Sentences with phrase «engineering study published»

The seahorse tail is square because this shape is better at resisting damage and at grasping than a circular tail would be, a new engineering study published in the 3 July issue of the journal Science shows.

Not exact matches

However, a study recently published in Nature Communications by chemical engineers at the University of Pittsburgh's Swanson School of Engineering explains how metal nanoparticles form.
The study, led by Nima Mesgarani, associate professor of electrical engineering, is published in the Journal of Neural Engineering.
In lab tests, prototype multilayer lenses have shown they can release ciprofloxacin (an antibiotic often used to treat eye and other infections) for up to 100 days, according to a study published in the July issue of Investigative Ophthalmology and Visual Science by researchers from Children's Hospital Boston, the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary's (MEEI) ophthalmology department, Schepens Eye Research Institute in Boston, and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (M.I.T.) chemical engineering department.
David Steward, professor of civil engineering, and Andrew Allen, civil engineering doctoral student, Manhattan, published those findings in the recent Agricultural Water Management study «Peak groundwater depletion in the High Plains Aquifer, projects from 1930 to 2110.»
«We use biological nanoparticles — a plant virus — to deliver a pesticide,» said Paul Chariou, a PhD student in biomedical engineering at Case Western Reserve and author of a study on the process published in the journal ACS Nano.
The study, led by Ken Shepard, Lau Family Professor of Electrical Engineering and professor of biomedical engineering at Columbia Engineering, is published online Dec. 7 in Nature Communications.
The study, co-authored by Dichtel, Damian Helbling, assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering at Cornell University, and members of their research groups at Northwestern and Cornell, recently was published by the Journal of the American Chemical Society.
In March 2016, Penn researchers published a study in Blood that showed long - term ibrutinib treatment reverses the dysfunction of T cells in CLL and that combining CAR therapy with ibrutinib enhanced engineered T cell proliferation in mice.
In a study, published in Coastal Engineering, the academics say deriving sufficient knowledge and understanding to forecast erosion and accretion with a level of confidence is arguably the «holy grail» for coastal scientists and engineers.
«The formula we derive turns out to be very useful in operating a quantum computer,» said Victor Albert, first author of a study published in the journal Physical Review X. «Our result says that, in principle, we can engineer «rain gutters» and «gates» in a system to manipulate quantum objects, either after they land or during their actual flow.»
In this study, published in the October 31 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Sudhir Yadav PhD, a neuroimmunology post-doctoral fellow in the laboratories of Drs. Kouichi Ito, associate professor of neurology, and Suhayl Dhib - Jalbut, professor and chair of neurology, tested mice that were engineered to have a pre-disposition for MS. Because mice would not normally develop MS, researchers used MS - associated risk genes from real patients to genetically engineer mice for this study.
The report, «U.S. Academic Scientific Publishingpublished November 19, follows a July 2007 NSF study which found that the absolute number of science and engineering (S&E) articles published by U.S. - based authors in the world's major peer - reviewed journals plateaued in the early 1990s even as funding and personnel increased.
In August, a team of engineers from Newcastle University and Imperial College London published a study of this new application of LSCF (lanthanum - strontium - cobalt — ferric oxide).
This is confirmed in a study that engineers from the University of Valladolid (UVa) have published in the journal Renewable Energy.
Meanwhile Coussens and her colleagues at U.C.S.F. found in a 2005 study, published in Cancer Cell, that the removal of antibody - making B cells from mice engineered to be prone to skin cancer prevented the tissue changes and angiogenesis that are prerequisites for disease progression.
But in general, writes Harvard's Freeman, «the job market for young scientists and engineers has worsened... relative to... many other high level occupations, which discourages US students... [but] the rewards are sufficient to attract large immigrant flows, particularly from less developed countries,» in a study published by National Bureau of Economic Research.
«It seems to have worked for at least one of the congeners studied,» says Tim Mattes, associate professor of civil and environmental engineering and corresponding author on the paper, published in the journal Ecological Engineering.
The study, published online in the Aug. 21, 2015, issue of Nature Communications, was led by Zheng - Rong Lu, Ph.D., CWRU M. Frank Rudy and Margaret Domiter Rudy Professor of biomedical engineering and an expert in molecular imaging for cancer and other diseases.
Developed by a team of University of Michigan researchers in materials science and mechanical engineering and detailed in a new study published in Science Advances, the process is inexpensive and scalable.
They've demonstrated how to design and genetically engineer enzyme surfaces so they bind less to corn stalks and other cellulosic biomass, reducing enzyme costs in biofuels production, according to a study published this month on the cover of the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering.
Statewide implementation of DDIs has been investigated mostly by MU civil engineers who recently published three studies analyzing the safety of these inventive designs.
In the study, which was published online in the Annals of Neurology, the scientists reduced the level of the protein tau by genetically engineering Dravet mouse models, «knocking out» the gene associated with tau production.
In a new study published in Materials and Design, noted materials researcher Nikhil Gupta, an associate professor of mechanical engineering, his doctoral student Fei Chen and former student Gary Mac show how certain intentionally induced defects can disappear when the part is printed under a very specific set of conditions.
Now, researchers led by Xiaoyu «Rayne» Zheng, an assistant professor of mechanical engineering at Virginia Tech have published a study in the journal Nature Materials that describes a new process to create lightweight, strong and super elastic 3 - D printed metallic nanostructured materials with unprecedented scalability, a full seven orders of magnitude control of arbitrary 3 - D architectures.
