Lead
author of the study Dr David Reynolds, from the School of Earth and Ocean Sciences, said: «Our results show that solar variability and volcanic eruptions play a significant role in driving variability in the oceans over the past 1000 years.
«Vitamin D deficiency is a silent syndrome linked to insulin resistance, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, and a higher risk for certain cancers,» said lead
author of the study Dr Emad Al - Dujaili.
Lead
author of the study Dr Mikako Matsuura, from Cardiff University's School of Physics and Astronomy, said: «This is the first time that we've found these species of molecules within supernovae, which questions our long held assumptions that these explosions destroy all molecules and dust that are present within a star.
Lead
author of the study Dr Tom Gernon, Lecturer in Earth Science at the University of Southampton, said: «When volcanic material is deposited in the oceans it undergoes very rapid and profound chemical alteration that impacts the biogeochemistry of the oceans.
«Two unusual and extreme droughts occurring within a decade may largely offset the carbon absorbed by intact Amazon forests during that time,» explained University of Leeds researcher and principal
author of the study Dr Simon Lewis.
Not exact matches
The team were «amazed to discover this cluster
of knolls» while they were scanning the sea floor,
Dr Robin Beaman, Geoscience professor at James Cook University and an
author of the
study, said in a statement.
«
Study author Dr Gabriele Macho examined the diet
of Paranthropus boisei, nicknamed «Nutcra.cker Man» because
of his big flat molar teeth and powerful jaws, THROUGH
STUDYING MODERN - DAY BABOONS IN KENYA..
«If the right levels
of the drug are not taken, as in they are too low or not regularly maintained, the virus can overcome the drug and become resistant,»
Dr Ravi Gupta, lead
author of the
study, told the BBC.
The committee included an international group
of academics with expertise in various aspects
of food culture and gastronomy such as Joxe Mari Aizega, General Manager
of Basque Culinary Center; Jorge Ruiz Carrascal, Professor
of the Department
of Food Science at the University
of Copenhagen; Marta Miguel Castro, a Research Associate at the CIAL Institute
of Research in Food Science, who
studies how food components could prevent disorders such as diabetes and obesity; Melina Shannon Dipietro, executive director
of Rene Redzepi's MAD project; and
Dr F. Xavier Medina,
author, social anthropologist and leading scholar
of Food and Culture at the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC) in Barcelona.
One
of the
authors of the UK
study was
Dr Gowri Motha, who runs a holistic birthing unit in London, The Jeyarani Centre.
Author Contributions:
Dr Li had full access to all the data in the
study and takes full responsibility for the integrity
of the data and the accuracy
of the analysis.
Author Contributions:
Drs Amitay and Keinan - Boker had full access to all
of the data in the
study and take responsibility for the integrity
of the data and the accuracy
of the data analysis.
Author Contributions:
Dr Johnson and Ms Rocha had full access to all
of the data in the
study and take responsibility for the integrity
of the data and the accuracy
of the data analysis.
Author Contributions:
Dr Li had full access to all
of the data in the
study and takes responsibility for the integrity
of the data and the accuracy
of the data analysis.
Author Contributions:
Dr Karagas had full access to all
of the data in the
study and takes responsibility for the integrity
of the data and the accuracy
of the data analysis.
Dr Maria Di Forti, the
author of the
study, told me that she thinks that high - THC cannabis is a risk factor in psychosis.
