Led by professor Monica Craciun, the team has used this technique to create the first transparent and flexible touch-sensor that could enable the development of artificial skin for use in robot manufacturing."
"said Yingfu Li, a professor in the Departments of Biochemistry and Biomedical sciences, Chemistry and Chemical Biology."
"says Dr. Barbara Sherman, a clinical professor of behavioral medicine. Much of the technology comes off the shelf
"says Dr. Barbara Sherman, a clinical professor of behavioral medicine. Much of the technology comes off the shelf
Co-lead author of the study professor Andrew Tobin said that the understanding of malaria's survival in the blood stream was a real breakthrough
Professor Patrick Maxwell, chair of the MRC's Molecular and Cellular Medicine Board, said tackling malaria was a global challenge,
"said Paula M Mendes, professor of Advanced Materials and Nanotechnology at the University of Birmingham."
The new technology, developed by Professor Gin Jose and a team in the Faculty of engineering at the University of Leeds,
The results of a pilot clinical study, carried out at the Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine under the supervision of Professor Peter Grant,
The new technology, developed by Professor Gin Jose and a team in the Faculty of engineering at the University of Leeds,
The results of a pilot clinical study, carried out at the Leeds Institute of Cardiovascular and Metabolic Medicine under the supervision of Professor Peter Grant,
the government is now working on a code of practice for driverless cars. The code will likely be published in the spring,
Among others, these include people with nonverbal autism, people with nonverbal learning disorders, people with ALS, people with Rett Syndrome,
It definitely a very strong emerging area, said Professor Elena Lurie-Luke, head of Procter & gamble Global Life sciences Open Innovation.
and is currently finishing his MBA degree at Isam-Iae University in France. And with their bioprinting goals in mind
so the learning curve is hardly a learning curve any more, Easton added. The algorithms operating the hand have incorporated even options for smaller and larger weights,
#MIT professor develops highly stretchable & tough hydrogels for 3d printing ears, noses & joints Jun 3,
added David Mooney, a professor of bioengineering at Harvard university. his builds off earlier work using other polymer systems,
and production and to ultimately create a learning center for sustainable building design. If all goes as scheduled,
which is currently being developed by Professor Jayanta Sahu along with his colleagues from the University of Southampton's Zepler Institute and co-investigator Dr Shoufeng Yang from the Faculty of engineering and Environment,
and microstructured fibre geometries) in silica and other host glass materials,"says Professor Sahu.""Our proposed process can be utilised to produce complex preforms,
and high-power lasers,"added Professor Sahu.""This is something that has never been tried before and we are excited about starting this project. r
It has already been applied very successfully to thousands of patients, Professor Xu Tao from Tsinghua University,
when Xu Tao was still a Phd student in the US at the team of Thomas Boland the father of 3d bioprinted organs.
or for further learning about how cells communicate with each other in the body he cells in our bodies communicate by adding proteins onto their surfaces,
professor of bioengineering and one of the researchers on the team. t is quite important to have these kinds of mobile devices,
Siyi, a Computer & Control engineering student at Nankai University, explains, his way, people with disabilities will be able to feel the relative temperature level of an object.
Several students and I designed this emperature-sensitive prosthetic handto bring increased safety and authenticity of experience for persons with disabilities using a prosthetic.
from being sacrificed, year after year, at the altar of dissection in classrooms and laboratories across the world.
That dissection of these unfortunately chosen animals is a learning tool used by 84 percent of those imparting pre-college education.
All this for every one of thirty students in a class for every one of 300-500 students in a grade, in every school or university, every year.
But Necropsynth intends to change all this, and they can because 3d printing can. So what exactly is Necropsynth?
Their next project will model a frog the most commonly dissected organism in the classroom,
Necropsynth can put anatomical science education in the hands of every student in the USAS a starter.
The research spearheaded by Aydogan Ozcan, associate director of the California Nanosystems Institute, Dino Di Carlo, professor of bioengineering,
University of Bristol Professor Duncan Wass was quoted by the Independent as saying that the self-healing products could be available to consumers in the near future.
Stoddart is the Board of trustees Professor of Chemistry in Northwestern Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences. ll living organisms,
Chuyang Cheng, a fourth-year graduate student in Stoddart laboratory and first author of the paper has spent his Ph d. studies researching molecules that mimic nature biochemical machinery.
An observation by William Dempsey, post-doc in the group of ETH professor Periklis Pantazis, led to the new application.
