Associate dean (8) | ![]() |
Dean (59) | ![]() |
Faculty member (63) | ![]() |
Professor (3078) | ![]() |
Professor Michael Sivak, at the University of Michigan Transportation Research Institute has published just a series of reports looking at car use,
working for longer and driving for longer, says Barbara Sahakian, Professor of Neuropsychology at the University of Cambridge,
In a 2010 review Claire Advokat, Professor of Psychology at Louisiana State university, found that stimulant drugs such as Ritalin might improve memory retention
says John Harris, Professor of Bioethics, and Director of the Institute for Science, Ethics and Innovations, University of Manchester, UK.
and predictable technology,#says Professor Roch Guerin, Chair of Computer science and Engineering at Washington University, St louis."Bluetooth targets lower transmission ranges and data rates than wi-fi,
#Its author Ferdinando Boero, Professor of Zoology at Salento University, Italy, concludes:""If you cannot fight them...
That's one possibility if Harvard professor Daniel Nocera's idea for a device that can harness and store energy from the Sun comes to fruition.
Yehuda Ben-Shahar, now a professor at Washington University in St louis, found cells in the human airway equipped with bitter receptors.
"Pluznick is now a professor at Johns Hopkins School of medicine, in Baltimore, Maryland. It has been a long time since she studied kidney disease.
Andraka's research incuding writing to 200 science professors led to him developing a dipstick diagnostic test which searches for a biomarker for pancreatic cancer.
which Professor Lee Cronin's group at the University of Glasgow are using to develop into a carbon-fixing paint.
Calestous Juma, Harvard Professor and author of The New Harvest; Agricultural innovation in Africa claims that the greatest failure of Africa agricultural sector is the absence of investment in rural infrastructure. arkets cannot function
or halt tumor development,"said Alexandra Newton, Phd, professor of pharmacology and the study's principal investigator,
and multifactorial than previously appreciated explained senior author Caroline Attardo Genco Phd professor of medicine and microbiology at BUSM.
but also following patient responses to therapy,"said Mitchell, the paper's corresponding author and professor of Pathology, Microbiology and Immunology.
and Jonathan Karn, director of the Center for Aids Research and professor and chair of the Department of Molecular biology and Microbiology at Case Western Reserve's medical school.
Karn, the Reinberger Professor of Molecular biology.""It surprised us to find they all work as an aggregate."
These theoretical predications were confirmed by a set of experimental methods conducted in the laboratory of Eliezer Masliah, a professor in UC San diego Department of Neurosciences. revious to this study,
"said senior study author Gábor Tigyi, a professor of physiology at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center (UTHSC)."
said senior author John Sedivy, the Hermon C. Bumpus Professor of Biology and professor of medical science at Brown."
including Randy Bruno (associate professor of neuroscience, Department of Neuroscience), Richard Mann (Higgins Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics, Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biophysics), Wesley Grueber (associate professor
"says Thomas M. Jessell, co-director of the Zuckerman Institute and Claire Tow Professor of Motor neuron Disorders, the Department of Neuroscience and the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics at Columbia."
an MIT professor of electrical engineering and computer science (EECS), in 2009. His team used that earlier version to fuse adult cells with embryonic stem cells,
Hidde Ploegh, an MIT professor of biology and member of the Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, is also a senior author of the paper.
a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the Georgia Institute of technology who was involved not in the research. t very well-controlled
a professor of molecular and medical pharmacology, used a device he invented to capture circulating tumor cells from blood samples.
Harold and Margaret Hatch Professor of the University and dean of the faculties of health sciences and medicine. he development of new treatments based on this genetic understanding will have profound effects on clinical practice.
Tom Maniatis, Phd, the Isidore S. Edelman Professor of Biochemistry and chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biophysics at Columbia University Medical center and director of Columbia university-wide
The device was developed by team led by Aydogan Ozcan, a professor of electrical engineering and bioengineering at the Henry Samueli School of engineering and Applied science and director of the California Nanosystems Institute."
a University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign materials science and engineering professor. hen the battery runs out, you need to have surgery to replace it.
invented at Rice university in 2002 by engineer Frank Tittel, Professor Robert Curl, and their collaborators, offers the possibility that such devices may soon be as small as a typical smartphone.
professor of electrical and computer engineering and a professor of bioengineering. ethane is emitted by natural sources, such as wetlands,
with an annual incidence of between 5%and 8%per 100 000, says INHERITANCE coordinator Professor Eloisa Arbustini of the Foundation IRCCS Policlinico San Matteo. t is one of the leading causes
says Professor Michele Rossi from Consorzio Ferrara Ricerche and the University of Padova, Italy. here were many technical limitations in terms of communication capabilities that have been solved
says Professor Sabine Bahn of the University of Cambridge Centre for Neuropsychiatric Research, a partner in the project.
