First
author on the paper Dr Rebecca Mead, a former teacher herself, said: «It's remarkable that such a simple and cost - free intervention makes such a big difference.
Not exact matches
«Despite sex determination being so fundamental, nature has found many ways of determining sex,» says
Dr Matthias Soller from the School of Biosciences at the University of Birmingham and lead
author on the
paper.
Dr Svetlana Jevrejeva from the NOC, who is the lead
author on this
paper, said «Coastal cities and vulnerable tropical coastal ecosystems will have very little time to adapt to the fast sea level rise these predictions show, in scenarios with global warming above two degree.
Dr Gareth Law, Senior Lecturer in Analytical Radiochemistry at the University of Manchester and an
author on the
paper, says: «Our research strongly suggests there is a need for further detailed investigation
on Fukushima fuel debris, inside, and potentially outside the nuclear exclusion zone.
«At room temperature, the mice in our study were unable to properly control the blood flow to their tails, which caused heat loss,» says
Dr Jens Mittag, senior
author on the
paper.
Dr Anthony Jones, A climate science expert from the University of Exeter and lead
author on the
paper said: «Our results confirm that regional solar geoengineering is a highly risky strategy which could simultaneously benefit one region to the detriment of another.
Dr David Aanensen, head of the Centre for Genomic Pathogen Surveillance and joint lead
author on the
paper said: «Drug resistance is a growing problem both in Europe and across the world and doctors need fast and accurate information to stop epidemics.
Dr Richard Lea, of the School of Veterinary Medicine and Science at The University of Nottingham, was lead
author on the
paper.
«It was a big step just coming up with the idea of using magnetic permeability to store information, and coming up with a practical way of getting the memory near the sensor so that it can be read» explains
Dr Alan Edelstein, an
author on the
paper.
Dr Alicia D'Souza, from The University of Manchester and first
author on the
paper, said: «The heart rate is set by the heart's pacemaker, but this is controlled by the nervous system.
Dr Rajat S. Barua, the corresponding
author of the
paper and a cardiologist, said: «With such widespread and ever increasing use of TRT, there has been growing concern regarding its effect
on mortality, as well as conflicting results.
Dr Mara Lawniczak, a corresponding
author on the
paper and Faculty at the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, said: «The diversity of mosquito genomes was far greater than we expected.
«Previous techniques that have been used to investigate DNA control sequences usually rely
on sorting cells one by one and measuring gene activity in each of them,» says
Dr Eva Yus, lead
author of the
paper.
Dr Stuart Ainsworth is first
author on a
paper about the work published today in the journal Communications Biology.
Dr Sally Wood, from the Coral Reef Research at Bristol (CRAB) group in the School of Earth Sciences and lead
author of the
paper, explains: «Coral build the framework of tropical coral reefs, creating habitats which support one of the most diverse ecosystems
on Earth.
Scaling up of interventions for PWID remains a crucial priority for halting the HIV and HCV epidemics,» says UNSW's
Dr Sarah Larney, lead
author of the
paper on global coverage of interventions.
Dr Cesar Tovar is the lead
author on the latest
paper.
He drew this to the attention of European specialists, including the lead
author on the
paper,
Dr Renate Matzke - Karasz, from Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Germany, who examined the specimens with
Dr Paul Tafforeau at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, France.
Dr Martin Hemberg, lead
author on the
paper from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, said: «It has been difficult to fully exploit single - cell RNA - sequence data due to the current lack of computational methods for analysing them.
According to another of the
paper's
authors,
Dr Nicolas Jourdain from ARCCSS, the mechanism that leads to rapid melting may be having an impact
on the Western Antarctic right now.
As explained by lead researcher,
Dr Ferdinand von Meyenn, postdoctoral researcher in the Epigenetics research programme at the Babraham Institute and first
author on the
paper: «Our method establishes a reliable system that can be used to explore the early stages of epigenetic reprogramming in primordial germ cell - like cells and how this is regulated in the generation of reproductive cells.
Dr David Jolliffe from QMUL, first
author on the
paper, added: «Our results are largely based
on data from adults with mild to moderate asthma: children and adults with severe asthma were relatively under - represented in the dataset, so our findings can not necessarily be generalised to these patient groups at this stage.
Dr Ellen Leffler from the University of Oxford, first
author on the
paper, said.
Dr Bernardo Tavora, lead
author on the
paper from the Barts Cancer Institute, said: «This work shows that sensitivity to cancer treatment is related to our own body mistakenly trying to shield the cancer from cell - killing effects caused by radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
Lead researcher and
author of the
paper Dr Rebecca Bromley, of The University of Manchester's School of Biological Sciences, said expectant mothers had to know the possible impacts their drug regimes may have
on unborn children.
