and Technology (NIST) and the University of Colorado Boulder. his technology can actively stabilize two items relative to each other with a precision well below one nanometer at room temperature,
University of Wisconsin-Madison neuroscientist Su-Chun Zhang has shown a new way to silence genes in stem cells and their progeny at any stage of development.
says Ian Macdonald, a professor of ophthalmology with the Faculty of medicine & Dentistry at the University of Alberta,
and this new study sponsored by the University of Alberta is another step forward in the development of AAV2-REP1,
and the data to date have shown very promising results. he first clinical trials took place at the University of Oxford.
University of Albert e
#TSRI and Biotech Partners Find New Antibody Weapons against Marburg virus A new study led by scientists at The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) identifies new immune molecules that protect against deadly Marburg virus, a relative
Antibodies against one site on Marburg were revealed in a study by Vanderbilt University and TSRI in February 2015,
A University of Virginia engineering professor and her former graduate student are already there. Maite Brandt-Pearce, a professor in the Charles L. Brown Department of Electrical and Computer engineering,
along with the University on their idea and Noshad has created a company, VLNCOMM, for Visible light Network Communications, to which Brandt-Pearce is a consultant.
and everybody has a good connection. e have a patent with the University and we will file more patents on the research being done now,
University of Virgini
#Elastic Gel to Heal Wounds A team of bioengineers at Brigham and Women Hospital (BWH), led by Ali Khademhosseini, Phd,
with the participation of researchers from the CNIO Molecular Imaging Core Unit and from the Complutense University of Madrid, is being published this week in the journal Cell Reports.
who is the leading researcher and the head of the Laboratory of Regulation of Transcription and Replication at the Biological Faculty of the Lomonosov Moscow State university.
#Tablet technology to help children with autism Monash University researchers have developed the world first tablet technology designed to assist children with developmental disabilities such as autism and Down syndrome.
At Monash and previously at Mcgill University in Canada, Professor Cornish has been studying attention delays in children with developmental disorders,
#Crowd-sourced computing reveals how to make better water filters with nanotubes Crowd-sourced computing has helped an international research team including researchers from the University of Sydney discover a new method of improving water filtration systems and water quality.
The research was led by the Center for Nano and Micro Mechanics (CNMM) at Tsinghua University in Beijing
with international partners including researchers from the University of Sydney in Australia. rior to our project,
a Phd from Tsinghua University, was also a visiting scholar at the University of Sydney working with nanotechnology expert Associate professor Luming Shen on the research.
University of Sydne a
#Bats do it, dolphins do it. Now humans can do it too University of California, Berkeley, physicists have used graphene to build lightweight ultrasonic loudspeakers and microphones,
enabling people to mimic bats or dolphinsability to use sound to communicate and gauge the distance and speed of objects around them.
a team led by University of Wisconsin-Madison Professor Laura Kiessling describes the knack of a human protein known as intelectin to distinguish between our cells
and Emory University biochemistry Professor Richard Cummings contributed to the study. Intelectin is not new to science, Kiessling notes,
In collaboration with researchers from Emory University School of medicine in Atlanta and Cedars-Sinai Medical center in Los angeles, the researchers reviewed medical records of 9, 715 patients in the area surrounding Nashville, Tennessee,
Janssen, who received his doctoral degree from Leiden University, is no stranger to the sensing of the very small.
which he received from the University of Nijmegen in The netherlands he did internships in the country and in France on detecting neurotransmitter secretion from single neurons.
#Researchers identify cause of heart damage in sepsis patients Researchers at the University of Liverpool Institute of Infection
Dr Yasir Alhamdi, from the University Institute of Infection and Global Health, said: his new discovery has important clinical implications.
from the University Institute of Infection and Global Health, said: he translational impact to patients with sepsis can extend beyond biomarker prediction of heart complications,
assistant professor in chemistry at the University of Chicago, have developed the first skeleton-like silicon spicules ever prepared via chemical processes. sing bone formation as a guide,
and Northwestern University described their new method for the syntheses and fabrication of mesocopic three-dimensional semiconductors (intermediate between the nanometer and macroscopic scales).
