NUS)( click on image to enlarge) The team from the National University of Singapore (NUS)- Mr Li Changjian, a graduate student from the NUS Graduate school for Integrative Sciences and Engineering, Assistant professor Ariando and Professor
who is a Phd graduate from NUSNNI, working with Professor Hans Hilgenkamp at the MESA+Institute of the University of Twente in The netherlands.
which was discovered by Distinguished Professor Michel W. Barsoum, Phd, head of the MAX/MXENE Research Group, more than two decades ago.
That order was imposed by Michel W. Barsoum, Phd and Yury Gogotsi, Phd, Distinguished University and Trustee Chair professor in the College of Engineering and head of the Drexel Nanomaterials Group
"written by MIT doctoral student Mingda Li, postdoc Cui-Zu Chang, professor of nuclear science and engineering Ju Li, senior scientist Jagadeesh Moodera,
a professor of physics at Tsinghua University in China who was involved not in this work. The three areas, he says,
"said Patankar, a professor of mechanical engineering in the Mccormick School of engineering and Applied science.""My lab likes to defy normal experience.
He is a Ph d. student in Patankar's research group. The researchers focused on the nanoscopic structure of surfaces,
Professor of Physical chemistry at the University of Zurich, succeeded in the controlled spatial manipulation of matter on the nanometer scale.
"said Melik Demirel, professor of engineering science and mechanics, Penn State.""There are other materials that are self healing,
"says Alex Dean, co-author of a paper on the work and an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at NC State.
"Dean explains.""This eliminates the need for a separate processor or controller circuit on the power converter itself,
"Dean says. The researchers made two prototype converters using the new technique and compared them to dozens of other compatible power converters on the market
"Dean says.""Our best prototype had 95 percent efficiency. And both had component costs of about 50 cents.
who is also the Samsung Distinguished Professor of Nanoscience and Nanotechnology at the University of California Berkeley,
Lead author of the study Professor Graham Hutchings, Director of the Cardiff Catalysis Institute, said:"
"Co-author of the study Professor Stuart Taylor, Deputy Director of the Cardiff Catalysis Institute, said:"
"Professor Matthew Rosseinsky, Professor of Inorganic chemistry at the University of Liverpool, who was not part of the study,
Two Virginia Tech chemical engineering faculty members, Luke Achenie and Hongliang Xin, along with Xianfeng Ma and Zheng Li from Xin research group,
authored the article in the peer-reviewed journal. his is the first example of learning from data in catalysis. We anticipate that this new approach will have a huge impact in future materials design,
David Kaplan, Ph d.,professor and Director of the NIH P41 Resource Center on Tissue Engineering, Alessandra Balduini, M d,
a George Holmes University Professor of physics. ou don have to do this on the fly. aving a way to know what youe inputting into an unknown situation is important.
"said University of Minnesota mechanical engineering professor Michael Mcalpine, the study's lead researcher.""Someday we hope that we could have a 3d scanner
"Learning from Nature One of the greatest successes of the 20th century has been the development of digital computers.
"said Felipe Garcia Quiroz, a former graduate student in Chilkoti's laboratory and first author of the new study.
says James Collins, the Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering and Science in MIT Department of Biological engineering and Institute of Medical Engineering and Science (IMES).
a professor of biotechnology and bioengineering at The swiss Federal Institute of technology in Zurich, described this experiment as an legant proof of conceptthat could lead to greatly improved treatments for viral infection. entinel designer cells engineered with the DNA sense
Lewis is a Core Faculty member at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard university and the Hansjörg Wyss Professor of Biologically Inspired Engineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of engineering and Applied sciences (SEAS.
who is the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical school and Boston Children's Hospital as well as Professor of Bioengineering AT SEAS."
a UCLA professor of physics and astronomy and a member of UCLA California Nanosystems Institute, is published Sept. 21 in the online edition of the journal Nature Materials("Three-dimensional coordinates of individual atoms
Professor Wolfram Pernice explains. Pernice headed a working group of the KIT Institute of Nanotechnology (INT)
but also with latest processors, Professor Harish Bhaskaran of Oxford university adds. The new memory can store data for decades even
"Professor David Wright, from the University of Exeters Engineering department said: With our prototype we have, for the first time,
Professor Wolfram Pernice, from the Institute of Physics at Mnster University and who led the work said:
or more, adds Professor Harish Bhaskaran from Oxford university in England, one of the lead co-authors,
CMP Director, Professor Min Gu, said: he newly demonstrated laser nano-patterning method in graphene oxides holds the key to fast processing and programming of high capacity information for big data sectors.
