ignored part of the human genome repetitive DNA sequences referred to as microsatellites.
and James Fox all professors of biological engineering at MIT had identified the presence of a lesion,
says John Essigmann, the William R. 1956) and Betsy P. Leitch Professor in Residence Professor of Chemistry, Toxicology and Biological engineering at MIT,
Motoharu Sakaue together with Maya Sieber-Blum, Professor of Stem Cell Sciences at the Institute of Genetic Medicine in Newcastle, investigated the possibility of making Schwann cells,
Professor Mark Bailey, Director of Armagh Observatory, said he Perseid meteor shower is one of the best and most reliable meteor showers of the year.
the John D. Macarthur Professor of Physics at MIT. e use ultracold atoms to map out
That long-range goal is moving toward reality thanks to an effort led by professors in the University of Wisconsin-Madison departments of computer sciences, psychology and educational psychology.
Timothy T. Rogers, a professor of cognitive psychology at UW-Madison and one of Zhu collaborators, explains how computer science
In addition to Zhu and Rogers, the UW research team includes computer sciences professors Michael Ferris, Bilge Mutlu andstephen Wright;
engineering professor Rob Nowak; psychology professor Martha Alibali; and educational psychology professorsmartina Rau and Percival Matthews. Machine teaching probes fundamental mathematical and scientific concepts.
In part because of that, the team research is open-ended at this stage h
#Scientists find a new way to manufacture graphene nanoribbons for future electronics There is no doubt that graphene is the key to the future of electronics.
Professor Michael Arnold, one of the authors of the study, said raphene nanoribbons that can be grown directly on the surface of a semiconductor like germanium are more compatible with planar processing that used in the semiconductor industry,
Professor Aneta Stefanovska of Lancaster University said: e used our knowledge of blood flow dynamics to pick up on markers
In this latest study, led by Michael Karin, Phd, Distinguished Professor of Pharmacology and Pathology, researchers traced the cells responsible for replenishing hepatocytes following chronic liver injury induced by exposure to carbon tetrachloride, a common environmental toxin.
CWRU M. Frank Rudy and Margaret Domiter Rudy Professor of biomedical engineering and an expert in molecular imaging for cancer and other diseases. e showed with this technique that we can detect very tiny tumors of just
Professor Jin-Chong Tan of the Department of Engineering science, who led the team, says: ecause of its fine-scale fibre network architecture,
In a world first, the group led by Professor Yasuo Ando of the Graduate school of Engineering in collaboration with Konica Minolta,
Led by materials science and engineering professor Kristopher Kilian, chemistry professorjeffrey Moore and graduate student Joshua Grolman, the team published its results in the journal Advanced Materials.
was a collaboration with Emory University Professor Pete Wenner and former graduate student Ming-fai Fong,
The team, led by nanoengineering professor Joseph Wang and electrical engineering professor Patrick Mercier, both from the University of California,
Professor Mete Atature, from the Cavendish Laboratory, Department of physics, and a Fellow of St john College at the University of Cambridge,
Shannon Hilton and Paul Jones The microfluidic technology, developed in the lab of professor Mark Hayes in the Department of chemistry and Biochemistry at Arizona State university, uses microscale electric field gradients, acting on extremely small samples,
Researchers from the MRC CDN, led by Professor Oscar Marín, have shed light on this problem by discovering that some neurons in the cerebral cortex can adapt their properties in response to changes in network activity such as those observed during learning of a motor task.
Professor Oscar Marín last author from the MRC CDN, said: ur study demonstrates the tremendous plasticity of the brain,
Mooney who is also the Robert P. Pinkas Family Professor of Bioengineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of engineering
The team included Georg Duda, Ph d.,who a Wyss Associate Faculty member and the director of the Julius Wolff Institute and Professor of Biomechanics and Musculoskeletal Regeneration at Charité Universitätsmedizin Berlin,
and Wyss Institute Founding Director Donald Ingber, M d.,Ph d.,who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical school and Boston Children Hospital and Professor of Bioengineering
Professor Nick Rawlinson, from the University of Aberdeen School of Geosciences, explained: hen material from a mantle plume reaches the base of the lithosphere it starts to melt,
According to Kevin Edgar, a professor of sustainable biomaterials and Meng doctoral adviser, the new method an get drugs to market,
With the help of Edgar and John Matson, a chemistry professor in the College of Science, Meng developed a method to successfully modify cellulose using cross-metathesis,
professor of engineering at Brown and senior author of a paper describing the new device. his is, to our knowledge,
Other authors on the study are Rajind Mendis, a research professor at Brown, and Yasuaki Monnai from Keio University in Tokyo.