#Discovery of a eat-storage ceramicresearchers at the University of Tokyo have discovered a new type of material which stores heat energy for a prolonged period,
The heat storage ceramic discovered by the research group of Professor Ohkoshi at the University of Tokyo Graduate school of Science preserves heat energy for a prolonged period.
University of Toky i
#Researchers Build a Transistor from a Molecule and A few Atoms An international team of physicists has used a scanning tunneling microscope to create a minute transistor consisting of a single molecule and a small number of atoms.
#Researchers create model of early human heart development from stem cells Researchers at the University of California, Berkeley,
The authors of the study, from Osaka University in Japan, say their dissolvable patch the only vaccination system of its kind could make vaccination easier, safer and less painful.
one of the authors of the study from Osaka University. ecause the new patch is so easy to use,
a Syracuse University team funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), wasn specifically looking for them.
said LHCB physicist Tomasz Skwarnicki of Syracuse University, whose research group was a leader in the analysis. ore precisely the states must be formed of two up quarks, one down quark, one charm quark and one anti-charm quark.
which supports the research through nine awards to scientists from Syracuse University, the University of Maryland College Park,
the Massachusetts institute of technology and the University of Cincinnati working at the Large hadron collider. he pentaquark is not just any new particle,
#Research Team Improves Lithium air batteries For Electric car Industry A research team from Carnegie mellon University and the University of California,
a team led by Viswanathan and Assistant professor Bryan Mccloskey from the University of California, Berkeley, published a paper in Nature Chemistry,
Researchers at the Washington University School of medicine, St louis, and University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, created a remote controlled,
next-generation tissue implant that allows neuroscientists to inject drugs and shine lights on neurons deep inside the brains of mice.
Its development was funded partially by the National institutes of health. t unplugs a world of possibilities for scientists to learn how brain circuits work in a more natural setting. said Michael R. Bruchas, Ph d.,associate professor of anesthesiology and neurobiology at Washington University School of medicine and a senior author
Jae-Woong Jeong, Ph d.,a bioengineer formerly at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, worked with Jordan G. Mccall, Ph d.,a graduate student in the Bruchas lab,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a senior author. ltra-miniaturized devices like this have tremendous potential for science and medicine. ith a thickness of 80 micrometers and a width of 500 micrometers,
and energy engineering at University of Colorado Boulder. e tried to engineer the implant to meet some of neurosciences greatest unmet needs. n the study,
Odds of recurrenceresearchers of the University of Twente have developed therefore a system, a so-called nomogram, that doctors can use together with patients to simply calculate the odds of recurrence of the disease themselves, on the basis of the age of the patient, the information on the original tumour and the treatment used.
The University of Twente will now get to work on providing doctors with concrete recommendations for planning subsequent check-ups.
University of Twent e
#Plankzooka Larval Sampler May Revolutionize Deep ocean Research Scientists have conducted successfully the first high-volume collection of plankton,
Scientists and engineers from Duke university, the University of Oregon and Woods hole oceanographic institution (WHOI) deployed the new sampler nicknamed Plankzooka for its uncanny resemblance to two bazooka rocket launchers on July 9 during a research expedition aboard the RV Atlantis
developed by an international collaboration led by the University of Cambridge and IBM, opens opportunities to tailor properties and functionalities of materials for a wide range of semiconductor device applications.
#olecular spongeadvancement in storing hydrogen Researchers at the University of Bath have discovered that hydrogen absorbed in specialised carbon nanomaterials can achieve extraordinary storage densities at moderate temperatures and pressures.
It was led by Dr Valeska Ting from University Department of Chemical engineering in conjunction with researchers from Rutherford Appleton Laboratory and collaborators in the USA and Germany.
