Sentences with phrase «author of the new study explained»

Christopher Morris of LANL and author of the new study explained that neutrons have been essentially «fossilized» in the nuclei of atoms.

Not exact matches

Richard Florida, the urban studies theorist and author of «The Rise of the Creative Class» recently cited three particular Boulder ingredients that could help explain its start - up density: «talented people and a high quality of life that keeps them around, technological expertise, and an open - mindedness about new ways of doing things, which often comes from a strong counterculture.»
Explaining their findings in Harvard Business Review, the study's authors, Harvard's Robert Huckman and Bradley Staats of the University of North Carolina, pointed to the time it takes new team members to learn how to communicate with one another and determine who is the best authority in different areas.
«The reticular thalamus acts like a gate that filters information from the thalamus and dispatches signals to the cortex,» explained Jeanne Paz, PhD, assistant investigator at Gladstone and senior author of the new study.
The lead author of the new study, Guillem Anglada [1], from the Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (CSIC), Granada, Spain, explains the significance of this find: «The dust around Proxima is important because, following the discovery of the terrestrial planet Proxima b, it's the first indication of the presence of an elaborate planetary system, and not just a single planet, around the star closest to our Sun.»
We believe that they will also lead to the development of a whole new range of therapies for neurodegenerative diseases of the central nervous system,» explains corresponding author of the study Jihwan Song, professor and director of Neural Regeneration and Therapy Group at the CHA Stem Cell Institute of CHA University.
Unlike «big data» genetic studies, which have loosely linked hundreds of genetic changes to schizophrenia but can not explain varying symptoms, the new study revealed distinct disease versions that may affect large slices of patients and enable precision treatment design, say the authors.
Scientists have known about the beneficial effects of bone marrow transplants since the late 1960s, but «there really hasn't been much data available to explain what is going on,» says immunologist James George of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, an author of the new study.
As the authors of the new research explain: «There are three main levels of analysis in the study of proteins: the first is the sequence of amino acids, the second is the three - dimensional structure that these filaments take on a very short time after they are synthesized, while the third regards their function.
However, the animal kingdom is host to an incredible diversity of sperm forms, explains Scott Pitnick, the lead author of a new study in Nature and Weeden Professor of Biology in the College of Arts and Sciences.
«These four new wheat lines showed improved resistance against powdery mildew in field trials compared with their parental lines — during the field seasons 2015 to 2017,» explains Teresa Koller, lead author of the study.
We hope this leads to the ability to design, study and test new therapies for every patient on their own cells in the lab, leading to new treatments and breakthroughs in personalized medicine for individuals with a variety of lung diseases, including cystic fibrosis,» explained lead author Katherine McCauley, a PhD student at BUSM.
«We demonstrate a new approach for a multiplexed assay that detects multiple proteins simultaneously by letting a fluid flow past the randomly positioned gold nano - rods,» explained Christina Rosman, first author of the study.
Dr Sam Parnia, Assistant Professor of Critical Care Medicine and Director of Resuscitation Research at The State University of New York at Stony Brook, USA, and the study's lead author, explained: «Contrary to perception, death is not a specific moment but a potentially reversible process that occurs after any severe illness or accident causes the heart, lungs and brain to cease functioning.
This makes it a valuable new treatment option in cases of anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis that have so far proven resistant to treatment,» explains Franziska Scheibe, the study's first author.
«This new study developed out of previous experiments,» explains Alissa Ferry, SISSA research scientist and among the authors of the paper, «in which we observed that infants were surprised when a liquid failed to behave as a liquid (in those experiments we «cheated» by disguising solids as liquids).»
«The inhibition of PRMT5 may have potential therapeutic utility in cancer treatment,» explains Cheryl Koh, a postdoctoral fellow in Guccione's lab and the co-first author of the new study.
The study offers impressive new evidence that supports some old theories while setting others to rest, explains Cody Dey, an author of the Nature paper who was completing his PhD in Biology at McMaster at the time of the research.
«Our findings are consistent with the idea that an imbalance of protein synthesis and actin dynamics contribute to physiological problems in FXS mice,» explains New York University Professor Eric Klann, director NYU's Center for Neural Science and the study's senior author.
«Next - generation sequencing technology has allowed us to find new causes of genetic diseases in much smaller families,» explained the study's lead author, William Motley, MD, PhD, a resident physician in Medicine.
«This study provides evidence that a single dose of an antibody stimulates patients» immune response, enabling them to make new or better antibodies against the virus,» explains Till Schoofs, a postdoctoral fellow and one of the study's first authors.