said Martin Yarmush, the Paul and Mary Monroe Chair and Distinguished Professor of biomedical engineering at Rutgers and Ghodbane adviser.
said Gargus, director of the Center for Autism Research & Translation and professor of pediatrics and physiology & biophysics. qually exciting,
said Parker, a fellow of London Royal Society and UCI professor of neurobiology & behavior, who studies cellular calcium signaling.
and just hope for the best, said Wendell Lim, Phd, professor and chair of UCSF Department of Cellular and Molecular Pharmacology,
and too high-maintenance, said Tony Jun Huang, Penn State professor of engineering science and mechanics. ore importantly,
who is also a professor of biology at MIT. his reporter is a very important tool.
The design was created by the research group of Alexis Vallée-Bélisle, a professor in the Department of chemistry at University of Montreal. espite the power of current diagnostic tests,
Francesco Ricci, a professor at University of Rome Tor Vergata who also participated in this study,
The design was created by the research group of Alexis Vallée-Bélisle, a professor in the Department of chemistry at University of Montreal. espite the power of current diagnostic tests,
Francesco Ricci, a professor at University of Rome Tor Vergata who also participated in this study,
Study author Professor Kazem Rahimi, Deputy Director of the George Institute for Global Health UK, said that in face of earlier conflicting and inconclusive reports,
Professor Rahimi said that the link between hypertension and fatal heart issues had been documented well, but the connection to diabetes had been less clear. revious smaller studies have varied significantly
Professor Rahimi said the research also pooled together 30 prior studies that examined risk factors for diabetes. here were similar results in this section of the research with a 77%higher chance of getting diabetes for every 20 mm
Professor Rahimi said researchers could now examine the causal relationship between blood pressure and diabetes. t a minimum we know for certain that the link exists,
says Catherine Drennan, a professor of chemistry and biology at MIT. The findings are detailed this week in the journal Nature.
says Rowena Matthews, a professor emerita of biological chemistry at the University of Michigan, who has read the paper.
and Kobus Barnard, professor of computer science. Morrison, who also has a strong, academic background in developmental psychology, said,
the Ruth L. Siteman Professor of Pediatrics. t casts a broad net and can efficiently detect viruses that are present at very low levels.
It was authored by Cengiz Ozkan and Mihri Ozkan, both professors in the Bourns College of Engineering,
said Cengiz Ozkan, a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science and engineering. The nanoribbon-like architectures transform upon heat treatment into an interconnected porous network architecture
said Mihri Ozkan, a professor of electrical and computer engineering. Therefore, the UC Riverside team is focused on naturally-derived carbons,
said John Guy, M d.,professor of ophthalmology and director of the ocular gene therapy laboratory at the Bascom Palmer Eye Institute, University of Miami Miller School of medicine.
distinguished professor of chemistry and biochemistry and materials science and engineering, was published recently by the journal ACS Nano.
thanks to findings published today by Professor Gilbert Bernier of the University of Montreal and its affiliated Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital.
Professor Gilbert explained. ithin 45 days, the cones that we allowed to grow towards confluence spontaneously formed organised retinal tissue that was 150 microns thick.
Beyond the clinical applications, Professor Bernier findings could enable the modelling of human retinal degenerative diseases through the use of induced pluripotent stem cells,
UW professor emeritus of psychology and director of the lab work at the Washington National Primate Research center. o the extent that macaques mirror human physiology,
ASTECH Training Centre Researcher Professor Michael Breadmore said the design and development of the hemapen is a world-first
Professor Breadmore said. his is often time-consuming and costly for both the individual and health care systems.
Professor Breadmore said the Centre was aiming to bridge the gap between research and product development through the partnership with Trajan. he hemapen is an example of ASTECH core foundations;
#Next-generation perovskite solar cells made stable by metal oxide andwichucla professor Yang Yang, member of the California Nanosystems Institute, is renowned a world innovator of solar cell technology
professor of engineering at Brown and corresponding author on the paper. ach HIV contains about 10,000 nucleotides,
Church is the Robert Winthrop Professor of Genetics at Harvard Medical school and a Wyss core faculty member.
