PNAS Early Edition for the week of June 15, 2009.
PNAS Early Edition (2013).
Renaud Boistel et al., How minute sooglossid frogs hear without a middle ear, Advance Online Publication
PNAS Early Edition 2 September 2013, DOI / 10.1073 / pnas.1302218110
A study showing these findings will be published Feb. 9 in
PNAS Early Edition.
Their study published online ahead of print in
PNAS Early Edition suggests a new therapeutic strategy for patients with Duchene muscular dystrophy, a progressive neuromuscular condition, caused by a lack of dystrophin, that usually leaves patients unable to walk on their own by age 10 - 15.
«If we could build a «family tree» of all cancer nodules in a patient, we could determine how different tumors are related to each other and reconstruct how the cancer evolved,» says Kamila Naxerova, PhD, of the Steele Laboratory for Tumor Biology at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), corresponding author of the report being published in
PNAS Early Edition.
We published this paper in
PNAS earlier this year if anyone's interested:
Not exact matches
To do so, the scientists use principles from stochastic geometry, as they have reported in a contribution to the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (
PNAS,
Early Edition).
The work was published in the August 31 online
Early Edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
In a new study due this week in the
Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), Rice University theoretical physicist Qimiao Si and colleagues at the Rice Center for Quantum Materials in Houston and the Vienna University of Technology in Austria make predictions that could help experimental physicists create what the authors have coined a «Weyl - Kondo semimetal,» a quantum material with an assorted collection of properties seen in disparate materials like topological insulators, heavy fermion metals and high - temperature superconductors.
The findings were published today, July 15, in the
early online edition of
PNAS, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The findings are published in the online
early edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
The study, published in the October 28
Early Online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), is the first to demonstrate the application of this methodology to the design of self - assembled nanostructures, and shows the potential of machine learning and «big data» approaches embodied in the new Institute for Data Sciences and Engineering at Columbia.
Jackson, a volcanologist by training who led an
earlier study at the ALS on Roman seawater concrete, is the lead author of a paper describing this study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS) titled «Mechanical Resilience and Cementitious Processes in Imperial Roman Architectural Mortar.»
The researchers say his tools meet the criteria for both tool groups made by
early Homo — wedges and choppers, and scrapers and drills (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.1212855109).
Development of these «stable nematic droplets with handles» was described May 20 in the
early edition of the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
The paper will appear the week of Sept. 18 in the
early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS), one of the world's most cited and comprehensive multidisciplinary scientific journals.
Their findings are published in the Feb. 28 online
early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
The recent research published in the
PNAS article, builds on work reported
earlier this year in Nature Chemical Biology, which was led by York, and involved Professor Bernard Henrissat, of CNRS, Aix - Marseille Université, Marseille, France.
The results were published the week of Aug. 5 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS)
Early Edition online.
However, it is still too
early to think about its clinical use,» according to researchers in their publication, in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (
PNAS).
The study is published today in the
Early Edition of the journal
PNAS.
A study published April 7 in
PNAS Online
Early Edition describes how a team of scientists, including researchers from the University of California, Davis, showed that vapor losses to the walls of laboratory chambers can suppress the formation of secondary organic aerosol, which in turn has contributed to the underprediction of SOA in climate and air quality models.
This is the
earliest known human consumption of oats, say Marta Mariotti Lippi at the University of Florence in Italy and her colleagues, who made the discovery after analysing starch grains on an ancient stone grinding tool from southern Italy (
PNAS, DOI: 10.1073 / pnas.15052131
PNAS, DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.15052131
pnas.1505213112).
The study is published online in the
early edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA (
PNAS).
The study will appear online October 24, 2016 in an
Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal (
PNAS).
She will bear her first child about 5 months
earlier and enter menopause 10 months later (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.0906199106).
Researchers led by Professor Eckhard Wolf, Chair of Molecular Animal Breeding and Biotechnology at the Gene Center and the Department of Veterinary Sciences at LMU, now report in the journal
PNAS, that
early phases of the development of bovine embryos, might offer a better system for the understanding of the
earliest differentiation steps.