says Professor Stefano Selleri of Università degli Studi di Parma in Italy, ALPINE project coordinator. hat is more,
adds Professor Selleri, he commercial potential of this technology is enormous. Just consider the fact that the laser
In the words of Professor Selleri: echanical scribing will disappear very quickly from the PV industry,
Professor Dolores Fregona and her research team at the University of Padua in Italy designed and tested gold compounds with the aim of elivering the metal as a cytotoxic smart bombkilling off cancer cells while minimising the impact on other organs.
says Professor Fregona. nterestingly, our compounds show different action mechanisms. The team focused on two types of cancer:
ruling out the onset of side effects due to chemotherapy, explains the professor. Furthermore, the team discovered that aggressive prostate cancer cells (resistant to cisplatin) were also sensitive to Aud8 and Aud9 gold derivatives
says Robotics Professor Véronique Perdereau, co-ordinator of the UPCM/HANDLE project. Humans naturally adapt their grasp,
One of the study authors, Professor Doug Easton from the University of Cambridge who led several of the studies,
COGS coordinator Professor Per Hall from the Karolinska Institutet says:''COGS is the largest genotyping project in the world targeting identification of genetic changes that influence the risk of common cancers.
Robert Meijer, a Professor of Applied Sensor Networks, at the University of Amsterdam, who is coordinating the Urbanflood project said:
and Professor Molly Stevens, a European Research Council grantee at Imperial College London, have tested successfully a pioneering HIV-detection technique that is ten times more sensitive than any identification method used to date.
Writing in Nature Nanotechnology, Dr de la Rica and Professor Stevens also state that affordable methods for detecting disease biomarkers at ultra-low concentrations can potentially improve the standard of living in countries lacking costly
The company's Chief Technology Officer is Gert-Jan Gruter former Professor for Polymer Catalysis at Eindhoven University of Technology who explains:
We believe that the PEF will become the new world standard for polyester bottles. with the possibilities it opens up for future work in vaccine discovery was recognised with the naming of Professor Lomonossoff as Innovator of the Year 2012 by the Biotechnology and Biological sciences Research Council
Professor George Lomonossoff of the John Innes Centre in the UK, the new technique turns the host plants into'mini-factories,
Now, says Professor Lomonossoff, that has changed all:""You don't have to place all your money on one particular construct,
was recognised with the naming of Professor Lomonossoff as Innovator of the Year 2012 by the Biotechnology and Biological sciences Research Council (BBSRC), U s
but also in agriculture, cosmetics and beyond, says Polymode project co-ordinator, Professor Bruno Moerschbacher of the University of Münster in Germany.
says Professor Moerschbacher t
#Doing away with bacteria in water systems We set out to develop a sensor which quickly and cheaply measures the content of copper
"says the Professor. Indeed, experts echo the sentiment saying that the refrigeration system developed and tested by MEDISCO could really help the Mediterranean and indeed other areas with no conventional means of refrigeration due to a lack of water and nonexistent or unreliable energy sources y
'Professor Baselga explained.''In addition, it is biocompatible, which is essential for something that is going to be used in the mouth,
and also Professor of Experimental Neuropathology at the University of Southampton, says the research looked at an aspect that all neurodegenerative diseases have in common:
Spitzer, a process metallurgy professor at the Clausthal University of Technology in the German town of Clausthal-Zellerfeld, says the key challenge was to develop a production process that brought all the elements together. his high strength steel cannot be cast by conventional continuous casting,
The project started when Christof Schütte, NANOPOLY project coordinator and professor at the Freie Universität Berlin,
As the ACTINOGEN project coordinator, Professor Paul Dyson of the Institute of Life science at Swansea University in the UK explains,
'explains Professor Dyson.''The big question was whether this genetic information was just redundant, or whether it could be used to trigger the production of new antibiotic compounds.'
'says Professor Dyson. During the project, ACTINOGEN scientists successfully triggered the creation of new antibiotics using the cryptic pathways of a number of streptomycete species,
In the past, says Professor Dyson, achieving the necessary level of production took around 10 years. The ACTINOGEN Superhost allows the same result to be achieved within six months to one year.
The approval from the MHRA was described by the project's scientific co-ordinator, Professor Julian Ma of St george's, University of London,
"The conventional production systems referred to by Professor Ma use sophisticated stainless steel fermentation vats containing bacteria or mammalian cells.