Now, a study of nearly 1 million engineering paper co-authorships puts hard numbers on the problem in this male - dominated scientific field, and finds a paradoxical trend: Female engineers are publishing in slightly more prestigious journals on average than their male colleagues, but their work is getting less attention.
«It is estimated that the average household in the North Dakota Bakken region uses about 80 to 160 gallons of water a day,» said Corrie Clark, an environmental systems engineer in Argonne's Environmental Science Division and co-author of a new study published in Environmental Science & Technology.
Henderson and Krishna Shenoy, PhD, professor of electrical engineering, are co-senior authors of the study, which will be published online Feb. 21 in eLife.
Scientists recently reconstructed the skin of endangered green turtles, marking the first time that skin of a non-mammal was successfully engineered in a laboratory, according to a recently published U.S. Geological Survey study.
Those findings are part of a recently published study by David Steward, professor of civil engineering, and colleagues at Kansas State University.
The NSABB ultimately concluded that those GOF studies, aimed at helping experts prepare for possible pandemics, should be published, despite the risks if the engineered viruses escaped the lab.
The study, published in Scientific Reports, demonstrated that animals injected with synthetic DNA engineered to encode a specific neutralizing antibody against the dengue virus were capable of producing the exact antibodies necessary to protect against disease, without the need for standard antigen - based vaccination.
«Carbon - reduction policies significantly improve air quality,» says Noelle Selin, an assistant professor of engineering systems and atmospheric chemistry at MIT, and co-author of a study published today in Nature Climate Change.
In the study, published online on February 4 in the journal Cell Stem Cell, Duke biomedical engineers show how colon cancer development is intricately linked to a specific microRNA that dictates how cells divide.
This finding, published in a study in the journal Nature Climate Change, is critical in predicting how much wheat and other crops we'll need to feed the world, said Senthold Asseng, a UF / IFAS professor of agricultural and biological engineering and leader of this study.
An antibody engineered to prevent excessive bleeding in patients with severe hemophilia A may be safe and effective, and require fewer injections than existing options, according to a first - in - human study of the treatment published online today in Blood, the Journal of the American Society of Hematology (ASH).
Matthew Paszek, assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at Cornell and Valerie Weaver, at the University of California, San Francisco, led the study on glycoprotein - induced cancer cell survival, published online in Nature.
Since at least the 1980s researchers in many different fields — including psychology, computer engineering, and library and information science — have investigated such questions in more than one hundred published studies.
The study, led by Pierre Gentine, associate professor of earth and environmental engineering at Columbia Engineering and at the Earth Institute, is published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
The study, published in Nature, was led by Xiangfeng Duan, UCLA professor of chemistry and biochemistry, and Yu Huang, UCLA professor of materials science and engineering at the UCLA Samueli School of Engineering.
Matthew Paszek, assistant professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering, led the study on glycoprotein - induced cancer cell survival, published online in Nature June 25.
The study, «SimRadar: A Polarimetric Radar Time - Series Simulator for Tornadic Debris Studies,» will be published in the May issue of the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing.
In their study published online in Science on 13 August, Christina Smolke of the University of Stanford and her colleagues successfully managed to engineer yeast to produce the enzymes required to create opioids, starting with sugar as the fuel source.
In a groundbreaking study recently published in the journal PLOS One, the scientists used a pair of engineered proteins to cut DNA in a site - specific manner to disrupt a targeted gene in the mosquito genome.
A new study, published in Nature Communications, explore — through genetically engineered tobacco plants — whether it is possible to develop crops that require less water per unit mass of production.
In the study, which was published online today in the Annals of Neurology, the scientists reduced the level of the protein tau by genetically engineering Dravet mouse models, «knocking out» the gene associated with tau production.
She is registred to the National Order of Biologists in the province of Palermo; collaboration in research project from 2012 to 2015 at the Department of Biopathology and Biotechnology, University of Palermo, focusing the study on the identification of molecules capable to modulate intracellular metabolic pathways for the prevention and treatment of infectious, tumor and degenerative disease, in collaboration with Prof. Angela Santoni, University of Rome; collaboration in research project in 2011 at the hospital «Villa Sofia Cervello» of Palermo to study methods can cure the genetic defect that causes thalassemia through genetic engineering; she studies different mechanisms of the differentiation and the activation of human gammadelta T cells as effector cells of the immune response against cancer and infectious diseases; she investigates about the identification and development of biomarkers of resistance and susceptibility to Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection; Valentina Orlando has published 13 papers in peer reviewed journals and 3 comunications at national and international congress.
For the study, published in the December 20, 2016, edition of Nature Immunology, Anjana Rao, PhD, a professor at the La Jolla Institute, genetically engineered mice to lack both TET2 and TET3 in T cells.
In a study being published July 13 in Nature Nanotechnology, NC State engineer Orlin Velev and colleagues show that silver - ion infused lignin nanoparticles, which are coated with a charged polymer layer that helps them adhere to the target microbes, effectively kill a broad swath of bacteria, including E. coli and other harmful microorganisms.
In a study published Wednesday in the journal Science Translational Medicine, Chinese researchers detail a process by which a dedicated smartphone app is used to «switch on» engineered insulin - producing cells in mice.
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