#Scientists Stretch Electrically Conducting Fibers to New Lengths An international research team based at The University of Texas at Dallas has made electrically conducting fibers that can be stretched reversibly to over 14 times their initial length and
#How to make chromosomes from DNA Researchers at the University of Tokyo have discovered a long-overlooked process important for converting a long, string-like DNA molecule into a chromosome.
Researchers at the University of Tokyo, including Assistant professor Takashi Sutani, Professor Katsuhiko Shirahige (Institute of Molecular and Cellular Biosciences) and Ph d student Toyonori Sakata (Graduate school of Agricultural and Life sciences), isolated from cells
Now scientists at the University of Zurich have found that adenoviruses penetrate the cells with the help of the cells themselves.
adenoviruses, as now team of scientists from the University of Zurich have discovered, use this natural repair mechanism to cause infections.
The latest breakthrough comes from Lu collaboration with Kai Tan at the University of Iowa, a systems biologist and associate professor of internal medicine.
The work is based on a team effort of ASU faculty Wei Liu Petra Fromme, Raimund Fromme, John Spence and Uwe Weierstall, with their teams of researchers and students, including:
a professor of medical science and engineering at Brown University who was not involved with this study. his is a very smart approach.
while at the Swedish University of Agricultural sciences and carried out ongoing studies at the university
and with colleagues at China Fujian Academy of Agricultural sciences and Hunan Agricultural University. he need to increase starch content and lower methane emissions from rice production is recognized widely
CSIRO new method, developed in collaboration with The University of Padova (Italy) and The University of Adelaide, makes the crystals viable to manufacture for the first time by reducing the production time from up to two days down to as few as 15 minutes.
The crystals are made of extremely porous metal organic frameworks (MOFS) and have an internal storage capacity of 7,
who also spent extended time at Tsinghua University in China during several years of the research.
who is now assistant professor at University of Yalova in Turkey. After exhaustive research, the group finally came up with a strategy to create the required shape first
in research published on the cover of the July edition of Hepatology, scientists from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem Alexander Grass Center for Bioengineering report that they produced large amounts of functional liver cells from human
Edgerton and colleagues, the University of Louisville Susan Harkema and Claudia Angeli and UCLA Yury Gerasimenko, reported that four young men who had been paralyzed for years were able to move their legs, hips,
An international group of clinicians and scientists from different universities and research institutions, among them the Berlin-based Max Planck Institute for Molecular genetics (Department of Vertebrate Genomics, Hans Lehrach, group
Further, researchers from the team of Jean-Pierre Bourquin from the University Children Hospital in Zürich
It a wonderful example of the power that comes from combining advances in basic biological research with technological innovation. he study was conducted by a team of researchers at the University of California, Los angeles;
University of California, San francisco; and the Pavlov Institute, St petersburg, Russia. The team was led by V. Reggie Edgerton, Ph d.,a distinguished professor of integrative biology and physiology at UCLA and Yury Gerasimenko, Ph d.,director of the laboratory of movement physiology at Pavlov Institute and a researcher
. and Claudia Angeli, Ph d.,from the University of Louisville, Kentuckyeported that four men with complete motor paralysis were able to generate some voluntary movements while receiving electrical stimulation to their spinal cords.
of the Boston University School of medicine. e had this clean idea of how there a really nice order to how neurons connect with each other,
Researchers at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Northwestern University have engineered a tethered ribosome that works nearly as well as the authentic cellular component,
Yoshua Bengio, a deep-learning researcher at the University of Montreal, says the Nvidia chipset is an important commercial milestone. would not call it a breakthrough,
Yann Lecun, a data scientist at New york University who leads deep-learning efforts at Facebook (see acebook Launches Advanced AI Effort to Find Meaning in Your Posts,
just like a human A team of researchers at the University of California has put together a robot that can learn how to do tasks through trial and error.