ETH professor Pantazis and his colleagues then had an idea of how this finding could be deployed in light microscopy.
said Nicholas Hud, a professor in Georgia Tech School of Chemistry and Biochemistry. ith this work,
"said Zhenan Bao, the senior author of the study and a professor of chemical engineering at Stanford."
and high electronic conductivity,"said graduate student John To, a co-lead author of the study."
Everett Carpenter, Ph d.,a professor in the Department of chemistry and director of the VCU's Nanoscience and Nanotechnology Program, said the new material is"already showing promise, even for applications beyond permanent magnets."
Together with our collaborators and students, we are increasing our understanding of the critical interactions between drugs and medical coatings,
such as an ultrahigh vacuum,"said Hiroshi Yabuno, a professor at the University of Tsukaba in Japan.
Yabuno's graduate students Daichi Endo and Keiichi Higashino performed the measurements, and Yasuyuki Yamamoto and Sohei Matsumoto, collaborators at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology, constructed the coupled microcantilevers using MEMS device manufacturing methods.
the Lester Wolfe Professor of Physics at MIT, states that tuning friction could help in creating nanomachines such as tiny robots,
Vuletic, along with graduate students Alexei Bylinskii and Dorian Gangloff, publish their results in the journal Science.
Tobias Schaetz, a professor of physics at the University of Freiburg in Germany, sees the results as a lear breakthroughin gaining insight into therwise inaccessible fundamental physics.
Professor of Chemistry, an international team of researchers developed a method for fabricating nanoscale electronic scaffolds that can be injected via syringe.
Ken Gethard, a former doctoral student who helped him develop it, is the co-inventor on the patent."
I imagined doing as a student and now my vision is being realized through the launch of Molescope#,
While a graduate student at SFU (she earned a Phd in computing science in 2012 under supervisor
and professor emeritus Stella Atkins) Sadeghi and her team also developed the UV Canada app for skin cancer awareness and prevention.
when he was a graduate student. The work combines his expertise in manipulating droplet fluid dynamics with a fundamental element of computer science an operating clock."
The crucial clockfor nearly a decade since he was in graduate school, an idea has been nagging at Prakash:
and in the early stages of the project, Prakash recruited a graduate student, Georgios"Yorgos"Katsikis,
"said graduate student and co-author Jim Cybulski.""That lends itself very well to a variety of applications."
Wang Fon-Jen Professor of Mechanical engineering at Columbia Engineering and co-author of the study. In order to develop fully integrated'photonic'circuits,
co-lead author and professor in the department of physics and astronomy at Seoul National University said,
. a professor of chemistry at Tufts and senior author on the paper, worked with iodine-125 radioactive isotope that is routinely used in cancer therapies.
An international collaboration with Angelos Michaelides, Ph d.,a professor of theoretical chemistry at UCL, and Philipp Pedevilla, a doctoral candidate at UCL, helped interpret these images
and in Talloires, France, is recognized among the premier research universities in the United states. Tufts enjoy a global reputation for academic excellence and for the preparation of students as leaders in a wide range of professions.
and collaboration among the faculty and students in the undergraduate, graduate and professional programs across the university's schools is encouraged widely.
Yurii Gun'ko, professor at Trinity college and co-director of International Research and Education Centre for Physics of Nanostructures at ITMO University comments on potential applications of the method developed by the group:
"says lead investigator Subroto Chatterjee, Ph d.,a professor of medicine and pediatrics at the Johns hopkins university School of medicine and a metabolism expert at its Heart and Vascular Institute."
The next step, said Professor Clare P. Grey, the senior author on the paper, s to use this new approach to understand why different ions behave differently on charging, an ultimately design systems with much higher capacitances.
Invented by Microchips Biotech cofounders Michael Cima, the David H. Koch Professor of Engineering, and Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor, the microchips consist of hundreds of pinhead-sized reservoirs,
each capped with a metal membrane, that store tiny doses of therapeutics or chemicals. An electric current delivered by the device removes the membrane,
and then-graduate student John Santini Phd 9 co-founded Microchips, and invented a prototype for their microchip that was described in a paper published that year in Nature.
Professor of Chemistry at the University of Toronto. am pleased to partner with Bruker to expand the great potential of ssnom as a versatile tool for broader scientific discovery. nspire is a nanoscale characterization system that extends atomic force microscopy into the chemical
a professor in the OSU College of Engineering. ut the heat needed for most applications of silver nanoparticles has limited their use.
and we could never have managed with just four students in the lab. We would have required the equivalent of nearly 40,000 years of processing power on a single computer.