Professor Dan Li, Co-director of the Monash Centre for Atomically Thin Material, which provided the graphene oxide film for this research said this work opens up a new high-tech application for graphene oxide
The design was created by the research group of Alexis Vallée-Bélisle, a professor in the Department of chemistry at University of Montreal."
Francesco Ricci, a professor at University of Rome Tor Vergata who also participated in this study,
a team of researchers led by Professor Lim Chwee Teck from NUS Department of Biomedical engineering achieves a significant technological breakthrough by adopting a liquid-based pressure sensing method in the design of such sensors.
Ph d. Omenetto is associate dean for research, professor of biomedical engineering and Frank C. Doble professor at Tufts School of engineering and also holds an appointment in physics in the School of arts and Sciences.
The research team reported similar results in vitro and in a preliminary in vivo study in mice e
"said senior author Holger Schmidt, the Kapany Professor of Optoelectronics at UC Santa cruz.""We're detecting the nucleic acids directly,
"says Leif Holmlid, Professor Emeritus at the University of Gothenburg. No radiation The new fusion process can take place in relatively small laser-fired fusion reactors fuelled by heavy hydrogen (deuterium.
senior author and UW physics professor Jens Gundlach.""We can really pick up atomic-scale movements that a protein imparts onto DNA."
according to co-author and UW physics doctoral student Jonathan Craig. They even discovered that these two steps involve sequential chemical processes that the protein uses to walk along DNA."
the Goizueta Foundation Professor of Biomedical engineering. anoparticles are large enough to keep from going through the skin surface,
said co-author Michael Girardi, a professor of dermatology at Yale Medical school. n fact, the indirect damage was worse
The research group of Associate professor Masakazu Sugiyama and Project Professor Katsushi Fujii (Graduate school of Engineering
"said Kenneth Goodfellow, a graduate student in the laboratory of the Quantum Optoelectronics and Optical Metrology Group, The Institute of Optics, University of Rochester, New york."
Professor Hartmut Loewen of the University of Düsseldorf d
#A quantum logic gate in silicon built for the for the first time (w/video) The significant advance, by a team at the University of New south wales (UNSW) in Sydney appears today in the international journal Nature("A two-qubit logic gate in silicon"."
"said team leader Andrew Dzurak, Scientia Professor and Director of the Australian National Fabrication Facility at UNSW."
But the UNSW team-working with Professor Kohei M. Itoh of Japan's Keio University-has done just that for the first time.
Karnik and former graduate student Tarun Jain, along with Benjamin Rasera, Ricardo Guerrero, Michael Boutilier, and Sean Oern from MIT and Juan-carlos Idrobo from Oak ridge National Laboratory, publish their results today in the journal Nature Nanotechnology("Heterogeneous sub-continuum ionic transport in statistically isolated graphene nanopores").
graduate student in the field of applied physics. t an exciting area to start looking at
and in this way we can measure the resistance at different positions in a skyrmionsays Christian Hanneken, a Phd student in the group of Prof.
and developed a simple model for this effect as the Phd student Fabian Otte explains.
but we are looking forward to improve our sensing platform even more"said Simona Ranallo, a Phd student in the group of Prof.
says Susan Lindquist, a professor of biology at MIT, member of the Whitehead Institute, and one of the senior authors of the paper, which appears in the Oct 8 issue of Cell("Sensitivity-Enhanced NMR Reveals Alterations in Protein Structure by Cellular Milieus").
"Robert Griffin, an MIT professor of chemistry and director of the Francis Bitter Magnet Laboratory, is also a senior author of the paper.
and a professor at Florida State university. ou don have to crystallize the proteins, you don have to put them into a uniform solution.
Atif Shamim and Swanlund Chair Professor John Rogers of University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign, reports their findings in the October 6, 2015 online edition of Advanced Functional Materials
""Six plus seven makes three-plus one carried over",calculated Professor Hermann Kohlstedt, Head of the Nanoelectronic group at Kiel University.
"said Professor Hermann Kohlstedt and his colleague from Bochum, Dr Thomas Mussenbrock to describe the research results.
lead study author and professor and chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Neuroscience at Nebraska,
antifouling materials developed in the lab of Joanna Aizenberg, the Amy Smith Berylson Professor of Materials science and core faculty member of the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard university.