said David H. Sachs, director of the TBRC Laboratories at Massachusetts General Hospital, the Paul S. Russell Professor of Surgery Emeritus at HMS and professor of surgical sciences at Columbia
professor of neuroscience in Penn School of veterinary medicine and Perelman School of medicine, provides important clues for understanding how a father life experiences may affect his children brain development and mental health through a purely biological and not behavioral means. t remarkable to
Professor Gavin Giovannoni, Chair of Neurology at QMUL Blizard Institute, said: he phase III ocrelizumab results for both PPMS and RMS,
Professor in the Department of Materials at ETH Zurich and holder of a SNSF professorship grant. hey can be made much smaller than today memory modules,
Professor Alan Warren from the Cambridge Institute of Medical Research at the University of Cambridge, said:
the Selma and Herman Seldin Professor of Medicine. t does something that other components don do,
the study senior author and a professor and vice chair for research and programs in the UCLA department of neurology. he brain has limited a capacity for recovery after stroke,
and other processes, is described in a paper by Department of Mechanical engineering Professor Evelyn Wang, graduate student Jeremy Cho,
says Satish Kandlikar, a professor of mechanical engineering at the Rochester Institute of technology, who was involved not in this research. uch control strategies will dramatically alter the heat transfer paradigm in many applications,
said Robert Mckenna, Ph d.,a professor of biochemistry and molecular biology in the UF College of Medicine,
a bioengineering professor at the Jacobs School of engineering at UC San diego. Researchers describe their work in the journal Sensors. clinical need is
Led by U. of I. materials science and engineering professor Jianjun Cheng, the researchers published their findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. hen you have an infection,
and Raoul Kopelman, a chemist, materials scientist and the Richard Smalley Distinguished Professor of Chemistry, Physics and Applied Physics, set out to target
along with Dr. Samie Jaffrey, professor of pharmacology at Weill Cornell Medicine. Jun Zhou, a postdoctoral research associate in Qian lab, is the paper first author.
That is precisely what University of Washington mathematics professor Gunther Uhlmann was expecting when he and three colleagues proposed a means to develop an electromagnetic wormhole in a 2007 paper in Physical Review Letters.
and within the egg and the sperm, said Herr, a professor of cell biology in the School of medicine.
Assistant professor Taketomo Kido, Professor Atsushi Miyajima and their research group at the Laboratory of Cell Growth
said Ellington, professor in the Department of Molecular Biosciences and member of the UT Center for Systems and Synthetic biology.
something that can be used immediately in cancer diagnosis. Professor Tim Maughan, Clinical Director of the Cancer Research UK/Medical Research Council Oxford Institute for Radiation Oncology, said:
Professor Zhenqiang ackma, one of the developers of this project explained: his demonstration shows great potential in high-performance and flexible photodetection systems.
Brandeis University professor Lizbeth Hedstrom and University of Minnesota professor Courtney Aldrich, two of the study other research collaborators, had identified several inhibitor molecules that bind to IMPDH,
says Michael Oonnell, Anthony and Judith Evnin Professor, head of Rockefeller Laboratory of DNA Replication and a Howard hughes medical institute investigator.
the team enlisted the help of co-authors postdoc Yi Shi and Brian Chait, the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Professor at Rockefeller and head of the Laboratory of Mass Spectrometry and Gaseous Ion Chemistry.
Professor Nicola Sibson, study author and Cancer Research UK scientist at The University of Oxford, said:
Professor Charlie Swanton, NCRI chair and Cancer Research UK scientist at the Francis Crick Institute, said:
says Bruno Reichart, a professor at the University of Munich, who leads a German consortium developing transgenic pigs. t very cumbersome.
a professor of nuclear science and engineering and the center director, published a conceptual design in July for a machine called the ARC reactor (ffordable, robust, compact.
Working with the thermoelectric base material strontium titanium oxide, the team led by Professors Ian Kinloch and Robert Freer has found that making it into a composite with grapheme could be advantageous.?
nonvolatile computer memory, said James Tour, professor of materials science, nanoengineering and computer science at Rice university. While current flash technology requires three electrodes per circuit,
professor of electrical and computer engineering at Duke. heepth of the cavitiesffects the pitch of the sound they make,
It was developed in the lab of materials science professor Joanna Aizenberg, whose team has been working on Slippery Liquid-Infused Porous Surfaces (SLIPS) since 2011. o far,
Bruce Drinkwater, Professor of Ultrasonics in Bristol University Department of Mechanical engineering said: e all know that sound waves can have a physical effect.
Sriram Subramanian, Professor of Informatics at Sussex University and cofounder of Ultrahaptics, added: n our device we manipulate objects in mid-air
Bruce Drinkwater, Professor of Ultrasonics in Bristol University Department of Mechanical engineering said: e all know that sound waves can have a physical effect.
Sriram Subramanian, Professor of Informatics at Sussex University and cofounder of Ultrahaptics, added: n our device we manipulate objects in mid-air
a professor at the University of Chicago Institute for Molecular Engineering. o people can use these concepts ncorporation of a new element
a professor of chemistry at the University of Wisconsin. o it not just about achieving higher efficiency,
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