Dr David Poznik, from Stanford University, California, first
author on the
paper, said: «We identified more than 60,000 positions where one DNA letter was replaced by another in a man with modern descendants, and we discovered thousands of more complex DNA variants.
Dr Robert Fear from the University of Southampton (formerly at the University of Leicester, where much of the research took place), and lead
author of the
paper published in Science this week, says: «Previously it was unclear whether this hot plasma was a result of direct solar wind entry through the lobes of the magnetosphere, or if the plasma is somehow related to the plasma sheet
on the night side of Earth.
Dr Federica Sotgia, from The University of Manchester's Institute of Cancer Sciences and joint - senior
author on the
paper, said: «This research expands
on the early work by the London surgeon Stephen Paget, who proposed the «seed and the soil» hypothesis, now over 125 years ago.
«As the global obesity epidemic intensifies, advertisements may have a greater effect
on people who are overweight and make snacks like chocolate bars harder to resist,» adds
Dr Amy Reichelt, lead
author of the
paper and UNSWpostdoctoral associate.
Dr Thekla Morgenroth, post-doctoral Research Fellow at the University of Exeter, and lead
author of the
paper said: «When people imagine a risk - taker, they might picture someone risking their fortune at a high - stakes poker game, an ambitious CEO, or someone crossing the Grand Canyon
on a tightrope — but chances are that the person they picture will be a man.
«We identified the most important parts of this protein that is involved in making up the outer structure of some pathogenic bacteria and found that the protein regulated itself in quite an unusual way,» said
Dr Mirella Vivoli, associate research fellow at the University of Exeter and first
author on the
paper.
Dr Jochen Hinkel from Global Climate Forum in Germany, who is a co-
author of this
paper and a Lead
Author of the coastal chapter for the 2014 IPCC Assessment Report added: «The IPCC has done a great job in bringing together knowledge
on climate change, sea - level rise and is potential impacts but now needs to complement this work with a solution - oriented perspective focusing
on overcoming barriers to adaptation, mobilising resources, empowering people and discovering opportunities for strengthening coastal resilience in the context of both climate change as well as existing coastal challenges and other issues.»
«The antibodies we have detected in children having a first episode of acute psychosis suggest there is a distinct subgroup for whom autoimmunity plays a role in their illness,» says the University of Sydney's
Dr Fabienne Brilot, the senior
author on the
paper and Head of the Neuroimmunology Group at The Children's Hospital at Westmead in Sydney.
Commenting
on the findings
Dr Saverio Stranges, the research
paper's lead
author, said: «Along with smoking, fruit and vegetable consumption was the health - related behaviour most consistently associated with both low and high mental wellbeing.
Commenting
on the findings
Dr Saverio Stranges, the research
paper's lead
author, said: «The data suggest that higher an individual's fruit and vegetable intake the lower the chance of their having low mental wellbeing.»
Dr Peter Rugg - Gunn, senior
author on the research
paper and research group leader at the Babraham Institute explained: «This unanticipated connection between stem cell factors and heterochromatin organisation is important because it tells us about how stem cells work.
Dr Green is the lead
author on a
paper just published in Environmental Science and Technology, which describes the worrying ecological effects of discarded plastic carrier bags.
«People said you may be able to cycle plants fast, but they will look tiny and insignificant, and only set a few seeds,» said
Dr Brande Wulff of the John Innes Centre, lead
author on the
paper.
The work was conducted by AMBER and RCSI TERG post-doctoral researcher,
Dr Alan Ryan, first
author on the
paper with
Dr Cathal Kearney, an AMBER senior research fellow and lecturer in RCSI in partnership with multi-disciplinary team of researchers based in RCSI, Trinity and Professor Katja Schenke - Layland's laboratory in Eberhard Karls University Tübingen in Germany, where the electrical stimulation research was carried out.
With more than 1000bn tonnes of carbon estimated to be locked up in permafrost soils, the impacts for climate could be very significant, says
Dr Sarah Chadburn, a specialist in Arctic permafrost modelling at the University of Exeter and lead
author on the new
paper.
This one though is really too big for its boots — it simply shouldn't be possible for it to be so large», said
Dr Jacco van Loon, an astrophysicist at Keele University and the lead
author on the new
paper.
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Dr Sherwood Idso was the most cited academic
on the list, having
authored or co-
authored 67 of the 938
papers, seven percent of the total.
Dr Dieter Gerten, research expert
on water scarcity, and lead
author of one of the three studies contained in the PIK
paper, said mean global warming of 2ºC − the target set by the international community − is projected to expose an additional 8 % of humankind to new or increased water scarcity.