"The students from Tsinghua are remarkable. The project represents the very positive cooperation between the two universities,
was made in the lab of Federico Capasso, the Robert L. Wallace Professor of Applied Physics and Vinton Hayes Senior Research Fellow in Electrical engineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of engineering and Applied science (SEAS)."
and graduate student in the Capasso lab."It's important that we not only observed these wakes
Professor Paula Mendes said, "There are two key benefits here. Crucially for the patient, it gives a much more accurate reading
Professor Mendes added""Biomarkers such as glycoproteins are essential in diagnostics as they do not rely on symptoms perceived by the patient,
Professor Mendes said, "It is essentially a lock, and the only key that will fit is the specific prostate cancer glycoprotein that we're looking for.
and his students live in a cotton-soft nano world, where they create clothing that kills bacteria, conducts electricity, wards off malaria,
Taking advantage of cotton irregular topography, Hinestroza and his students added conformal coatings of gold nanoparticles,
Two of Hinestroza students created a hooded bodysuit embedded with insecticides using metal organic framework molecules,
Other students have used MOFS to create a mask and hood capable of trapping toxic gases in a selective manner.
and other threats,"says Dr. Aly Fathy, Professor, Department of Electrical and Computer engineering at UT Knoxville."
modeling and testing,"says Dr. Ahmad Hoorfar, Professor and Director of Antenna Research Laboratory, Department of Electrical and Computer engineering, Villanova University y
One of Dr Royle Phd students was examining structures called mitotic spindles in dividing cells using a technique called tomography
r Royle and Professor Ian Prior at the University of Liverpool have made significant inroads into our understanding of the way in
Our specially selected scientific committee includes some of the UK leading professors, award-winning scientists and pioneering professionals. arwick Medical school division of biomedical cell biology carries out fundamental molecular and cellular research into biomedical problems.
San diego graduate student has found a way to use mass-produced graphene, an allotrope of carbon that is one atom-thick.
said Zaretski. wanted to go to a graduate school where my ideas would not only be accepted, but embraced and nurtured.
Velev, INVISTA Professor of Chemical and Biomolecular engineering at NC State. The nanoparticles infused with silver ions were utilized to attack Pseudomonas aeruginosa, disease-causing bacteria;
Co-authors of the PNAS research were Danny King, formerly a UCLA graduate student in chemistry and biochemistry;
Kang L. Wang, a UCLA professor of electrical engineering; Liang He, formerly a postdoctoral scholar in Wang lab;
Xufeng Kou, formerly a graduate student in Wang lab; Gerald Morris and Masrur Hossain at TRIUMF;
Gregory Fiete, a professor at the University of Texas, Austin; and Mercouri Kanatzidis, a professor at Northwestern University.
Source: http://www. ucla. edu h
#New Multispectral Microscope for Studying Impact of Experimental Drugs on Biological Samples This is the largest such microscopic image ever created.
in turn has a strong effect on the electrical conduction of grapheneexplains Professor Mischa Bonn, Director at the MPI-P. The study,
pushing their response times to be as short as a picosecond. he results of this study will help improve the performance of graphene-based nanoelectronic devices such as ultra-high speed transistors and photodetectorssays Professor Dmitry Turchinovich,
Erik Bakkers, TU/e professor and research head, stated that it is not just the yield,
"Mirkin is the George B. Rathmann Professor of Chemistry in the Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences and professor of medicine, chemical and biological engineering, biomedical engineering and materials science and engineering.
Ferdinand Brandl and Nicolas Bertrand, the two lead authors, are former postdocs in the laboratory of Robert Langer, the David H. Koch Institute Professor at MIT Koch Institute
UW-Madison chemical engineering Professor Manos Mavrikakis and his collaborators have turned to the nanoscale structure of particles,
a graduate student in Mavrikakis'lab."We're also able to use more of the platinum atoms than we were before--at best,
and researchers at Georgia Tech--led by professor Younan Xia--Oak ridge National Laboratory, Arizona State university and Xiamen University in China a
said Younan Xia, a professor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University.
The co-authors of the paper include Professor Manos Mavrikakis and researchers Luke Roling and Jeffrey Herron from the University of Wisconsin-Madison
Miaofang Chi from Oak ridge National Laboratory, Professor Jingyue Liu from Arizona State university, Professor Zhaoxiong Xie from Xiamen University,
In a seminal paper in the scientific journal"Nature Photonics",Juerg Leuthold, professor of photonics and communications at ETH Zurich,
The plasmon-trickfor this sleight of hand the researchers led by Leuthold and his doctoral student Christian Haffner who contributed to the development of the modulator, use a technical trick.