According to Professor Rainer Fischer, Director of the institute where the GM tobacco was grown, this much simpler,
in the words of Professor Ma, are currently"horribly expensive"to treat. As Professor Fischer explains,
the success of PHARMA-PLANTA"is a springboard for European plant biotechnology and will enable many important medical products to be realised".
Giancarlo Ferrigno is Professor at Politecnico di Milano. He said: his is a robotic system for assisting a surgeon during neurosurgery operations.
"said David A. Savitz, professor of epidemiology at Brown University, who was involved not in the Interphone study.
##The power of microneedles for treating eye conditions is the ability to target delivery of the drug within the eye##says Mark Prausnitz professor in the School of Chemical and Biomolecular engineering at the Georgia Institute of technology.##
so injections into the eye are becoming more common##says Henry F. Edelhauser emeritus professor of ophthalmology.##
Hans Grossniklaus professor of ophthalmology at Emory University contributed to the study. Yoo C. Kim Henry F. Edelhauser and Mark R. Prausnitz hold microneedle patents and Mark Prausnitz and Henry Edelhauser have significant financial interest in Clearside
and ultimately produced impressive results says Peter Searson a professor in the Whiting School of engineering and Wong s doctoral advisor.
##This could really be a game-changer for a lot of applications including diagnostics##say James Collins who is a professor of biomedical engineering and medicine at Boston University and a core faculty member at Harvard s Wyss Institute.##
The researchers led by Markus Aebi a mycology professor at ETH Zurich discovered the substance in the common inky cap mushroom Coprinopsis cinerea.
##There is great interest in the development of objective biomarkers of dietary intake especially biomarkers that can be measured noninvasively##says coauthor Susan T. Mayne professor of epidemiology at Yale university and a developer of the device.##
unless you have an animal model that mimics the Ebola virus disease spectra##says study coauthor Ralph Baric professor of epidemiology at the University of North carolina at Chapel hill.
whose utility is difficult if not impossible to gauge says senior author Luis Amaral professor of chemical and biological engineering at the Mccormick School of engineering and Applied science and a professor of medicine at Feinberg.
which we were working on controlling says Steven J. Schiff an engineering professor at Penn State and director of the Center for Neural engineering.
and now a professor of physics at University of South Florida explored extending older models of brain cell activity with basic conservation principles.
##The ramifications of the work presented in the PNAS paper are tremendous with respect to tissue grafts used in surgery as well as new tissues fabricated using the principles of tissue engineering##says Kyriacos A. Athanasiou a professor of biomedical engineering and orthopedic surgery and chair
I did not think that these girls would have shorter telomeres than their low-risk counterparts they'e too young says Ian Gotlib professor of psychology at Stanford university.
A team led by Selim Ã#nlã#a professor of biomedical engineering electrical and computer engineering and materials science and engineering at Boston University in collaboration with physics professor Bennett Goldberg showed the ability to pinpoint
and size single H1n1 virus particles. Researchers reported the first demonstrated of the concept in Nano Letters in 2010.
A team led by ETH Zurich Professor Yaakov Benenson has developed several new components for biological circuits.
"The input signals can be transmitted much more accurately than before thanks to the precise control over timing in the circuit"says Benenson professor of synthetic biology who supervised Lapique s work.
##Filoviruses are far more ancient than previously thought##says lead researcher Derek Taylor professor of biological sciences at University at Buffalo.##
Taylor and coauthor Jeremy Bruenn professor of biological sciences research viral##fossil genes##â##chunks of genetic material that animals and other organisms acquire from viruses during infection.
and become small and weak colony variantssays Eric Skaar professor of pathology microbiology and immunology at Vanderbilt University.
"Tiny wireless nodes such as these have the potential to become a key tool for addressing neurological disorders"says Florian Solzbacher professor of electrical and computer engineering at University of Utah and director of its Center for Engineering Innovation.
professor of biology at Penn State and one of the study primary investigators. hey affect organs that require a lot of energy,
And when you mutate PTEN in mice you cause tumors says David Soll biology professor
but such disparities were eliminated completely in villages with insurance coverage##says Neeraj Sood professor and director of research at the Schaeffer Center for Health policy and Economics at University of Southern California.##
##We didn t know that the drug affects preosteoclasts nor did we understand how important preosteoclasts are in maintaining healthy bones##says study leader Xu Cao professor of orthopedic surgery at the Johns hopkins university School of medicine.##
In collaboration with Amato Giaccia professor of radiation oncology the researchers gave intravenous treatments of this bioengineered decoy protein to mice with aggressive breast and ovarian cancers.
and the human trials weren t large enough for the true risk of liver injury to become apparent says Paul Watkins coauthor of the study and professor of medicine and pharmacy at University of North carolina.