"said Mary jane Shultz, Ph d.,professor of chemistry in the School of arts and Sciences at Tufts University."
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,
"says UNSW Scientia Professor Michelle Simmons, study co-author and Director of the CQC2T.""The great thing about this work,
"says University of Melbourne Professor Lloyd Hollenberg, Deputy Director of the CQC2T who led the work with colleague Dr Charles Hill."
and parallel operation essential for scaling up the size of the quantum processor,"says Scientia Professor Sven Rogge, Head of the UNSW School of Physics."
"said Ellington, professor in the Department of Molecular Biosciences and member of the UT Center for Systems and Synthetic biology."
and Joel Schneider, who was a professor at UD and now is in the Chemical Biology laboratory at the National Cancer Institute.
while he was a professor in UD's Department of chemistry and Biochemistry, and Darrin Pochan, professor and chair of UD's Department of Materials science and engineering.
Nagy-Smith did the microscopy using a transmission electron microscope at the National Cancer Institute to show how the fibers change
"said Mauricio Terrones, professor of physics, chemistry and materials science at Penn State.""We were previously able to dope graphene with atoms of nitrogen,
Bioengineering graduate student Samantha Paulsen and research technician Anderson Ta worked together to develop a proof-of-concept construct--a small silicone gel about the size of a small candy gummy bear--using 3-D printing.
Professor Peter Waterhouse, a plant geneticist at QUT, discovered the gene in the ancient Australian native tobacco plant Nicotiana benthamiana, known as Pitjuri to indigenous Aboriginals tribes.
Professor Waterhouse made the discovery while tracing the history of the Pitjuri plant, which for decades has been used by geneticists as a model plant upon
"Professor Waterhouse, a molecular geneticist with QUT's Centre for Tropical Crops and Biocommodities, said scientists could use this discovery to investigate other niche
Professor Waterhouse said the team's findings also have implications for future genetic research back here On earth."
Professor Waterhouse said the fact that the N. benthamiana variety from central Australia had doubled its seed size also opened the door for investigations into how N. benthamiana could be used commercially as a biofactory,
Researchers around the world can access Professor Waterhouse's open source website to study the genomes of seven family members.
Dr Bally and Professor Waterhouse have lodged a patent on their study (Organisms with Modified Growth Characteristics and Methods of Making Them) and a research paper,
Led by Hongrui Jiang, professor of electrical and computer engineering at UW-Madison, the researchers designed lenses no larger than the head of a pin and embedded them within flexible plastic.
graduate student Jayer Fernandes and recent graduate Aditi Kanhere--are exploring ways to integrate the lenses into existing optical detectors and directly incorporate silicon electronic components into the lenses themselves s
Led by Hongrui Jiang, professor of electrical and computer engineering at UW-Madison, the researchers designed lenses no larger than the head of a pin and embedded them within flexible plastic.
graduate student Jayer Fernandes and recent graduate Aditi Kanhere--are exploring ways to integrate the lenses into existing optical detectors and directly incorporate silicon electronic components into the lenses themselves s
a graduate student and first author of the study published in Nano Letters("Mechanically Self-Assembled, Three-dimensional Grapheneold Hybrid Nanostructures for Advanced Nanoplasmonic Sensors").
ACES Director and research author Professor Gordon Wallace said that the breakthrough is significant progress in the quest to create a bench-top brain that will enable important insights into brain function,
Professor Wallace said. To create their six-layered structure, researchers developed a custom bio-ink containing naturally occurring carbohydrate materials.
Professor Wallace said. his paves the way for the use of more sophisticated printers to create structures with much finer resolution. 3d printing of layered brain-like structures using peptide modified gellan gum substrates
Dr. Benveniste, Principal investigator and a Professor in the Departments of Anesthesiology and Radiology at Stony Brook University School of medicine, has used dynamic contrast MRI for several years to examine the glymphatic pathway in rodent models.
says Richard Futrell, a Phd student in the Department of Brain and Cognitive sciences at MIT,
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
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,
the researchers predict that accumulation of the lesions would increase the mutation rate of a cell up to 30-fold,
and the large number of participants who reflect the general adult population rather than just college students.