Clinical Psychologist (USA)
Dr Brooke Magnanti Feona Attwood, Professor
of Media & Communication at Middlesex University Martin Barker, Emeritus Professor at University
of Aberystwyth Jessica Ringrose, Professor, Sociology
of Gender and Education, UCL Institute
of Education Ronete Cohen MA, Psychologist
Dr Meg John Barker, Senior Lecturer in Psychology, The Open University Kath Albury, Associate Professor, UNSW Australia Myles Jackman, specialist in obscenity law
Dr Helen Hester, Middlesex University Justin Hancock, youth worker and sex educator Ian Dunt, Editor in Chief, Politics.co.uk Ally Fogg, Journalist
Dr Emily Cooper, Northumbria University Gareth May, Journalist
Dr Kate Egan, Lecturer in Film
Studies, Aberystwyth University
Dr Ann Luce, Senior Lecturer in Journalism and Communication, Bournemouth University John Mercer, Reader in Gender and Sexuality, Birmingham City University
Dr. William Proctor, Lecturer in Media, Culture and Communication, Bournemouth University
Dr Jude Roberts, Teaching Fellow, University
of Surrey
Dr Debra Ferreday, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Lancaster University Jane Fae,
author of «Taming the beast» a review
of law / regulation governing online pornography Michael Marshall, Vice President, Merseyside Skeptics Society Martin Robbins, Journalist Assoc. Prof. Paul J. Maginn (University
of Western Australia)
Dr Lucy Neville, Lecturer in Criminology, Middlesex University Alix Fox, Journalist and Sex Educator
Dr Mark McCormack, Senior Lecturer in Sociology, Durham University Chris Ashford, Professor
of Law and Society, Northumbria University Diane Duke, CEO Free Speech Coalition (USA)
Dr Steve Jones, Senior Lecturer in Media, Northumbria University
Dr Johnny Walker, Lecturer in Media, Northumbria University
However the
authors of the
study, Professor Michael Hebbert and
Dr Vladimir Jankovic from the University
of Manchester found that despite all the technology available to them, most planners build cities without an awareness
of the atmospheric effects they are creating.
The Pulvinar might facilitate the detection
of these stimuli,» explains
Dr Morgane Roth, one
of the
authors of the
study.
Study lead
author Dr Ryan Hossaini, from the Lancaster Environment Centre at Lancaster University, said: «Dichloromethane is a human - made ozone - depleting chemical that has a range
of industrial applications.
«A short - term blockade
of the inflammation response opened up a window
of opportunity for the immune system to respond effectively,» explained the
study's first
author,
Dr Milica Vukmanovic - Stejic (UCL Infection & Immunity).
Dr Angela Wood, from the University
of Cambridge, lead
author of the
study said: «If you already drink alcohol, drinking less may help you live longer and lower your risk
of several cardiovascular conditions.
«Despite common perceptions and the growth
of the online world for teenagers, our
study finds that cyberbullying, on its own, is relatively rare, with face - to - face bullying remaining most common among teenagers,» says lead
author Dr Andrew Przybylski, University
of Oxford, UK.
«Our aim was to explore the effect
of a more acidic ocean on every gene in the coral genome,» says
study lead
author Dr Aurelie Moya, a molecular ecologist with the ARC Centre
of Excellence for Coral Reef
Studies at James Cook University.
Dr Lydia Makaroff (International Diabetes Federation, not an
author of the current
study): «The health cost for diabetes currently exceeds US$ 600 billion, 12 %
of the global health budget, and will only increase as diabetes becomes more common.
Dr Luis Pedro Coelho, corresponding
author of the
study, commented: «We found many similarities between the gene content
of the human and dog gut microbiomes.
Joint first
author of the
study, microbiologist
Dr Jo Fothergill said: «We have discovered that the nasopharynx acts as a silent reservoir for bacteria from which more serious infections in the lungs can develop.»
Study lead
author Dr Christopher Doughty, from the Environmental Change Institute in School
of Geography and the Environment at the University
of Oxford, said: «Tropical rainforests have been popularly thought
of as the «lungs»
of the planet.
Dr Tomi Pastinen, senior
author on the second
study, from McGill University said: «We have created an expansive, high - resolution atlas
of variations that deepens our understanding
of the interplay between the genetic and epigenetic machinery that drives the three primary cells
of the human immune system.
Dr Alice Forster,
study author and Cancer Research UK scientist at University College London, said: «Although around 87 per cent
of girls in the UK do have the vaccine it's concerning to see that some girls from some ethnic minority groups feel they don't need to have it.
«Our preliminary collars that we deployed in the first field season came up with interesting results, but only provided a couple
of weeks
of data; they needed to be more robust to keep up with the baboons,» added
Dr Andrew King, head
of Swansea University's SHOAL (Sociality, Heterogeneity, Organisation And Leadership) research group in the College
of Science, who is the senior
author of the
study.
Dr Claudia Wellbrock,
study author and Cancer Research UK scientist at The University
of Manchester and a member
of the Manchester Cancer Research Centre, said: «We used to think that cancer cells spread by first specialising in invading other parts
of the body and then change in order to grow rapidly.