The team combined information about troglitazone with data specific to the human liver generated in the lab of senior author Kim Brouwer a professor at the pharmacy school.
In 30 years of dengue-related research this new mechanism was discovered never according to senior author Professor Mariano Garcia-Blanco of the Program in Emerging Infectious diseases.
and comfortable much like skin itself says Yonggang Huang professor of civil and environmental engineering and mechanical engineering at Northwestern University.
and professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois. This technology significantly expands the range of functionality in skin-mounted devices beyond that possible with electronics alone.
or months says Mark Pallen professor of microbial genomics at University of Warwick Medical school. Plus relying on laboratory culture means using techniques that date back to the 1880s.
Professor Benoit Ladoux co-principal investigator at the Mechanobiology Institute at the National University of Singapore and colleagues created a technique to measure the cell-generated nanoscale forces behind wound healing.
The results challenge the perception that low-fat diets are always better for the heart says lead author Lydia Bazzano professor in nutrition research at Tulane University School of Public health and Tropical Medicine.##
In developing countries keeping track of a baby s vaccine schedule on paper is largely ineffective says Anil Jain professor of computer science and engineering at Michigan State university.##
##Coauthor Christopher Basler professor of microbiology at Mount sinai Hospital was the first to show that VP24
Lead researcher Peter Currie a professor at Monash University says that understanding how HSCS self-renew to replenish blood cells is a##Holy grail##of stem cell biology.##
but we know very little about how these microbial communities assemble##says senior author Phillip I. Tarr professor of pediatrics.##
or treatment of NEC##says co-first author Barbara Warner a professor of pediatrics who treats patients at St louis Children s Hospital.##
professor of neurosurgery at University of Michigan. his is an incredibly novel and exciting development,
says Yale School of medicine professor and lead author Sabrina Diano. ur findings could eventually lead to new treatments for diabetes.
Diano, a professor in the departments of obstetrics, gynecology, and reproductive sciences, and her team discovered that this enzyme is important
says senior author Hongjie Dai, professor of chemistry at Stanford university. Furthermore, it does not appear to have any adverse affect on innate brain functions. he NIR-IIA light can pass through intact scalp skin
says Sherman Fan, professor of biomedical engineering at University of Michigan. or diabetes, acetone is a marker, for example.
says Nicholas Kotov, professor of chemical engineering, who led the University of Michigan effort. The method requires access to sophisticated equipment that can create very tiny features, roughly 500 times smaller than the width of a human hair.
says lead author Seema Khan, professor of surgery and professor of cancer research at Northwestern University Feinberg School of medicine.
a professor in the pathology department. hyroid cancer is usually very curable, and we are getting closer to quickly
says Aliasger Salem, professor in pharmaceutical sciences at University of Iowa and a corresponding author of the paper.
public health professor and a contributing author of the paper. his work suggests a way forward to alleviate mite-induced asthma in allergy sufferers.
professor of medicine and of molecular microbiology and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Washington University studies how malaria affects red blood cells.
Professor Leann Tilley from the University of Melbourne says the test could make an impact in large-scale screening of malaria parasite carriers who do not present the classic fever-type symptoms associated with the disease. n many countries only
professor of epidemiology at Johns hopkins university. his research points out the areas that need improvement. It also reminds us that there are many forces threatening to push stroke rates back up and,
for several years, says Bruce Hammock, professor at University of California, Davis, and senior author of a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. e were surprised to find that the dual inhibitor was more active than higher doses of each compound,
says Robert Koenekoop, professor of human genetics, pediatric surgery, and ophthalmology at Mcgill University. t is giving hope to many patients who suffer from this devastating retinal degeneration.
University of Queensland Professor Mark Walker, in collaboration with Emory University and University of California, San diego, are working on additional preclinical testing of the modified vaccine.
says Craig Meyers, professor of microbiology and immunology at the Penn State College of Medicine.
says Rustem Ismagilov, a professor of chemistry and chemical engineering at the California Institute of technology (Caltech). There are thousands of species of microbes in one sample from the human gut,
says Karl Deisseroth, professor of bioengineering and of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Stanford university. The first problem was that laboratories were not set up to reliably carry out the CLARITY process.
