Sentences with phrase «including pnas»

Bibliometrics: I have authored and co-authored over 110 papers in international journals (including PNAS, Neuron, Nature Neuroscience, Physical Review Letters and top - tier specialist journals in the area of biomedical imaging), collecting over 4300 citations (Scholar).
Her work has been funded primarily by the National Science Foundation and USDA - AFRI, and has been published in leading scientific journals including PNAS, Science, Ecology Letters, Ecology, and Proceedings of the Royal Society of London.
But so far, only seven journals, including PNAS and a collection of e-journals, are participating, and a few additional journals have signed up.
A DfE spokesperson said the department was working with the school to «ensure all outstanding liabilities, including PNA repayments, are minimised».

Not exact matches

A paper co-lead by Dr Nicholas Casewell, a NERC research Fellow at LSTM, and 34 co-authors from six countries, including the Director of the Alistair Reid Venom Unit at LSTM, Dr Robert Harrison, has been published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Other contributors to this PNAS study include Iman Aganj, Gregroy Wojtkiewicz, Sandeep Hedgire, and Ralph Weissleder of Massachusetts General Hospital; and Christophe Benoist and Diane Mathis of Harvard Medical School.
The coauthors of the PNAS paper include six other UC Santa Cruz researchers in addition to Costa.
In their recent PNAS paper members of the Imperial College team reported that the presence of LSD was linked to a boost in blood flow and functional connectivity between the brain's primary visual cortex and seemingly unrelated brain networks that mediate other sensory inputs as well as higher - level processes including emotion.
A team of researchers including members of the University of Chicago's Institute for Molecular Engineering highlight the power of emerging quantum technologies in two recent papers published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
There is, however, a possible way around this, which was investigated in a recent paper published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) by an international research team that includes Ryan Requist, Erio Tosatti and Michele Fabrizio of the International School for Advanced Studies (SISSA) in Trieste.
A study published April 7 in PNAS Online Early Edition describes how a team of scientists, including researchers from the University of California, Davis, showed that vapor losses to the walls of laboratory chambers can suppress the formation of secondary organic aerosol, which in turn has contributed to the underprediction of SOA in climate and air quality models.
Other authors on the PNAS «atlas» study include past or present members of the Ansari lab, members of the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, and researchers at the Morgridge Institute for Research.
«Understanding the magnitude of this bias is essential in accurately interpreting survey results that include subjective reports of feelings and symptoms,» says Patrick Shrout, a professor in New York University's Department of Psychology and a co-author of the paper, which appears in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Some recent papers «communicated» to PNAS include work on the effect of testosterone on financial decisions by men and women; on the proper DNA «barcode» for identifying plants; and a cover story on the separation and divergence of different lineages of the coast horned lizard.
Participation in genome sequencing projects (turbot, bean, olive, crocodile, myriapods, melon, lynx, etc.), including leadership in some (Gabaldon's, Guigo's, Kondrashov's and Notredame's groups, PNAS 2012, Nature 2013, Nature 2014, Nature 2014, Genome Biology 2015, Genome Biology 2016, PNAS 2016).
In 2012, news media were abuzz with a new finding from PNAS: Authors based in Israel had found evidence that our brains can unconsciously process more than we thought — including basic math and reading.
In the PNAS paper, Varvel and his colleagues include a cautionary note about using these mice for studying situations of more prolonged brain inflammation, such as neurodegenerative diseases: the monocytes may turn down production of the red protein over time, so it's hard to tell if they're still in the brain after several days.
Dr. Palop has published his findings and reviews in many prestigious scientific journals, including Cell, Nature, Science, Nature Medicine, Neuron, Nature Neuroscience, PNAS and The Journal of Neuroscience.
The research team, which included Sandra L. Wolin and Richard Flavell, both HHMI investigators at Yale University School of Medicine, published its findings June 3, 2003, in the online Early Edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).
Dr. Korlach is the recipient of multiple grants, an inventor on 70 issued U.S. patents and 61 international patents, and an author of over 70 scientific studies on the principles and applications of SMRT technology, including publications in Nature, Science, and PNAS.
Prof. Cryan has an H - Index of 57 (Google Scholar) having published over 250 peer - reviewed articles and book chapters including articles in high - impact journals such as PNAS, Neuron, Nature Reviews Neurosci.