«The decline in Madagascan amphibians is not just a concern for herpetologists and frog researchers,» says
Dr Franco Andreone from the International Union for Conservation
of Nature (IUCN), who is one
of the
study authors.
«We found that nearly one in four patients with small tumours are at risk
of distant metastases and do benefit from chemotherapy,» said
Dr Fatima Cardoso, senior
author of the
study, Co-Principal Investigator
of MINDACT and Director
of the Breast Unit
of the Champalimaud Clinical Centre, Lisbon, Portugal.
The result is isolation, depression and further deterioration
of their physical condition, a veritable downward spiral,» explains Prof
Dr Claus Vögele, a health psychologist at the University
of Luxembourg and one
of the
study's
authors.
Dr Julie Seibt, Lecturer in Sleep and Plasticity at the University
of Surrey and lead
author of the
study, said: «Our brains are amazing and fascinating organs — they have the ability to change and adapt based on our experiences.
«Our research reveals that a country's climate and geographical location have a startling influence on the burden
of liver cirrhosis,» said
Dr Neil D. Shah, lead
author of the
study, and senior
author,
Dr Ramon Bataller, from the University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, United States.
Dr Alexandre Courtiol, co-first
author of this
study, and a researcher at the Leibniz Institute for Zoo and Wildlife Research, comments, «Our findings suggest that males evolve to divest from the construction
of powerful bodies and the demonstration
of spectacular feats when females do not use these characteristics to discriminate (e.g. in our experiments, they were prevented to do so).»
Dr Antonio Pardiñas, first
author of the
study, said: «We show for the first time that genetic variants that do not severely impact gene function, but presumably have a more subtle impact on these critical genes, increase risk for developing schizophrenia.»
Speaking about the research,
Dr Elliot Freeman,
author of the
study and a Senior Lecturer in Psychology at City, University
of London, said:
Study lead
author Dr Ryan Hossaini, from the School
of Earth and Environment at the University
of Leeds, said: «VSLS can have both natural and industrial sources.
Co-Senior
author,
Dr Florence Raynaud, a group leader at The Institute
of Cancer Research, London, said: «The
study made accurate measurements
of a large number
of metabolites as they varied by time
of day and under different sleep patterns.
Dr David Carslake, the
study's lead
author and Senior Research Associate from the MRC Integrative Epidemiology Unit (IEU) at the University
of Bristol, said: «An alarming increase in obesity levels across the world which have risen from 105 million in 1975 to 641 million in 2014, according to a recent Lancet
study, create concern about the implications for public health.
Dr Campos - Silva, first
author of the
study, said: «Conservation initiatives in Amazonian floodplains are often a huge challenge due to lack
of governance, investments and human resources.
LSTM's
Dr Robert Harrison, senior
author of the
study and Head
of the Alistair Reid Venom Unit, said: «The findings underscore challenges to developing broad - spectrum snakebite treatments, because conventional antivenom is produced by immunizing horses or sheep with the venom from a specific species
of snake.
We also hope to learn why exenatide appears to work better for some patients than for others,» said the
study's first
author,
Dr Dilan Athauda (UCL Institute
of Neurology).
Dr Nathan Mayne, Senior Lecturer in Astrophysics at the University
of Exeter and one
of the
authors of the
study said: «This research is not only important in developing our understanding
of this exotic class
of planets, but also represents the first steps to building a deeper understanding
of how planetary atmospheres and climates work across a range
of conditions, including those more conducive to life.
Said
Dr Tom Evans, WCS Director
of Forest Conservation and Climate and joint lead
author of the
study: «Even if all global targets to halt deforestation were met, humanity might be left with only degraded, damaged forests, in need
of costly and sometimes unfeasible restoration, open to a cascade
of further threats and perhaps lacking the resilience needed to weather the stresses
of climate change.
We will use the unique set
of mutations present in that individual's cancer, as a barcode or thumbprint that we can exploit as innovative diagnostics to monitor for cancer recurrence and diagnose it early,» explained
Dr Iain Tan, co-lead
author of the
study who is a Consultant Medical Oncologist at NCCS and also a clinician scientist at GIS.
«Before our
study, it was never quite clear whether PSC was a complication
of IBD or a distinct disease in its own right,» says
Dr Carl Anderson, lead
author from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute.