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says Mitul Mehta, a senior lecturer at Institute of Psychiatry, King's college London. Brain scans he carried out found those with the lowest working memory capacity to begin with improved the most when taking Ritalin.
Teachers get more empowered as they can respond to students and tailor lessons. There are several initiatives trying to connect the entire world to the internet,
for teachers to see in a traditional classroom. Equipped with this information course designers can adapt their materials,
what they can teach the teachers: offering a unique opportunity to monitor student behaviour during lessons in unprecedented detail.
All of which promises a future in which teachers can adapt at a glance to how different students respond to everything from string theory to Shakespeare
whereby teachers travel to students in more remote locations and islands around the country, holding classes in the hills, farms and marketplaces.
whereby teachers travel to students in more remote locations and islands around the country, holding classes in the hills, farms and marketplaces.
at best, out of about 100, for a school with 450 students and 50 teachers, he recalls. hey were mostly the big, boxy computers,
In the current study, Goenjian and first author Julia Bailey, an adjunct assistant professor of epidemiology at the UCLA Fielding School of Public health, focused on two genes called COMT and TPH-2
This interaction by SCFA and T-cells surprised co-investigators Fengchun Ye, assistant professor of biological sciences at the Case Western Reserve University School of dental medicine,
an associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at NC State and senior author of a paper describing the work."
Columbia University School of engineering and Applied science-Opening new doors for biomedical and neuroscience research, Elizabeth Hillman, associate professor of biomedical engineering at Columbia Engineering and of radiology at Columbia University Medical center
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
and Kimara Targoff (assistant professor of pediatrics, Department of Pediatrics), all of whom are starting to use the SCAPE system in their research."
#Radiation plus hormone therapy is such a treatment for men with aggressive prostate cancerssaid lead author Justin E. Bekelman MD an assistant professor of Radiation Oncology Medical Ethics and Health policy at Penn
teachers will guide them on how to use two or more programming languages. All of this is compulsory.
says John Partridge, a computing teacher in Nottinghamshire, U k. specially for the younger children.""The U s. has managed to cultivate a tech mecca in Silicon valley in spite of its public-school system.
The integration is designed to create"a more productive experience to teachers and students by harmonizing login credentials, calendar management and course content creation,
and Office 365 and students and teachers who create events in Moodle will have stored those events in their Office 365 calendars.
Teachers will also be able to create assignments in Onenote where students can complete them,
then submit them through Moodle, in turn receiving teacher feedback in the same document. The integration will also allow"instructors to easily embed interactive online lessons created in Powerpoint with Office Mix through an open format standard,"according to information released by the companies."
"Educators and trainers who have both Moodle and Office 365 create new learning experiences that leverage the power of both platforms.
"said Robert Cannistra, a Marist lecturer of computer science and IT.""The network is critical to the cloud.
The project coordinated by The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Cambridge, UK has 7 participants from 4 countries i
one of the experienced researchers has been appointed as an assistant professor at Freie Universität Berlin. nterdisciplinary research is hard work,
Tóth is assistant professor at the Slovak University of Agriculture in the city of Nitra where he teaches in agricultural entomology,
##since it was discovered in 1972â##has been that we can t culture the human viruses in a cell culture dish##says Stephanie Karst associate professor in the molecular genetics and microbiology department at University of Florida College of Medicine.##
Brenda Cartmel a senior research scientist and lecturer at the Yale School of Public health is a co-author of the paper along with researchers from the USDA/Agricultural research service Grand Forks Human nutrition Research center and the University of Utah.
and cost-effective way for arsenic removal says Bin Gao associate professor of agricultural and biological engineering at University of Florida.
##says William Fischer an assistant professor of medicine who has treated Ebola patients in Africa.####We can decrease Ebola fatality rates with intensive critical care
and a research assistant professor of genetics in the UNC School of medicine says:####Public perception of Ebola infection typically focuses on the high mortality rate following hemorrhagic fever
and the way they usually do things says lead author Curtis Weiss assistant professor of medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of medicine and a physician at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
##Not only did transplanted these cells survive in the mouse brain they showed functional properties similar to those of native cells##says senior author Andrew S. Yoo assistant professor of developmental biology at the Washington University School of medicine in St louis.##These cells
For a lot of at-risk children intake of vegetables is really low says Jaimie Davis assistant professor in the nutritional sciences department at University of Texas at Austin.