and certainly not of this scale, said Nevan Krogan of the University of California, San francisco,
said molecular biologist Edward Marcotte of the University of Texas at Austin who led the new study. n fact,
according to a study published today (June 15) in Nature Biotechnology. his is an effective new system for extremely precise control of gene editing via light, Paul Knoepfler, a stem cell biologist at the University of California, Davis,
University of Tokyo chemist Moritoshi Sato and his colleagues developed pairs of photoswitching proteins called Magnets,
Researchers at Northwestern University have determined that Wernicke area, a hotdog-shape region in the temporal lobe of the left hemisphere,
but overall the results bode well for Reebov continued use as a quick Ebola diagnostic in West Africa. his is an important proof-of-principle that the test can really be used in a field setting, infectious disease doctor Charles Chiu of the University of California, San francisco,
it doesn require electricity or a sophisticated lab or an experienced technician, added Robert Garry, a virologist at Tulane University in New orleans,
Andrea Stocco of the University of Washington in Seattle told New Scientist. e are sampling different neurons from different animals
the engineers and physicists at the University of Pennsylvania were able to grow compound lenses with controllable sizes,
The experiments were duplicated by participating labs at Rice, at the Indian Institute of technology and at the Lebanese American University in Beirut.
said Ahmad Kabbani, a professor of chemistry at the Lebanese American University, Beirut. here no way we can grind two nanotubes in a microscope
Researchers at Bristol University department of engineering mathematics have designed now synthetic chromophores which, they say,
who developed the technique working with the company Cinogy and the Department of Dermatology, Venereology and Allergology at the University Medical centre Göttingen.
Berlin/Dresden University of Technology in collaboration with research partners from Advanced Light source/Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,
said Prof Stanga, who works in Manchester University Institute of Human Development as Professor of Opthalmology & Retinal Regeneration.
has developed ben by engineers at Vanderbilt University in Nashvile, Tennessee. Needlescopic surgery, also known as mico-laproscopy, uses instruments about the size of a sewing needle inserted through incisions that are typically 5-10mm long.
Jeff Clune, a computer scientist at the University of Wyoming, said: verything we take for granted works so well
of the Pierre and Marie Curie University in France and the lead author, said: nce damaged, the robot becomes like a scientist.
But researchers from Portsmouth University have found their structure is so biologically strong it could be copied to make cars, boats and planes.
Professor Asa Barber from the university School of engineering said: ntil now we thought that spider silk was the strongest biological material because of its super-strength
The university's associate physics professor, Jason Petta, who led the study, said that researchers had created the smallest laser possible powered by single electrons that burrow through quantum dots.
"enthused the Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland-National Institute of Standards and Technology's adjunct assistant prof Jacob Taylor,
says Michael Eisen, a geneticist at the University of California, Berkeley.""I worry that this $200 million will ultimately come from basic research funding,
says Andrew Pruszynski, an associate professor of physiology and pharmacology at Western University. He wasn't involved in the research
a professor of urology at Cornell University who was not involved with this study.""There certainly is need a potential for this method."
synthetic biologist at Northwestern University and a co-author of the study. These ribosomes could be tailored to only make a certain type of molecule,
a molecular biologist at the University of Illinois at Chicago and a co-author of the study."
researchers at the Columbia University have created a new technology that powers the world's first evaporation-driven engine.
"The technology has been developed by a team of bioengineers led by Ozgur Sahin at Columbia University by making use of the property of bacterial spores,
#Researchers make breakthrough advance towards potentially super-fast Internet A team of researchers from the University of California,
a paper published in the university's Science journal on June 26 has revealed that the researchers managed to break the barriers in the way of increasing the maximum power,
Finette, 58, is a professor of pediatrics, microbiology and molecular genetics at the University of Vermont College of Medicine and director of the Global Health and Humanitarian Opportunity Program.
and chief of inpatient and critical care pediatrics at The University of Vermont Children's Hospital.