and professor and vice chair of the department of public health sciences at UC Davis.##What we saw were several classes of pesticides more commonly applied near residences of mothers
professor of electrical engineering at University of Washington. e have shown this is possible in principle. If you can fit this sensor device into an intraocular lens implant during cataract surgery
says Tueng Shen, a collaborator and professor of ophthalmology. MARTERLENSES But if ophthalmologists could insert a pressure monitoring system in the eye with an artificial lens during cataract surgeryow a common procedure performed on 3 million to 4 million people each year to remove blurry vision
professor of gerontology at the University of Southern California. STARVING KILLS DAMAGED CELLS hen you starve, the system tries to save energy,
According to Hashemi and his adviser, Guillermo Sapiro, professor of electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering at Duke
says William Newsome, professor of neurobiology and director of the Stanford Neurosciences Institute. Newsome, who was involved not in Poon experiments
professor of civil and environmental engineering and mechanical engineering at Northwestern University. t is as soft as human skin
John A. Rogers, professor of materials science and engineering at the University of Illinois and a coauthor of the current study, previously demonstrated skin electronics made of very tiny, ultrathin, specially designed and printed components.
Eva Feldman, professor of neurology, studies amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS. It paralyzes patients as it kills motor neurons in the brain and spinal cord.
says Robert Krug, professor of molecular biosciences at University of Texas at Austin. In addition to countering the body defense mechanisms,
and hugely beneficial, says Professor Paul Orien from Monash University Centre for Obesity Research and Education (CORE).
The findings appear online this week in the journal PLOS Genetics. his discovery provides novel insight into the genetic cause of a form of cleft palate through the use of a less conventional animal model says study leader Professor Danika Bannasch,
professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at Johns hopkins university School of medicine. hat we could intervene in adolescence
Ohea, a professor in the department of cell and developmental biology and director of the University of Michigan Pluripotent Stem Cell Research Lab,
and Mcinnis, a professor in the department of psychiatry, are co-senior authors of the new paper published in the journaltranslational Psychiatry.
a professor of human development and family studies and of psychology at Penn State. ut the glucose levels under the skin trail blood glucose levels from anywhere between 8 and 15 minutes.
professor of mechanical engineering. he high prediction fidelity of our model over 30-minute intervals allows for the execution of optimal control of fast-acting insulin dose in real time
Geschwind, a professor of radiology, says that knowing the true extent of tumor response to chemoembolization is particularly important for patients with moderate to advanced disease,
The researchers led by Markus Aebi a mycology professor at ETH Zurich discovered the substance in the common inky cap mushroom Coprinopsis cinerea.
and adults alike. here is great interest in the development of objective biomarkers of dietary intake especially biomarkers that can be measured noninvasivelysays coauthor Susan T. Mayne professor of epidemiology at Yale university
or storage says James Tour a chemistry professor at Rice university. o much of chemistry occurs at the edges of materialstour says. two-dimensional material is like a sheet of paper:
A team led by ETH Zurich Professor Yaakov Benenson has developed several new components for biological circuits.
and reinstalls it in the correct orientation making it active. he input signals can be transmitted much more accurately than before thanks to the precise control over timing in the circuitsays Benenson professor of synthetic biology who supervised Lapique s work.
Researchers led by Christian Degen professor at the Laboratory for Solid State Physics at ETH Zurich developed a different and vastly more sensitive measurement technique for MRI signals.
and will present results this week at the International atomic energy agency s Fusion energy Conference in St petersburg Russia. ight now this design has the greatest potential of producing economical fusion power of any current conceptsays Thomas Jarboe a professor
of aeronautics and astronautics and an adjunct professor in physics. The reactor called the dynomak started as a class project taught by Jarboe two years ago.
and power wearable sensors or medical devices or perhaps supply enough energy to charge your cell phone in your pocketsays James Hone professor of mechanical engineering at Columbia University
and piezotronic effect adds new functionalities to these two-dimensional materialssays Zhong Lin Wang a professor in Georgia Tech s School of Materials science and engineering
Christoph Benning professor of biochemistry and molecular biology at Michigan State university and his colleagues unearthed the protein's potential
All this gesturing wizardry is made possible by a new type of algorithm developed by Jie Song a master s student in the working group headed by Otmar Hilliges professor of computer science at ETH Zurich.
and facial gesturessays Jim Foley computing professor in the Georgia Tech School of Interactive Computing. f hard-of-hearing people understand the speech the conversation can continue immediately without waiting for the caption.
I need and get back into the conversation. oley s colleague Professor Thad Starner leads the Contextual Computing Group working on the project.
says study leader Alan Willner, electrical engineering professor at the USC Viterbi School of engineering. Faster data transmission rates have been led achievedillner himself a team two years ago that twisted light beams to transmit data at a blistering 2. 56 terabits per secondut methods to do so rely on light to carry the data. he advantage
< Back - Next >
Overtext Web Module V3.0 Alpha
Copyright Semantic-Knowledge, 1994-2011