"as the ETH professor puts it in a nutshell. At present the reliability of the modulator is being tested in long term trials,
or three times a year,"said Biondo Biondi, professor of geophysics at Stanford's School of Earth sciences.
a student of Biondi's who is now a postdoctoral scientist at the University of Edinburgh,
what starts the race says Zhi-Yang Tsun a graduate student in Sabatini's lab and co-first author of the Science paper.
or off says Shuyu Wang another Sabatini lab graduate student and co-first author of the Science paper.
Leo Laughlin, a Phd student from the University EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training (CDT) in Communications, together with MSC student Chunqing Zhang, supervisors Professor Mark Beach and Dr Kevin Morris,
who is in the first cohort of students in the CDT in Communications, said: ntil now there has been unsolved a fundamental problem with radio communication.
Mark Beach, Professor of Radio Systems Engineering commented: n addition to EPSRC investment in Doctoral Training Centres at Bristol, we have also been awarded equipment funding.
Danehorn and Holmström formed the company, Neosense Technology, with Lars Åke Brodin, a professor of medical engineering at KTH, with the hope of bringing their technology to market by 2018."
Developed by a team led by experimental physicist Cody Youngbull, assistant research professor in the School of Earth and Space exploration,
A 39-bit accumulation register and 128 times gain configuration make this device ideal for both heavy
The analyzer is certified fully for use in hazardous areas around the world, with accreditations from ATEX, IECEX and ccsaus C
Classmates Megan Carney, Joseph Hajj, Joseph Heaney and Welles Sakmar each 22 years old and graduated from Johns Hopkins last month spent their senior year researching,
they then challenged a student to try to break into their invention. e took a hammer and other tools to it, from a hacksaw to a drill,
The future potential of the device is highlighted by co-senior author Zhen Gu, Phd, a professor in the Joint UNC/NC State department of Biomedical engineering:"
Jiching Yu, PNAS first author and a Phd student in Gu labhyaluronic acid and 2-nitromidazole were connected to create a new double ended molecule, with one side hydrophilic and the other hydrophobic.
an MIT graduate student in electrical engineering and computer science and first author on the new paper. e need to regulate the input to extract the maximum power,
the Joseph F. and Nancy P. Keithley Professor in Electrical engineering, use an inductor, which is a wire wound into a coil.
The new work carried out by Professor Takao Someya and his team at the University of Tokyo's Graduate school of Engineering has resulted in the fabrication of an elastic
and easily printable conducting ink that can be patterned on textiles with a single printing step.
Professors in Warwick Nano-Silicon Group, Physics department, Evan Parker and Terry Whall, led the team
Professor Parker commented, e were surprised very when our first very crude prototype showed such impressive speed
Professors Parker and Whall are currently working on a demonstrator of the device having been awarded a £100,
Warwick Ventures, Warwick technology transfer business, has helped the professors to create a spin out company, Q-Eye Ltd,
along with graduate student Benjamin Johnson who helped lead the study, have discovered that ethoxzolamide, a sulfa-based compound found in many prescription glaucoma drugs,
#Graduates in work but earning less Graduates in England have seen a fall in their median salary of more than £1, 000 in the past five years, according to official statistics.
But more are in work than at any time since 2007, suggests Department for Business, Innovation and Skills data.
And graduates still earn almost £10, 000 a year more than people without degrees-though the highest earners are those with postgraduate qualifications.
graduates typically earned £31, 200, while non-graduates were paid £22, 100, a gap of £9, 100.
But in the same period of 2010, graduates typically earned £32, 396, some £1, 196 more than they do now.
There was better news for those with postgraduate qualifications, whose median salaries rose from £37, 180 to £39, 000 during the past five years,
as well as for non-graduates, whose median salaries went up from £20, 800 to £22, 100, according to the figures.
Some 87.5%of working-age graduates were employed during the three months to March-the highest proportion since the end of 2007
%This compares with an employment rate of 69.3%for non-graduates. The figures also suggest an improving employment market for graduates aged between 21 and 30, with only 3. 9%unemployed, again the lowest for this time of year since 2007,
when it was 3. 5%."Making the leap from university to the'real world'of work is becoming easier,
"However, TUC general secretary Frances O'Grady said the overall prospects of young graduates were worsening."
and more likely to have a job than non-graduates of the same age, today's figures show their prospects are worsening,
"Many graduates are now finding themselves doing lower-skilled, lower-paid jobs.""This is in turn pushing young people who don't have a degree out of work altogether."
"Working-age graduates still benefit from a significant earnings premium of, on average, £9, 000 per year over non-graduates."
"Teachers cannot be turned into spies in the classroom.""Head teachers'leader Russell Hobby said schools should see the regulations in terms of"safeguarding"and not"surveillance"."