The two have known each other for 26 years, crossing paths as young pediatricians and then as co-workers at the University of Vermont Medical center.
and Tropical Medicine and another diploma in international humanitarian assistance from Fordham University in New york and the United nations in a program called the Center for International Humanitarian Cooperation."
"The power of economicsfinette and Heath formed THINKMD last August after the University of Vermont passed on developing Medsinc.
"Right now Barry is doing an incredible job with a full-time job at the university of getting his product developed in beta phase to prove the concept,
Researchers from the University of Rochester have used femtosecond laser pulses to turn metals waterproof or super-hydrophobic.
Chunlei Guo, a physicist at the Institute of Optics at the University of Rochester and the lead author of the study,
Jacob Taylor, an adjunct assistant professor at the Joint Quantum Institute, University of Maryland-National Institute of Standards and Technology and one of the researchers, said,
said Jacob Taylor, an adjunct assistant professor at the Joint Quantum Institute at the University of Maryland-National Institute of Standards and Technology.
Dr. Jill Ostrem, a neurologist at the University of California San francisco Medical center, commented t totally novel.
According to the study co-author Matthew Charles, a particle physicist at The french National Center for Scientific research LPNHE laboratory at the University of Paris VI
#Muscle like Microbots Developed By University of Michigan In an innovative research, the scientists from the University of Michigan have devised special microbots that could possibly work as muscles in the body of human beings.
These synthetic muscles, which are even smaller than a grain of sand, have a gold plating over them
whereas Michael Solomon, one of her colleagues and a professor of chemical engineering at the University of Michigan, explained that the chains in groups demonstrated great potential. f we can get the chains to swarm together,
#Researchers develop catalyst to remove endocrine disruptor from wastewater Researchers from the Carnegie mellon University in US
and Brunel University London have developed a TAML catalyst which claimed to remove endocrine disruptor from wastewater.
The activators have been created by US based Carnegie mellon University's Institute for Green Science, Teresa Heinz Professor of Green Chemistry Terence Collins. Professor Collins said:"
"Brunel University Ecotoxicology professor and Institute of Environment, Health and Societies director Susan Jobling said:"
"Research teams at Brunel University London and Carnegie mellon University intend to conduct comparison tests for TAMLS against ozone
and activated carbon treatment systems in pilot treatment plants to find out about the exact costs of purification and carbon footprint savings s
#New Invention Boosts Fiber optic Transmission Up to 400%June 30, 2015-Just in case you were worried that we didn't have enough data traveling through fiber optic cables, engineers at University of California,
In a recent series of experiments engineers at the university have been able to increase both optical signal power and distance.
The university team found a way to add more power and eliminate the need for repeaters.
So what did these University of California engineers discover to achieve their success? It is called a wideband frequency comb.
June 25, 2015-For future astronauts on Deep space missions, a technology developed at University of California
Redlabs founder and University of Houston business professor Hesam Panahi manned a turntable on stage, spinning tunes as DJ Surge.
CAR-T cells from the University of Pennsylvania appeared to be safe. But the university, which has an exclusive partnership with Novartis (NYSE:
NVS), reported the cells showed no effect on the tumors. And Juno partner, Seattle Children Hospital, has started just a Phase 1 CAR-T trial for children with neuroblastoma,
Researchers at the University of California, Los angeles published work late last year that showed why certain patients responded well to a different kind of cancer immunotherapyn antibody called pembrolizumab (Keytruda.
and director of research at the Centre for Theoretical Cosmology within the University of Cambridge: Stephen Hawking.
#Aussies 3d print jet engine in world first Engineers from Monash and Deakin universities and the CSIRO have printed two gas turbine engines modelled on an"auxiliary power unit"used in aircraft like the Falcon 20, a French business jet.
the Monash University company making the technology available to Australian industry.""The project is a spectacular proof of concept that's leading to significant contracts with aerospace companies,"Batagol added.
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