Unlike most previous research, the new study included a large sample size that reflects the general adult population and not just young college students;
Professor Ole A. Andreassen and his research team have collaborated with Optinose on a project that evaluated two different doses of oxytocin
Professor Ole A. Andreassen explains: he results show that intranasal administration, i e. introducing oxytocin through the nose,
concludes Professor Andreassen o
#New Technology Enables Completely Paralyzed Man to Voluntarily Move His Legs Robotic step training and noninvasive spinal stimulation enable patient to take thousands of steps.
and quality of life, said V. Reggie Edgerton, senior author of the research and a UCLA distinguished professor of integrative biology and physiology, neurobiology and neurosurgery.
a UCLA professor of neurology and member of the Easton Laboratory for Neurodegenerative Disease Research. ecause the presentation varies from person to person,
who collaborated on the study with the lab of TSRI Institute Professor Richard A. Lerner,
who is also Lita Annenberg Hazen Professor of Immunochemistry. The study was published September 18, 2015 in the journal Nature Communications.
said Gargus, director of the Center for Autism Research & Translation and professor of pediatrics and physiology & biophysics. qually exciting,
including ones regulating learning and memory, neuronal excitability and neurotransmitter release areas known to be dysfunctional in ASD. e propose that the proper function of this channel
said Parker, a fellow of London Royal Society and UCI professor of neurobiology & behavior, who studies cellular calcium signaling.
the Liew Family Professor in Molecular Engineering. he liquid crystal molecules that are at the interface become distorted:
and University of Washington researchers have created an artificial intelligence (AI) system that can solve SAT geometry questions as well as the average American 11th-grade student, a breakthrough in AI research.
which is an important dimension of learning. Today, Geos can solve plane geometry questions; AI2 is moving to solve the full set of SAT math questions in the next three years.
developed with mechanical engineering students Leo Jiang and Kevin Low, incorporates commercially available fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensors,
working with mechanical engineering students Celeste To from CMU and Tess Lee Hellebrekers from the University of Texas, invented a highly stretchable and flexible optical sensor, using a combination of commercially available silicone rubbers.
says Catherine Drennan, a professor of chemistry and biology at MIT. The findings are detailed this week in the journal Nature.
graduate students Percival Yang-Ting Chen, Marco Jost, and Gyunghoon Kang of MIT; Jesus Fernandez-Zapata and S. Padmanabhan of the Institute of Physical chemistry Rocasolano, in Madrid;
since she was a graduate student, emphasizes that key elements of the research were performed by all the co-authors.
says Rowena Matthews, a professor emerita of biological chemistry at the University of Michigan, who has read the paper.
said senior author Michael Levin, Ph d.,the Vannevar bush Professor of Biology at Tufts and director of the Tufts Center for Regenerative and Developmental biology.
Maria Lobikin, Ph d.,recent doctoral graduate from the Levin laboratory and first author on the Science Signaling paper, first identified the building blocks receptors, hormones and other signaling
and progression of disease, says senior author Katerina Akassoglou, Phd, a senior investigator at the Gladstone Institutes and professor of neurology at the University of California,
and brain macrophages, says Scott Zamvil, MD, Phd, a professor of neurology at the University of California,
and accelerate the accumulation of beta amyloid deposits, a hallmark of Alzheimer pathology. The blood test developed by Dr. Nagele has shown also promise in detecting other diseases,
the Research Professor Simon Driver said. But, before you quit your job to prepare for a doomsday party,
Professor Driver from the International Centre for Radio astronomy Research, said scientists came to this conclusion after conducting the largest multi-wavelength survey ever put together. e used as many space
and learning to cook things like bagels and pizza dough with the ingredients on hand. Then, just days after the mission ended in Mid-june,
Consulting with professors from the College of Veterinary medicine in Cornell University, the company established the direction a dog wags its tail directly reflected its mood.
a handful of students walked through a park behind the University of Hannover in Germany.
These stimulated the students'muscles, guiding their steps without any conscious effort. Max Pfeiffer of the University of Hannover was the driver.
His project directs electrical currentmovie Camera into the students'sartorius, the longest muscle in the human body,
One of the students compared the feeling to cruise control in a car, where the driver can take control back
Pfeiffer steered students manually, but the plan is to build the mechanism into other apps.
so they based the brain on detailed images of the professor grey matter. e could foresee a future in which, before brain surgery,
they could open up space exploration to students and countries that lack their own space programmes, says Paulo Lozano at the Massachusetts institute of technology. e want to offer space access to people who don currently have space access,
This August, Lozano and his students tested the complete system, Cubesat and all. They put it in a vacuum chamber
The rats took part in a range of learning and memory tests. One of these involved the rats being placed in a pool of water with a hidden escape platform.
though, old animals performed as well as their younger companions. e restored learning and memory 100 per cent,
but professors already routinely use graduate students and colleagues for the same service, so the risks are understood well.
and in partnership with fellow NC State faculty member Michael Kudenov on projects supported by the National institutes of health, the Department of energy and the Department of defense.