Teachers will have to assess the risk of pupils being drawn into extremist ideologies. There will be training for staff to identify children at risk
"Schools will have to ensure that pupils do not access extremist material online. Mr Hobby, leader of the National Association of Head teachers, said schools should"see their duties on radicalisation as another safeguarding duty"."
""Schools are used to keeping their students safe from harm and this is a version of that.
This means looking out for students rather than conducting surveillance on them.""It means understanding the risk and acting proportionately.
"Ms Blower warned that concerns over extremism could"close down"the classroom debates which could encourage democracy and human rights.
French and US researchers have developed a learning algorithm that enables robots to adapt very quickly
Most of the development of the system was done by Antoine Cully, a Phd student working with Dr Mouret.
professor of virology at the University of Nottingham said:""It is a technology which is applied probably best on a population-basis rather than an individual patient basis
but some copper interconnectors can be replaced with light and photodetector devices,"Professor Ritesh Agarwal, who led this study at the University of Pennsylvania,
"explained Professor Ritesh Agarwal. This is a step towards engineering new, useful properties by changing the geometry of a material l
"said chemistry professor Duncan Wass.""But micro-cracks can lead to catastrophic failures.""The technology could also be applied to other products made of carbon composite materials-including bicycle frames and wind turbines,
The head of Baidu's deep learning lab Yu Kai has told previously the press that the firm does not agree with Google's view of a completely autonomous car,
and was led by Paulo Stanga, consultant ophthalmologist and vitreo-retinal surgeon at Manchester Royal Eye Hospital and professor of ophthalmology and retinal regeneration at the University of Manchester.
Stoddart is the Board of trustees Professor of Chemistry in Northwestern's Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences."
Chuyang Cheng, a fourth-year graduate student in Stoddart's laboratory and first author of the paper, has spent his Ph d. studies researching molecules that mimic nature's biochemical machinery.
"said Jonathan Kipnis, Phd, professor in the UVA Department of Neuroscience and director of UVA's Center for Brain Immunology and Glia (BIG)."
"In Alzheimer's, there are accumulations of big protein chunks in the brain, "Kipnis said.""We think they may be accumulating in the brain
"says Tsuyoshi Hirota, a chronobiologist and an associate professor at ITBM, who works with Steve Kay, a principal investigator at ITBM and a professor at the University of Southern California."
"Tsuyoshi Oshima is a graduate student in Itami's group and worked closely with the biologists at ITBM to synthesize molecules for studying structure-activity relationships (SARS)."Through SAR studies on the molecular derivatives of KL001,
"says Takashi Yoshimura, an animal biologist and professor at ITBM, who also led this research from a biological perspective."
"says Stephan Irle, a theoretical chemist and a professor at ITBM, who also co-led this research."
Peter Facchini, professor in biological sciences, Jill Hagel, research associate, and Scott Farrow, Phd student. Many people who live in developing countries do not have access to the pain relief that comes from morphine or other analgesics.
That's because opiates are derived primarily from the opium poppy plant (Papaver somniferum) and are dependent on the plant health and supply around the world.
After years of leading research on the opium poppy, University of Calgary scientists, Peter Facchini, his Phd student, Scott Farrow,
codeine and oxycodone,"says Facchini, professor of biological sciences in the Faculty of science and an internationally recognized expert on the opium poppy."
Rodrigues, a Phd student, and Sergey Lekomtsev, a postdoc, working in the group led by Buzz Baum of the MRC Laboratory for Molecular Cell biology at University college London.
Dr Kim Good-Jacobson, Professor David Tarlinton and colleagues from the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute discovered the presence of a protein called Myb was essential for antibody-producing plasma cells to migrate into bone marrow,
"Professor Tarlinton said the discovery would mean researchers could now search for the trigger of Myb production
"said Kevin Healy, a UC Berkeley professor of bioengineering, who is co-senior author of the study with Dr. Bruce Conklin, a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular disease and a professor of medical genetics and cellular and molecular pharmacology at UC San francisco."
"This technology could help us quickly screen for drugs likely to generate cardiac birth defects, and guide decisions about
Lead author Professor John Ladbury Dean of the University of Leeds'Faculty of Biological sciences and Professor of Mechanistic Biology, said:"
"There has been huge investment in sequencing the human genome with the idea that if we get all the relevant genetic information we can predict
Professor Ladbury said:""From the patient's point of view, the key findings are that these proteins are biomarkers.
Professor Jennifer Doudna, have called for a worldwide moratorium on the use of CRISPR/Cas9 in human embryos
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