Now after four years of refining the instrumentation with collaborators including John Connor a School of medicine associate professor of microbiology the team has demonstrated the simultaneous detection of multiple viruses in blood serum samplesâ##including viruses genetically modified to mimic the behavior of Ebola
The National institutes of health the Rice Century Scholars Program and a Hamill Innovation Award by the Rice university Institute of Biosciences and Bioengineering supported the research.
"We think this will enable researchers to develop a new generation of tiny implants designed for a wide array of medical applications"says Amin Arbabian assistant professor of electrical engineering at Stanford university.
According to project leader Eric Barth associate professor of mechanical engineering the next stage in the surgical robot s development is testing it with cadavers.
'##At the same time Robert Webster associate professor of mechanical engineering had developed a system of steerable surgical needles.####The idea for this came about when Eric and
The engineers identified epilepsy surgery as an ideal high-impact application through discussions with Joseph Neimat associate professor of neurological surgery.
The new findings will help improve understanding of how to evaluate pneumonia prevention methods in the ICU says associate professor James Hurley from the University of Melbourne.
##The surgery can only be performed on highly obese people##says Victor Shengkan Jin associate professor of pharmacology at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical school
The majority of patients who succumb to cancer fall prey to metastatic forms of the disease says Jennifer Cochran an associate professor of bioengineering at Stanford university.
##Historically in Tanzania parents that have sought autism diagnoses had to go to other countries to receive those diagnoses##says Ashley Johnson Harrison a former postdoctoral fellow at Brown University who is now an assistant professor at University of Georgia. Researchers used the new
and those properties are universal says Evilevitch an associate professor in Carnegie mellon s physics department. This could lead to a therapy that isn't linked to the virus gene sequence or protein structure
The device is very practical says Yihui Zhang co-first author and research assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering.
and respond in a graduated way##says Wilbur Lam assistant professor in the pediatrics department at Emory University School of medicine and a physician in the Aflac Cancer and Blood disorders Center at Children s Healthcare of Atlanta.
and the severe problems associated with reconstructive surgery says team leader Francesca Mariani assistant professor of cell and neurobiology and principal investigator in the Eli and Edythe Broad Center for Regenerative medicine and Stem Cell Research at University
the Baxter Medical Scholar Research Fellowship; USC undergraduate fellowships; the Provost Dean Joan M. Schaeffer and Rose Hills fellowships;
##Fibrin production is on the back end of the clotting process so we feel that it is a safer place to try to interact with it##says Tom Barker associate professor of biomedical engineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University and a co-corresponding author of the paper.##
##In addition to providing new treatment options the particles could also cut costs by reducing costly natural transfusions says Lam assistant professor in the biomedical engineering department at Georgia Tech and Emory University.
or rectally offer a way to slow the spread of the virus notes lead researcher Toral Zaveri postdoctoral scholar in the food science department at Penn State.
##We ve known for a long time that infection with Ebola obstructs an important arm in our immune system that is activated by molecules called interferons##says senior author Gaya Amarasinghe assistant professor of pathology
& Microbe Amarasinghe and Daisy Leung assistant professor of pathology and immunology show that VP24 tightly binds to a nuclear transporter a protein that takes molecules into
an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering, and Girish Kulkarni, a doctoral candidate in electrical engineering. The device is faster, smaller,
an assistant professor of biology at the California Institute of technology (Caltech) and the principal investigator whose team has developed the new techniques,
By making clever use of an organism own network of blood vessels, Gradinaru and her colleaguesncluding scientific researcher Bin Yang and postdoctoral scholar Jennifer Treweek, coauthors on the paperan quickly deliver the lipid
and RNARADINARU and her team collaborated with Long Cai, an assistant professor of chemistry at Caltech,
led by bioengineering assistant professor Kim Woodrow, previously found that electrically spun cloth could be dissolved to release drugs.
associate professor of chemical and biological engineering at the New york University School of engineering. ee known that phosphotriesterases had the power to detoxify these nerve agents,
Montclare and Richard Bonneau, an associate professor in NYU biology department, have patented the process. Plans are under way to begin developing therapeutic applications.
says Linwah Yip, assistant professor of surgery in the University of Pittsburgh School of medicine. Yip says without the test a second surgery to remove the thyroid was required often
an associate professor of psychology at Michigan State university. nd people are getting less sleep each night than they ever have.
Using the fly ear structure as a model, Neal Hall, an assistant professor of engineering at the University of Texas at Austin,
a postdoctoral research scholar at Washington University in St louis. ee been searching for a single step that all those various proteins have to take to be secreted,
associate professor of psychology at University of Arizona. ut sleep problems that persist for an extended period may mean something different.
Lead researcher Bayden Wood, an associate professor at Monash University, says to reduce mortality and prevent the overuse of antimalarial drugs,
says Jon Pierce-Shimomura, assistant professor at University of Texas at Austin. An alcohol target is any neuronal molecule that binds alcohol,
a University of Kansas assistant professor of sociology and the study lead author, says the study findings are significant
To do this, Liang Ma, a postdoctoral scholar in Ismagilov lab developed a way to isolate
It is possible that low-nutrient diets set off the same pathways in us to put our cells in a quiescent state says David R. Sherwood an associate professor of biology at Duke university.
Sherwood s colleague Ryan Baugh an assistant professor of medicine showed that hatching C. elegans eggs in a nutrient-free environment shut down their development completely.
The researchers, including Brian Otis, associate professor of electrical engineering and also of Google Inc, . and former doctoral students Cagdas Varel and Yi-Chun Shih, have filed patents on the pressure-monitoring device prototype l
explains Damiano, associate professor of biomedical engineering at BU. And even though the dosage needs of adults are more predictable,
a senior lecturer in andrology at the University of Sheffield and the study lead author. t is
assistant professor of clinical medicine at the USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center and Hospital. ore clinical studies are needed,
explains Chay Kuo, an assistant professor of cell biology, neurobiology and pediatrics at Duke university. In a study with mice, his team found a previously unknown population of neurons within the subventricular zone (SVZ) neurogenic niche of the adult brain, adjacent to the striatum.
associate professor of radiology at Washington University in St louis. t roughly akin to spotting the rush of blood to someone cheeks
says Amy Esler, an assistant professor of pediatrics and autism researcher at the University of Minnesota,
Neither, however, expects it to become widely usedot because clinicians, teachers, and parents aren willing,
teacher, or clinician would simply need to download the app and sit their child down in front of it for a few minutes.
associate professor of cell biology and physiology at UNC School of medicine. o we looked for commonalitieshe things that each of these receptors need
says study leader Richard Leigh, assistant professor of neurology and radiology at Johns hopkins university School of medicine. Described in the journal Stroke
says Ada Poon, assistant professor of electrical engineering at Stanford university. The central discovery is an engineering breakthrough that creates a new type of wireless power transfersing roughly the same power as a cell phonehat can safely penetrate deep inside the body.
an associate professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Duke university Pratt School of engineering. hat like taking the eye color of everyone in a room
an associate professor of research pediatrics at the Keck School of medicine of the University of Southern California. e were surprised by the simplicity and precision of this method.
Alexander Star, an associate professor of chemistry at the University of Pittsburgh, says the new chip,
Jianping Fu, assistant professor of mechanical engineering at University of Michigan, says the findings raise the possibility of a more efficient way to guide stem cells to differentiate
says senior author Maziar Divangahi, an assistant professor in the Faculty of medicine at Mcgill University. Despite the worldwide use of vaccination and other antiviral interventions, the flu virus remains a persistent threat to human health.
associate professor of microbiology and immunology. ut what wee now shown is that RSV has increased an ability to cause airway obstruction because, during an RSV infection,
associate professor of internal medicine at the University of Michigan. here are other drugs that block one or two of the signaling pathways that cause the disease,
We have built a circulator that does need not magnets or magnetic materialssays Andrea Alu an associate professor at the Cockrell School of engineering at the University of Texas at Austin.
Brenda Cartmel a senior research scientist and lecturer at the Yale School of Public health is a co-author of the paper along with researchers from the USDA/Agricultural research service Grand Forks Human nutrition Research center and the University of Utah.
Sindy K. Y. Tang an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Stanford university describes what she calls her ime capsule technologyin the journal Lab on a Chip.
and has been shown to cause cancer. ecause biochar can be produced from various waste biomass including agricultural residues this new technology provides an alternative and cost-effective way for arsenic removalsays Bin Gao associate professor of agricultural
because they act like switches generating electrical feedbacksays senior author Jon Sack assistant professor of physiology
and here we have provided a new route to increase light intensity by modulating loss in the systemsays Lan Yang an associate professor in electrical
and research assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering. hen your skin is stretched compressed or twisted the device stretches compresses
and reduced greenhouse gas emissionssays lead author Rebecca Barnes an assistant professor of environmental science at Colorado College who began the research as a postdoctoral research associate at Rice university.
