Sentences with phrase «described by researchers»

A new strain of canine distemper virus was first described by researchers in 2011, after a sharp rise in canine distemper cases was noted worldwide.
This was a remarkable discovery, described by the researchers as follows: «Nigella sativa had been documented to possess many therapeutic functions in medicine but the least expected is sero - reversion in HIV infection which is very rare despite extensive therapy with highly active anti-retroviral therapy (HAART).»
Scientists have found that there are currently four packs of wolves roaming the isle that continually battle for turf and food — and their rise and fall, as described by the researchers, can often stem from seemingly insignificant events.
A new species of fossil baleen whale that lived in the North Pacific Ocean 30 to 33 million years ago has been described by researchers from New Zealand's University of Otago.
Of 134 teens described by researchers as heavy Internet users, 26 had elevated blood pressure.
«New herpes treatment strategy described by researchers
And I took the opposite half of the brain, pulled out the hippocampus, which is the area described by researchers as the target for disease, and ground it up, saving the RNA.
The NIH team realized that the first family's symptoms matched those of a different family described by researchers at Yale University in 1981.
In April, a team reported the discovery of another world snuggled up to a red sun, LHS 1140b, described by researchers at the European Southern Observatory as perhaps the best candidate in the search for signs of life.

Not exact matches

Schroepfer said that Facebook took 3.5 billion Instagram photos, adorned with people's hashtags to describe them, and was able to «produce state of the art results» on the popular ImageNet computer - vision benchmark, used by AI researchers as a gauge of their project's effectiveness compared to others.
The CIA tools described by WikiLeaks do not involve mass surveillance, and all of the targets were government entities or had legitimate national security value for other reasons, Symantec researcher Eric Chien said ahead of Monday's publication.
Our Migration Matters series led by Dr. Eva Busza, APF Canada's Vice-President Research and Programs, along with researchers Valentine Ostaszewski and Amar Nijhawan, will provide a brief demographic profile of each country, describe immigration policies, analyze challenges, and highlight successes.
He describes the initial starting point of an idea, and how it gets built out by sharing it with other researchers and outside contributors.
The parting of the waters described in the book of Exodus that enabled Moses and the Israelites to escape the pharaoh's army is possible, computer simulations run by researchers at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and the University of Colorado at Boulder show.
A recently published study by researchers in the Center for Injury Research and Policy at Nationwide Children's Hospital is the first to compare and describe the occurrence and distribution patterns of basketball - related injuries treated in emergency departments and the high school athletic training setting among adolescents and teens.
In case anyone missed the cover story of last Sunday's New York Times magazine, it described groundbreaking efforts by one intrepid researcher, Dr. Kari Nadeau, to desensitize highly food - allergic kids against multiple allergens.
Meanwhile the general term «human milk feeding» is used by researchers and administrators to describe both mother's own milk and donated milk (or combinations of the two) despite the fundamental differences in the two, according to the lead author, Paula Meier, PhD, Rush University Medical Center's director for Clinical Research and Lactation, Special Care Nursery and a Professor of Pediatrics and Women, Children and Family Nursing.
The potentially disappointing divide, described in a recent analysis by psychologists David Lubinski, Camilla Benbow and Harrison Kell at Vanderbilt University, mirrors what researchers have seen in studies of other highly educated folks.
A new tool, developed by University of Washington and Microsoft researchers Maxim Grechkin, Hoifung Poon and Bill Howe, and described in a Community Page article publishing June 8 in the open access journal PLOS Biology, hopes to get around this problem and help advance open science by automatically detecting datasets that are overdue for publication.
He described wandering up to a poster discussing salmonella by FDA researchers, «and I say, «I presume the food agency funded that,» and they say, «Oh, we would never have the money to fund that — it was the Department of Homeland Security that felt sorry for us and gave us the money.»»
In order to describe the mechanism of a membrane sensor which measures the degree of lipid saturation in the yeast cell, the researchers used genetic and biochemical methods and simulated the motions and underlying forces of membrane lipids over a period of a few milliseconds by means of extensive molecular dynamic simulations.
In their paper published online in Annals of Internal Medicine, the team led by researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) and the Yale School of Public Health describes how a 33 percent cutback in funds earmarked for HIV / AIDS prevention, treatment and research in recent budget proposals would only save $ 900 per year of life lost in the countries of South Africa and Côte d'Ivoire.
Researchers at the Bellvitge Biomedical Research Institute of Bellvitge, the Catalan Institute of Oncology and the University Hospital of Bellvitge have participated in an international study published in the journal Cancer Cell that describes how exosomes secreted by tumor cells contain protein and microRNA molecules capable of transform neighboring cells into tumoral cells promoting tumor growth.