«Changing the picture of Earth's
earliest fossils (3.5 - 1.9 Ga) with new approaches and new discoveries» by Martin Brasier, Jonathan Antcliffe, Martin Saunders and David Wacey in
PNAS
Top - down proteomics reveals a unique protein S - thiolation switch in Salmonella Typhimurium in response to infection - like conditions, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,
Early Edition online the week of May 27, 2013, DOI 10.1073 /
pnas.1221210110.
At last the
PNAS article previewed
earlier this week by In Sequence is available on the journal's site.
Microphysical effects determine macrophysical response for aerosol impacts on deep convective clouds, Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A,
Early Edition online the week of November 11 - 15, 2013, DOI: 10.1073 /
pnas.1316830110.
The research team, which included Sandra L. Wolin and Richard Flavell, both HHMI investigators at Yale University School of Medicine, published its findings June 3, 2003, in the online
Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (
PNAS).
Now available in the
Early Edition of
PNAS: Tom Williams (University of Bristol, UK) in collaboration with, among others, the Ettema - lab reports on using integrative modeling of gene and genome evolution to root the archaeal tree of life and to resolve the metabolism of the
earliest archaeal cells.
A recent paper published in in
PNAS reveals that selection of long - lived sperms from the male ejaculation results in offspring with greater prospects of surviving
early -LSB-...]
Now, a study in
PNAS journal suggests they descend from
early farmers who mixed with local hunters before becoming isolated for millennia.
This is true going back to work in the
early 1990s (MIT Press, Yale Press, Science,
PNAS, among others).
The
earliest period in their study [«Socioecological transitions trigger fire regime shifts and modulate fire — climate interactions in the Sierra Nevada, USA, 1600 — 2015 CE,»
PNAS] was a time when Native Americans used sophisticated burning techniques to improve hunting and prepare ground for agriculture.
Citation:
PNAS Online Early Edition, 10.1073 / pnas.0806139105 (September 2, 2008) Csaba Leranth, M.D. http://www.med.yale.edu/obgyn/research/researchlabs.
PNAS Online
Early Edition, 10.1073 /
pnas.0806139105 (September 2, 2008) Csaba Leranth, M.D. http://www.med.yale.edu/obgyn/research/researchlabs.
pnas.0806139105 (September 2, 2008) Csaba Leranth, M.D. http://www.med.yale.edu/obgyn/research/researchlabs.html
In the first comprehensive biogeochemical model of this «Canfield Ocean,» Johnston et al. (2) in a recent issue of
PNAS present a stunningly different take on those
early photosynthesizers — one in which the upper, light - containing layers indeed drove biological production but without the expected concomitant release of oxygen.
Moreover, the paper gets its history wrong when it notes that «Total cancer mortality rates did not decline until 1990, 25 years after the identification of the effect of smoking on lung and other cancers...» Well, actually, it was more like 50 years, because the
earliest studies to connect smoking and lung cancer were conducted not by NIH - funded scientists but by Nazi scientists in the run - up to World War II.4 By the logic of the
PNAS paper, then, ought we to be crediting the Nazi health science agenda with whatever progress has been made on reducing lung cancer, rather than the incredibly protracted and difficult public health campaign (that, for the most part, NIH had nothing to do with) aimed at getting people to cut down on smoking?
I wanted to make a point about an
earlier (2013)
PNAS paper by the authors that Dr. Curry linked to after my original comment — a paper I was already familiar with.
With apologies in case it's out there and I'm repeating myself, I wanted to make a point about an
earlier (2013)
PNAS paper by the authors that Dr. Curry linked to after my original comment — a paper I was already familiar with.
An
early salvo in this direction was published recently in the flagship publication of the National Academies (of science, engineering, and medicine),
PNAS.
It's just that instead of so much ego - publishing in
PNAS / Nature / Science and so much emphasis on the answer (the recon) and in backing up his
earlier work, it out to be explored as an approach that may extract signal out of noise.
The
early data for this is «Study 1» in the recent
PNAS paper (another paper will report the four - year outcomes for all of the charters who participated in the second cohort).