Sentences with phrase «cu study»

But sulfates make up just under half of shipping's total particle emissions, according to the NOAA - CU study.
Link to CU Study Abroad Program This past summer she performed research at the Technische Univeritaet in Dresden (TUD), Germany Link to TUD.
CU study looks at how this happens in real time... twitter.com/i/web/status/9...
CU study looks at how this happens in real time... twitter.com/i/web/status/9...

Not exact matches

Poorly camouflaged insects can kick off a cascade of ecological impacts, new CU - Boulder study finds October 21, 2013 • Natural Sciences, Research, Academics, Environment
The analogy I used when I was startled by a similarly lame attempt at proof by an otherwise intelligent fellow grad student is that using the bible to prove the resurrection is like using the Old Irish tales I had been studying then to prove the superhuman powers of Irish folk hero Cu Chulainn.
(In January, Hoffman found herself in the spotlight after a CU ethnic studies professor likened Sept. 11 victims to Nazi Adolf Eichmann.)
University of Colorado Boulder: Nap - Deprived Tots May be Missing Out on More Than Sleep, Says New CU - led Study
The Power of Yes [3] Duhachek A, Zhang S, Krishnan S. Connections in the brains of young children strengthen during sleep, CU - Boulder study finds.
For the current study, working in the CU Cancer Center Advanced Light Microscopy Core, co-authors Dominik Stitch, PhD, and Radu Moldovan, PhD, implemented a new technique known intravital multiphoton in vivo microscopy that enabled the team to watch fluorescent - tagged liposomes in real - time after injection.
«Although the effects of light are well studied in adults, virtually nothing is known about how evening light exposure affects the physiology, health and development of preschool - aged children,» said lead author Lameese Akacem, a CU Boulder instructor and researcher in the Sleep and Development Lab.
«Much of our historical data about species» population - level responses to climate change comes from observational studies, which can suggest but not confirm causation,» said Anne Marie Panetta, lead author of the study and a post-doctoral researcher in CU Boulder's Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology (EBIO).
«The influence of distant forest fires on melt events on the Greenland ice sheet is inherently challenging to demonstrate and these clear chemical results provide another line of evidence for this connection,» said Diane McKnight, a CU Boulder professor and a co-author of the study.
The impetus for the study was a survey done a few years ago at CU Hospital's Spine Center.
«I didn't expect to find that half a degree Celsius would make a big difference, but it really does,» said Alexandra Jahn, author of the study and an assistant professor in CU Boulder's Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and a fellow in the Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR).
It's time for the Surgeon General to say the same thing about UV tanning,» says Robert P. Dellavalle, MD, PhD, MSPH, investigator at the CU Cancer Center, associate professor of dermatology at the University of Colorado School of Medicine, and the study's senior author.
«The novelty of this study is that it provides potential neuroimaging - based tools that can be used with new patients to inform about the degree of certain neural pathology underlying their pain symptoms,» said Marina López - Solà, a post-doctoral researcher in CU Boulder's Cognitive and Affective Control Laboratory and lead author of the new study.
CU Boulder researchers used functional MRI scans (fMRI) to study brain activity in a group of 37 fibromyalgia patients and 35 control patients as they were exposed to a variety of non-painful visual, auditory and tactile cues as well as painful pressure.
«There have been several studies relating cortisol levels in teenagers and adults to socioeconomic status, but this is the first to look at this relationship among pregnant women and their babies,» said study author Zaneta Thayer, PhD, assistant professor of anthropology at CU Denver, a major center of timely, topical and relevant research.
In a study published today in the Journal of Archaeological Science an international team of Serbian and UK researchers have developed a Cu - As - Sn (Copper - Arsenic - Tin) colour ternary diagram to uncover the original colours of archaeological artefacts now patinated through age and exposure.
«Pyrroloquinoline quinone, or PQQ, is a natural antioxidant found in soil and many foods and enriched in human breast milk,» said the study's lead author Karen Jonscher, PhD, an associate professor of anesthesiology and a physicist at CU Anschutz.
Scientists of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) studied the reactions under close - to - reality conditions: With the help of X-rays, they observed the interactions of the nitrogen monoxide pollutant molecule and of the reduction agent ammonia with iron and copper centers, i.e. transition metal ions in Fe - ZSM - 5 and Cu - SSZ - 13, where the reaction takes place.
For the study, published in the journal Nature Communications, Seals and lead author Chris Martens, then a postdoctoral fellow at CU Boulder, included 24 lean and healthy men and women ages 55 to 79 from the Boulder area.
Known as the phosphatidylserine receptor, or PSR - 1, the molecule can locate and clear out apoptotic cells that are pre-programmed to die as well as necrotic cells that have been injured and are causing inflammation, said CU - Boulder Professor Ding Xue, who led one study and co-authored the other.
Kenneth Manning, professor of marketing at Colorado State University; Bridget Leonard, CU - Boulder graduate student at the time of the study and now assistant professor of marketing at Indiana University - Purdue University Fort Wayne; and Hannah Manning, CSU student, co-authored the paper.