Also, despite thousands of years of living alongside us, cats still retain the same instincts as their wild ancestors and are only «semi-domesticated,» according to a team of researchers from schools including Washington University School of Medicine and Texas A&M and published in the journal PNAS.
We have a paper coming out on Monday in PNAS that reports some new behavioral economics research showing that this good will extends, as well, to how top policy makers think about including fairness when they make complex bargains.
UT Austin required all authors to disclose any potential conflicts of interest and to affirmatively approve the language about them that was included in the PNAS article.
According to the new research in PNAS, some areas where small shifts in individual behavior could strikingly reduce United States emissions include improving home insulation, changing to a more fuel - efficient vehicle, cruising at the most efficient speed (55 miles per hour) and carpooling when possible.
If Dr. Hansen never imagined Scenario A as being a real possibility for the next 20 years, I guess indicated by his description «Scenario A, since it is exponential, must eventually be on the high side of reality in view of finite resource constraints and environmental concerns, even though the growth of emissions in Scenario A (~ 1.5 % yr - 1) is less than the rate typical of the past century (~ 4 % yr - 1)» then his subsequent comment (PNAS, 2001) «Second, the IPCC includes CO2 growth rates that we contend are unrealistically large» seems to indicate that Dr. Hansen doesn't support some of the more extreme SRES scenarios.
Examples of such circulation patterns include the Pacific - North American pattern (PNA), the North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) / Arctic Oscillation (AO), the East Atlantic (EA), the West Pacific (WP), and the tropical / Northern Hemisphere (TNH).
But if we look a decade or few hence — the range of possibilities include a 16 degree cooling in some places (Abrupt climate change: inevitable surprises, PNAS).
Chambers» co-authors on the PNAS paper were Alan Di Vittorio of Berkeley Lab and Robinson Negron - Juarez, Daniel Marra, Joerg Tews, Dar Roberts, Gabriel Ribeiro, Susan Trumbore and Niro Higuchi of other institutions, including INPA, Brazil; Tulane University, USA; Noreca Consulting Inc, Canada; the University of California at Santa Barbara, USA; and the Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry, Germany.
Sophie Delannoy, Project Manager Supports the science team on projects including PAS - PNA and Horizon2020 project MAGIC.
Note: The data used in Anderegg et al 2010 in PNAS included signers of all statements shown here except CCC09 and EPA10, which were published after the analysis was done for the paper.
(note: the word «tenets» was used in the infamous PNAS article whose authors included Steve Schneider.)
In addition to the petition, the mailing included what appeared to be a reprint of a scientific paper from Proceedings of the National Academy of Science (PNAS), and a letter from Seitz identifying himself as past president of the National Academy of Sciences.
The participants include Al Gore and many world leaders, the UN's IPCC, the US National Academy of Sciences, the International Alliance of National Academies of Science, the UK's Royal Society, leading research journals (Science, Nature, PNAS, etc.), the Norwegian Nobel Prize Committee, public and private news media, etc..
It might be explained in part by the fact that PNAS for some reason did not include the embers paper in its weekly publicity material.
In his 2006 PNAS article, Thompson also used a seventh series from Puruogangri, which is included in PAGES2017, but I was unable to figure out from his description how he had incorporated it, and so did not attempt to calibrate the resulting 7 - core composite index.
The member must include a brief statement endorsing publication in PNAS along with all of the referee reports received for each round of review.
Members» submissions must be accompanied by the names and contact information, including e-mails, of knowledgeable colleagues who reviewed the paper, along with all of the reviews received and the authors» response for each round of review, and a brief statement endorsing publication in PNAS.
(Besides the pair's 2005 GRL article, Ross McKitrick's misleading list of so - called «peer - reviewed science journal articles» also includes two pieces in the contrarian social science journal Energy and Environment, a comment letter to PNAS and a pair of replies to comments on the GRL article!)
So, on every point, the post fails on basic facts, let alone the specious logic it rests on, while impugning several people, including Kemp, Cazenave, and the entire PNAS.
Given the kerfuffle surrounding the PNAS review of Lindzen and Choi, I'll make a few comments here regarding the review of this paper, which has to be regarded as controversial and contentious since it includes criticisms of the IPCC.
More usefully in terms of future predictions, a recent paper in PNAS by Van Vuuren and co-workers (including a friend of mine, Tom Wigley, who is an Adjunct Professor at the University of Adelaide), assessed the impact on climate change of some plausible real - world actions.
The PNAS study included scholars whose primary research is not in climate science.
Field inspections of 1,250 apartments which include: physical need assessments (PNA) for New York City Housing Authority buildings.
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