Specifically, after the analysis involving microscopic techniques and virtual models developed by the UA researcher, carious lesions caused by carbohydrates, present in plants, were found in the dental remains discovered at the La Brea Tar Pits site in Los Angeles, California, described by Alejandro Romero as «one of the most paradigmatic sites to study fossil mammals from the Pleistocene in North America.»
A new model developed by researchers at Chalmers describes how much the electrons are decelerated, paving the way to making these runaway electrons harmless.
The digital sugarcane, described earlier this year by researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana — Champaign, illustrates how crops in silicomight aid farmers.
Historical documents describe this cultural mixture, but now international teams of researchers are enriching our view by analyzing the genomes of people today.
The researchers, led by Hughes, describe the find as perhaps «the first example of behavioral manipulation in the fossil record.»
The complaint, filed in a federal district court by two prominent heart researchers, offers the first indication of just what is amiss in two papers they co-authored, which describe the heart's natural regenerative ability, and an effort to heal damaged hearts with stem cells.»
The researchers make their case in part by describing paleoclimate data from the Eemian, an interglacial (warm) period that lasted from about 130,000 to 115,000 years ago.
She notes that in Africa, the longstanding Western legend of an «African unicorn» was explained in the early 20th century by British researchers, who found and described the flesh - and - blood okapi, a giraffe relative that looks like a mix between that animal and a zebra and a horse.
In a 3 - year study described in today's Science, the researchers showed that bumper crops of acorns lead to an explosion of mice, and the mice in turn protect oak trees by eating gypsy moths.
They described a new theory called the «Big Bang» model of cancer heterogeneity, developed by researchers from the University of Southern California.
The researchers, who included University of Surrey's Dr Isabel Rodriguez and Professor Allan Williams, described the research as vital because the innovation by entrepreneurs who are «new to tourism» is poorly understood.
At a meeting in Sheffield this week, organised by the Physiological Society, Holdcroft described how the researchers built up three sets of magnetic resonance images to give three - dimensional pictures of the brains of 10 healthy women.
The team of researchers, led by Carol Lin of the City University of Hong Kong, describes successful laboratory testing of a biorefinery procedure that converts stale bakery goods from Starbucks coffee shops into a key consumer goods ingredient.
The researchers describe their technique in the journal Biomicrofluidics, which is produced by AIP Publishing.
It has been devised by a group of researchers headed by Prof. Klaus Rajewsky of the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine in the Helmholtz Association (MDC), and is now described in the journal PNAS.
Written by 25 authors, it described the collaboration between government, academic researchers, and disease advocacy groups that led to the ICV trial as a model of the teamwork that can speed drugs through early development, boosting their chances of being commercialized.
In a paper published online this week by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers describe the results of their study of caterpillar parasitism.
Thomas Cochran, senior scientist at the NRDC and one of the report's authors, says a 1 - kiloton bomb could be made with as little as 1 kilogram of plutonium from designs developed by American weapons researchers in the 1950s and described in technical reports that are no longer classified.
The errors were not in the P - curve code, as initially described, but resulted from an incompatibility between scripts from the P - curve website and those written by the researchers.
However, a new study from a team of researchers led by University of Wisconsin - Madison Space Science and Engineering Center scientist, Claire Pettersen, describes a unique method involving cloud characteristics that could help answer some big questions about the Greenland Ice Sheet and its snowfall.
The researchers found it intriguing that the leadership charismas identified from post-vocal disorder vocal stimuli were characterized by personality traits that are also used to describe an older person, for example, as wise.
By carefully analyzing the reflected beam, the researchers detected stripes of holes lying along every eighth row of copper atoms, as they describe in the 4 March issue of Physical Review Letters.
In a new article, researchers from Aarhus University describe how the waste left by ants on plant leaves serves as a valuable fertiliser for the plants — handed on a silver platter.
As David Yáñez, a CSIC researcher at the Zaidin Experimental Research Centre in Granada (southern Spain) explains, «Up until now, no - one had described the mode of action of a compound which can repeatedly reduce (by 30 %) methane production in animals without any risks, either to the animal's health, or to their productivity.»
Led by Timothy Lu, an associate professor of biological engineering and electrical engineering and computer science, the researchers described their findings in the Sept. 21 issue of Nature Biotechnology.
Researchers at the San Diego Supercomputer Center (SDSC) and the Moores Cancer Center at the University of California, San Diego, have described for the first time the molecular mechanism of cancer development caused by well - known «resistance» mutations in the gene called epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR).
In the report, the researchers were able to describe mortality from legal intervention in the U.S. from 1999 to 2013 by time, person and place.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z