Fine details When the physicists Professors Stefan Karsch and Franz Pfeiffer illuminate a tiny fly with X-rays, the resulting image captures even the finest hairs on the wings of the insect.
Professor Wolfram Pernice explained, ptical bits can be written at frequencies of up to a gigahertz. This allows for extremely quick data storage by our all-photonic memory.
Professor Harish Bhaskaran of Oxford university added, he memory we have developed is compatible not only with conventional optical fiber data transmission,
The 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,
a graduate student in the Mazur lab and co-author on the paper. t could also improve entanglement between quantum bits,
Learning from recent attempts to combine III-V and silicon materials in Finfet electronic devices, the Belgian team grew their laser structures directly onto a standard silicon wafer.
Professor Cathie Martin from the John Innes Centre in Norwich said, ur study provides a general tool for producing valuable phenylpropanoid compounds on an industrial scale in plants
and milliseconds for the chip to switch to the new experiment,"said Jacques Carolan, a doctoral student at Bristol."
a professor of chemistry at Duke university who was involved not in this research.""The fact that the reference state can be made white is quite useful;
"said Samuel Pfaff, a professor in Salk's Gene expression Laboratory.""These are just raw signals you can see through the eyepiece of a microscope.
or holes anywhere in the body,"said Harvard professor Dr. Conor Walsh.""The device is a minimally invasive way to deliver a patch
"said Mayank Goel, a University of Washington doctoral student and Microsoft Research graduate fellow. Compared to an image taken with a normal camera (top),
"said University of Washington professor Shwetak Patel.""With this kind of camera, you could go to the grocery store
a professor in Viking studies at the University of Nottingham, translated the recipe from the Old english in Bald Leechbook,
and is incredibly durable--according to Stanford chemistry professor Hongjie Dai, you can even drill a hole through the battery
A team of student engineers at Rice university has developed a clever pair of VR gloves that make it feel like you're actually interacting with virtual objects.
and rooms of students at work, asking the students if they need a beer and then returning with a beverage
"said Timmons Roberts, a professor of environmental studies at Brown University.""It really does matter what the actual cap is."
Aipoly is a smartphone app that acts as an intelligent assistant to the non-sighted user Students at Singularity University Silicon valley-based benefit corporation, educational program,
but for the Univ. of Cincinnati (UC)' s Yoonjee Park, assistant professor in the College of Engineering and Applied science biomedical engineering professor, these words are central to every conversation relating to her cutting edge research on drug delivery vehicles.
and resources for Park to pursue her research in tandem to her responsibilities as a professor.
In fact, it was the superb medical facilities she would have access to as a professor at UC that aided in her decision to accept the position at the university.
and learning how drugs could be released time at the proper time. With the support of the Univ. of Cincinnati behind her efforts, Park hopes to be able to overcome the barriers that have slowed others,
Xiaokui Shu, a computer science doctoral student of Anqing, China, advised by Yao, was the first author."
a graduate student in the Aiden lab and at Stanford university. he protein complex that forms DNA loops appears to operate like the plastic slider that is used to adjust the length of the straps:
a graduate student in the Aiden lab and at Stanford university. hat was stunning was that once we understood how the loops were forming,
which acts like a brake, said Rao, a student in the Aiden lab and at Stanford university. o it not so much that the keywords need to point at one another;
"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.
lead study author and professor and chair of the Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Neuroscience at Nebraska,
a professor of chemistry who led the team at UC Riverside. n a similar way,
The research project resulted from collaboration between students and researchers at UC Riverside and the Univ. of Augsburg
followed by device integration in Bavaria. t was really exciting to see how our students obtained these fascinating results by combining the 2-D materials from California
UCR graduate student Edwin Preciado and Univ. of Augsburg recent graduate Florian J. R. Schülein spearheaded the research project in the research laboratories of Bartels and Krenner
Likewise, Sebastian Hammer, a graduate student at the Univ. of Augsburg, worked in Bartels lab this summer fabricating a new batch of devices in an extension of the current project
a UC Berkeley professor of chemistry who led the project. The flexible MOF can be loaded with methane
Long and graduate student and first author Jarad Mason instead turned to flexible MOFS noting that they behave better
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