but in fact researchers have found that biochar-amended sand holds water longer. tudy coauthor Brandon Dugan assistant professor of Earth science at Rice says e hypothesize that this is likely due to the presence of two flow paths
and Sciences and the corresponding author of the study. ow we know more about how that works. ay worked with lead author Dawn Nagel a postdoctoral researcher and coauthor Jose Pruneda-Paz an assistant professor at the University of California
This discovery which is like a eesaw circuitwas led by postdoctoral scholar Weizhe Hong in the laboratory of David J. Anderson biology professor at Caltech and an investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
and tightly binds the nanotubes together says Martã an assistant professor of chemistry and bioengineering and of materials science and nanoengineering.
and washed outsays Link associate professor of chemistry at Rice and the lead researcher on the PNAS study. he key advancement here was to place the nanorods in an ordered array. lson says the array setup allowed her to tune the pixel s color in two
and the linked-together smart gadgets envisioned in the nternet of Things. he next exponential growth in connectivity will be connecting objects together and giving us remote control through the websays Amin Arbabian an assistant professor of electrical engineering at Stanford university who recently demonstrated this ant
which could provide another source of energy for certain applicationssays Shwetak Patel associate professor of computer science and engineering and of electrical engineering at the University of Washington.
and we wanted to find out what that limit looks like in terms of neuronssays Aaron P. Batista assistant professor of bioengineering at University of Pittsburgh.
Byron M. Yu assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering and biomedical engineering at Carnegie mellon believes this work demonstrates the utility of BCI for basic scientific studies that will eventually impact people s lives. hese findings could be the basis
Led by bioengineering Associate professor Christina Smolke the Stanford team has spent already a decade genetically engineering yeast cells to reproduce the biochemistry of poppies with the ultimate goal of producing opium-based medicines from start to finish in fermentation vats. e are now very close to replicating the entire
In the new report Smolke and her collaborators Kate Thodey a postdoctoral scholar in bioengineering and Stephanie Galanie a doctoral student in chemistry detail how they added five genes from two different organisms to yeast cells.
questionssays Eric Lyons assistant professor in the School of Plant Sciences at University of Arizona. ow does stored the genetic information in the genome help us understand the functions of the organism
isolationsays Christian Rabeling assistant professor of biology at the University of Rochester. e now have evidence that speciation can take place within a single colony. n discovering the parasitic Mycocepurus castrator researchers uncovered an example of sympatric speciation
or highly colored materials. o one wants to sit behind colored glasssays Richard Lunt an assistant professor of chemical engineering
when we cannot consciously see it. he results are consistent with an extensive body of research suggesting that we form spontaneous judgments of other people that can be largely outside awarenessexplains Jonathan Freeman an assistant professor in New york University's psychology department.
Fan is developing the sensor with Zhaohui Zhong an associate professor of electrical and computer engineering and Girish Kulkarni a doctoral candidate in electrical engineering.
The technique allows them to peer through the tissue#in 3d#using standard optical methods such as confocal microscopy. arge volumes of tissue are not optically transparent#you can t see through themsays Viviana Gradinaru (BS 05) an assistant professor of biology
and postdoctoral scholar Jennifer Treweek coauthors on the paper#can quickly deliver the lipid-dissolving hydrogel and chemical solution throughout the body.
and RNA#Gradinaru and her team collaborated with Long Cai an assistant professor of chemistry at Caltech
and connect these devices to the internet has kept this from taking off. f Internet of things devices are going to take off we must provide connectivity to the potentially billions of battery-free devices that will be embedded in everyday objectssays Shyam Gollakota an assistant professor of computer science
if you re looking for specific patterns you can find it among all the other Wi-fi reflections in an environmentsays coauthor Joshua Smith an associate professor of computer science and engineering and of electrical engineering.
which is one of the most powerful tools we have today. he new sensor could have an advantage over current bomb-screening methods says co-lead author Ren-Min Ma an assistant professor of
Ota a former Phd student in Zhang s lab who is now an assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Tokyo.