Not so, according to a field study led by CU - Boulder researchers, who found that higher levels of spruce beetle infestation did not lead to more ecologically severe fires.
«Our study is unique because we were actually out in the forest peeling bark off of the burned trees, looking for evidence of the beetle,» said Robert Andrus, a graduate researcher in the Department of Geography at CU - Boulder and lead author of the new study.
The new CU - Boulder study suggests that how much a person trusts an investment banker or an economic adviser could affect the person's decisions about saving and spending.
«Most of the time, when people talk about delaying gratification, they talk about basic processes of evaluation and self - control,» said Laura Michaelson, a CU - Boulder doctoral student in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience and co-lead author of the new study appearing in the online journal Frontiers in Psychology.
CU Boulder scientist Larry Benson said the new study shows that Chaco Canyon — believed by some archeologists to have been populated by several thousand people around A.D. 1100 and to have held political sway over an area twice the size of Ohio — had soils that were too salty for the effective growth of corn and beans.
The decline is primarily a result of habitat destruction, bushmeat hunting and illegal capture for the pet trade, said CU Boulder Professor Michelle Sauther, co-author of study.
A preschooler is exposed to light at night as part of a CU Boulder study measuring the impact of screens on sleep.
The study was le d by Jimi Adams, an associate professor in the Department of Health and Behavioral Studies at CU Denver College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and published this month in Social Science Research.
CU Boulder Professor Michelle Sauther, shown here, is part of a new study showing Madagascar's ring - tailed lemurs are declining significantly from habitat loss, hunting, and illegal capture.
Ancient inhabitants of Chaco Canyon likely had to import corn to feed the masses a thousand years ago says a new CU - Boulder study.
«Prior to this study we really didn't have much information on the impact of spaceflight on the liver,» said the study's lead author Karen Jonscher, PhD, an associate professor of anesthesiology and a physicist at CU Anschutz.
«A lot of attention has been paid to defeat devices, but our work emphasizes the existence of a much larger problem,» said Daven Henze, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at CU Boulder who, along with postdoctoral researcher Forrest Lacey, contributed to the study.
«Surprisingly, we found that we could create all sorts of biogenic - like materials that have the right shape, structure and chemistry to match natural materials we assume are produced biologically,» said Associate Professor Alexis Templeton of CU Boulder's Department of Geological Sciences and senior author of the new study.
«This line of work is starting to change our thinking about who and when — the timing and patient selection for anti-androgen receptor therapy in triple - negative breast cancer,» says Valerie Barton, the study's first author and PhD candidate in the lab of CU Cancer Center investigator Jennifer Richer, PhD.
«Knowing this mechanism that underlies IL - 37's effect on the immune system now allows us to study IL - 37 function and perhaps dysfunction in a wide range of diseases,» says Mayumi Fujita, MD, PhD, investigator at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, associate professor in the CU School of Medicine Department of Dermatology, and the paper's senior author.
The study showed some microbial communities associated with humans tick in a predictable, clock - like succession following death, said CU - Boulder and UC San Diego Senior Research Associate Jessica Metcalf, who led the study with UC San Diego Professor Rob Knight.
«The fungus lost a crucial energy - producing gene while the algae retained a full - length copy of this gene,» said Cloe Pogoda, lead author of the study and a graduate researcher in CU Boulder's Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology.
The new study is one of more than a dozen papers authored or co-authored by CU - Boulder researchers published in the past several years on human microbiomes.
In addition to Metcalf, Fierer, Knight, Carter and Parfrey, other study authors included Antonio Gonzalez, Gail Ackerman, Greg Humphrey, Mathew Gebert, Will Van Treuren, Donna Berg Lyons and Kyle Keepers from CU - Boulder, former BioFrontiers doctoral student Dan Knights from the University of Minnesota, and Yan Go and James Bullard from Pacific Biosciences in Menlo Park, Calif..
«Symbioses allows two different organisms to survive in areas where they otherwise might not be able to grow,» said Erin Tripp, Curator of Botany at CU's Museum of Natural History and a co-author of the new study.
Led by CU - Boulder Assistant Research Professor Peter Grace and Distinguished Professor Linda Watkins, the study showed that just a few days of morphine treatment caused chronic pain that went on for several months by exacerbating the release of pain signals from specific immune cells in the spinal cord.
A study led by CU Boulder researchers provides new insight into the Moon's excessive equatorial bulge, a feature that solidified in place over four billion years ago as the Moon gradually distanced itself from the Earth.
Moderators: Christine Holmes, director of postdoctoral studies & Colleen McLinn, CU - CIRTL director.
Karl Pfenninger, M.D., CU School of Medicine: Study causes of intellectual disability associated with Down syndrome, specifically the APP protein
James DeGregori, Ph.D., CU School of Medicine: Study increase in leukemia incidence and other problems with blood cell production, including reduced immunity
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