«The information we have gained about the dynamic changes in ECM composition and its interactions with various secreted growth factor proteins enables us to develop new hypotheses for the activation of stem cells in the lung,» explains Dr. Herbert Schiller, first author of the study.
The authors of the study say their new understanding of how epidermal cells form a barrier may explain the paradox of how we can shed them without compromising our skin's integrity.
«The need to conserve the environment by reducing the wash temperature and the use of biodegradable washing products have grown in importance in the new millennium, making this type of research more high profile,» explained Professor John Dean, corresponding author of the study from the University of Northumbria.
«This approach for data integration will enable the comparison of single - cell datasets and the ability to dissect the differences between them,» explains Rahul Satija, the study's senior author, who is an assistant professor in NYU's Center for Genomics and Systems Biology and a core faculty member at the New York Genome Center.
«We therefore use a relatively new method, hyperpolarization,» explains Stephan Düwel, physicist and first author of the study.
The wind pushes them out to the open sea, where they ultimately break up into smaller pieces and melt in the course of two to three years,» explains Thomas Rackow, a climate modeller at the Alfred Wegener Institute in Bremerhaven / Germany and first author of the new study.
The specialists are those which are most flexible in adapting their foraging choices across seasons», explains Irene Bender, Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre and German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv), lead author of a new study on this topic.
«Strangulation occurs when the gas is consumed to make stars faster than it's being replenished, so the galaxy starves to death,» Toby Brown, a PhD candidate at ICRAR and Swinburne University of Technology and lead author of a new study published in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, explained in a statement.
The team leader and first author of the new study, Héctor Arce (Yale University, USA) explains that «ALMA's exquisite sensitivity allows the detection of previously unseen features in this source, like this very fast outflow.
«This pretty much rules out the alien megastructure theory, as that could not explain the wavelength - dependent dimming,» said Huan Meng, at the University of Arizona, Tucson, who is lead author of the new study published in The Astrophysical Journal.
«Our study uncovers the first genetic evidence explaining why some people look older for their age,» write the authors of the paper, in the latest issue of the journal Current Biology, «and provides new leads for further investigating the biological basis of how old or young people look.»
«Now, we have a mechanism to explain how sequences that comprise one - third of our genome have moved,» says John Moran, Ph.D., senior author of the new paper and a longtime U-M and HHMI researcher studying jumping genes.
Prof Drew Shindell, professor of climate sciences at Duke University and lead author of the new Nature Climate Change study, explains to Carbon Brief:
Animal research has linked such increases to a higher risk for developing anxiety and depression, explained study author Jiook Cha, an assistant professor in the division of child and adolescent psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center in New York City.
On the third page of the study, the authors write: «Negative voucher effects are not explained by the quality of public fallback options for LSP applicants: achievement levels at public schools attended by students lotteried out of the program are below the Louisiana average and comparable to scores in low - performing districts like New Orleans.»
Such naivete explains why the Obama Administration has continually promoted case studies of reform - minded school leaders working closely with NEA and AFT locals, why Class Struggle author Steve Brill floated the laughable idea of Weingarten becoming chancellor of New York City's traditional district three years ago, and why organizations such as Educators4Excellence and Teach Plus — which represent younger, reform - minded teachers who now make up the majority of NEA and AFT rank - and - filers (and are staffed by teachers who are themselves centrist and progressive Democrats)-- work so hard to aim to lead reform from within union ranks.
Todd Morgan, lead author of the new study and a research professor in gerontology at USC explained his findings thusly, the Times reports: «Our data would suggest that freeway pollution could have a profound effect on the development of neurons and brain health in children and young kids, especially those who attend schools built alongside freeways.»
With a drier future and higher regional temperatures amplifying possible late - century droughts, the situation presents a major adaptation challenge for managing the region's water needs, explains Ault, who along with lead author Benjamin Cook and Jason Smerdon, both of NASA, published their new study, «Unprecedented 21st Century Drought Risk in the American Southwest and Central Plains Drought Risk in Western North America.»
«It's a bit like sitting on one side of a water bed filled with very thick honey,» explains Ben DeJong, the lead author on the new study, who conducted the research as a doctoral student at UVM's Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources with support from the U.S. Geological Survey, «then the other side goes up.
The study's author suggests that the difference may be explained by the fact «new media» communications are less likely to be vetted and edited than publications in «old» media, and there may be better evidence of «new media»... Read More
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