Lead researcher Bayden Wood, an associate professor at Monash University, says to reduce mortality and prevent the overuse of antimalarial drugs,
an associate professor of physics and biophysics at the University of Michigan and lead author of a paper published in Nature Chemistry. n artificial systems,
and reduced productivity of surviving colonies and both parasites threaten global food security because of reduced pollination services to agriculturesays Nancy Ostiguy associate professor of entomology at Penn State. he extent to which these detriments are attributable
says Steve Safferman, an associate professor of biosystems and agricultural engineering at Michigan State university, who is involved with the project. bout 90 percent of the manure is water
and refining release tremendous amounts of low-grade heat to ambient temperaturessays Yi Cui an associate professor of materials science and engineering at Stanford university. ur new battery technology is designed to take advantage of this temperature gradient at the industrial scale. he new system
and dischargingsays Seok Woo Lee a postdoctoral scholar at Stanford and co-lead author of the study.
while they are subject to realistic static loads and dynamic forces such as vibrations or impactssays Cary Pint assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Vanderbilt University.
associate professor in the department of chemical engineering. t is all polymer and we are able to get performances comparable to really expensive materials such as mixed matrix membranes
associate professor in the mechanical engineering department. as where they mine it is impure and contains different poison gases you don want.
says Kwabena Boahen, associate professor of bioengineering at Stanford university. Boahen and his team have developed a circuit board consisting of 16 custom-designed eurocorechips.
and really nail down some property of a small planet orbiting a distant starexplains Bean an assistant professor and the project s principal investigator.
The design was inspired by natural biological motors that have evolved to perform specific tasks critical to the function of cells says Jong Hyun Choi a Purdue University assistant professor of mechanical engineering.
which is comparable to steel says Pablo D. Zavattieri a Purdue University assistant professor of civil engineering. his is a material that is showing really amazing propertieshe says. t is abundant renewable and produced as waste in the paper industry. indings
and easily chop it up this small. our worked with co-author Angel Mart assistant professor of chemistry
or mechanical structures that allow researchers to conduct their work on the micro/nanoscopic levelsays Jae Kwon associate professor of electrical and computer engineering at the University of Missouri. il-based materials or low-surface tension liquids
but we would certainly like to push thatsays Yi Cui an associate professor at Stanford and the Department of energy s SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory who led the research with Bao.
The design and construction of an instrument based on these arrays as well as an analysis of its commissioning data appear in the Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. hat we have made is essentially a hyperspectral video camera with no intrinsic noisesays Ben Mazin assistant professor
and maneuverability at the same timesays Noah Cowan the associate professor of mechanical engineering who supervised the research. he Wright Brothers figured this out
This biomimetic robot was developed in the lab of Malcolm Maciver associate professor of mechanical and biomedical engineering at Northwestern University and a co-author. e are far from duplicating the agility of animals with our most advanced robotsmaciver says. ne exciting implication of this work is that we might be held back in making more agile machines by our assumption that it s wasteful
as if the processing power of the brain is much greater than we had originally thoughtsays Spencer Smith an assistant professor in the University of North carolina at Chapel hill s School of medicine.
and a variety of other electromechanical devices providing a considerable cost savings. f you ask experts about making a supercapacitor out of silicon they will tell you it is a crazy ideasays Cary Pint an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Vanderbilt University who headed the development
and analyze data from our oceans in real timesays Tommaso Melodia associate professor of electrical engineering at the University at Buffalo
The sensors make use of microfluidic technologyâ##developed by Abraham Stroock associate professor of chemical and biomolecular engineeringâ##that places a tiny cavity inside the chip.
The challenge for Angel Mart assistant professor of chemistry and bioengineering at Rice university and his team of student researchers was to get their large metallic particles through the much smaller pores of a zeolite cage.
when lava and water meet in aerial environments the water instantly flashes to steamsays Gregg associate professor of geology. hatâ#a volume increase of eight timesâ##boom.?
materialsays Jun Lou an associate professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at Rice university. verybody has been talking about these materials for electronic
Chemists and educators teach and use chemical reaction networks a century-old language of equations that describes how mixtures of chemicals behave.
and then use DNA to build the molecules that realize the desired dynamicssays corresponding author Georg Seelig am assistant professor of electrical engineering
Now imagine as many as 10000 of our suns crammed into that relatively small space. his galaxy is more massive than any ultra-compact drawfs of comparable sizesays Jay Strader assistant professor of physics
but silver is too expensive for use at large scalesays Yi Cui an associate professor of materials science and engineering. hough the search is under way for a more practical material finding a substitute will take time. ource:
and coordination difficulties one of the major challenges teachers and occupational therapists come up against time and again is limited the time they have to work one-to-one with each childhill says. n this respect haptic robotic technologies have huge potential efficiency benefits. hey provide a means by which children can receive supported practice at a level
Differences in performance between children previously identified by their classroom teachers as having handwriting difficulties were also noticeable.
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