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.
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.
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.
«It hit me that we've been calculating chlorophyll profiles
from surface measurements for more than thirty years, but we don't know what the depth profiles of other biogeochemically - important materials look like,» said Barney Balch, a senior research scientist at Bigelow Laboratory and
lead 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.
Matthias Mauch,
from the School of Electronic Engineering and Computer Science at QMUL,
lead author of the
paper, said: «For the first time we can measure musical properties in recordings
on a large scale.
«Wildlife are impacted by many different stresses» explains Dr. Elliott,
from the Dept. of Natural Resource Sciences at McGill, who is the
lead author on the
paper.
Manuel, currently a machine learning researcher with Google, was the
lead author on a
paper with Sowers which explored a mathematical model for determining the optimal time for transporting a strawberry crop
from the field to cold storage.
«Currently, mechanisms for this conversion are not completely understood, nor how long it takes the molecules to transform
from one spin isomer to the other,» said Salvatore Mamone, a post-doctoral physicist at the University of Southampton and
lead author on the JCP
paper.
The discovery was made in part by Kevin Cox, a Texas A&M doctoral student
from St. Louis, Missouri, who has been working with Shan for nearly four years and is
lead author on the
paper.
«People involved with these gardens are passionate about healthy eating, food security and helping people connect to where their food comes
from,» says Ashley Chaifetz,
lead author of a
paper describing the work and its effect
on school and community gardening practices.
«The source and sink of carbon
from glacial to interglacial periods is the holy grail of oceanography,» says oceanographer Victor Smetacek of the Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar and Marine Research in Bremerhaven, Germany, who
led the EIFEX expedition and was the
lead author on a
paper about it published online today in Nature.
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.
At the International Symposium
on Low Power Electronics and Design in August, Gao, Peh, and
lead author Pilsoon Choi, a postdoc in Peh's group, together with researchers at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, presented a
paper demonstrating that an 802.11 p radio built
from gallium nitride and controlled by silicon electronics would consume half the power that existing radios do.
«It was stunning and disappointing and somewhat gut - wrenching,» says USGS researcher Scott Ferrenberg, the
lead author on a
paper analyzing data
from these experiments.
Large - scale conservation genetics studies
on wild jaguars spanning across several range countries assessing these threats are rare and suffer
from low sample sizes for this region,» said Claudia Wultsch, the
lead author of the
paper, a scientist in the Museum's Sackler Institute for Comparative Genomics, and a conservation research fellow at Panthera.
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.
Jana Beinhauer, a visiting scientist
from Palacký University in the Czech Republic who spent nine months working at UT Arlington, and Liangqiao Bian, of the Shimadzu Center for Advanced Analytical Chemistry, are
lead authors on the new
paper.
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.
«We do not understand how radio galaxies evolve,» says Joseph Callingham, a postdoctoral fellow
from the Netherlands Institute for Radio Astronomy (ASTRON) and
lead author on the
paper describing the result.
«This is a particularly important issue because research tells us that the people most likely to rely
on help
from food pantries are also those who have less access to health care to address foodborne illness in the event that they do get sick,» says Ashley Chaifetz,
lead author of the
paper.
«It is the first time that we have seen outflowing cold gas moving at these large speeds at such large distances
from the supermassive black hole,» said Claudia Cicone, a PhD student at Cambridge's Cavendish Laboratory and Kavli Institute for Cosmology, and
lead author on the first of the two
papers.
«Multiple otter lineages have low - crowned bunodont teeth,
leading us to ask the question if this was inherited
from a common ancestor or if this was convergent evolution based
on common dietary behaviors across different species,» said Dr. Wang,
lead author of the
paper.
Purdue University doctoral student Yang Xu,
lead author of a new research
paper on «topological insulators,» an emerging class of materials that could make possible «spintronic» devices and practical quantum computers far more powerful than today's technologies, is shown here inspecting devices made
from topological insulators under a microscope before electrical measurements.
Tao Su,
lead author on the
paper and associate professor at Xishuangbanna Tropical Garden, discovered the fossils near his home in Kunming in southwest China when some road construction exposed a rock outcrop
from the late Pliocene.
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.
Lippman and Cora MacAlister, Ph.D.,
lead author on the new
paper, found that deleting the genes for these enzymes
from the flowering mustard plant Arabidopsis thaliana and the moss Physcomitrella patens resulted in similar defects in both species, which are widely separated in evolutionary time.
On June 30, following on work published in the scientific journal Nature by STRI post-doctoral fellow, Scott Mangan, a group of 50 researchers from 12 countries published a paper in Science (lead author, Joe LaManna, Washington University in St. Louis) showing that close plant relatives make bad neighbors and that the negative interactions between relatives are stronger in the tropics, which may explain why tropical forests are so rich in species diversity: Because plants do not do well next to their relatives, there is more space for non-relatives to fil
On June 30, following
on work published in the scientific journal Nature by STRI post-doctoral fellow, Scott Mangan, a group of 50 researchers from 12 countries published a paper in Science (lead author, Joe LaManna, Washington University in St. Louis) showing that close plant relatives make bad neighbors and that the negative interactions between relatives are stronger in the tropics, which may explain why tropical forests are so rich in species diversity: Because plants do not do well next to their relatives, there is more space for non-relatives to fil
on work published in the scientific journal Nature by STRI post-doctoral fellow, Scott Mangan, a group of 50 researchers
from 12 countries published a
paper in Science (
lead author, Joe LaManna, Washington University in St. Louis) showing that close plant relatives make bad neighbors and that the negative interactions between relatives are stronger in the tropics, which may explain why tropical forests are so rich in species diversity: Because plants do not do well next to their relatives, there is more space for non-relatives to fill.
«At first we thought we'd made a mistake, but we repeated the experiment, and we were right — the cells responded to inputs
from either eye,» says Natalie Zeater, a CIBF PhD Student and
lead 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.»
«It's important to have a better understanding of what distinguishes potential terrorists
from individuals who pose little or no risk of becoming terrorists, whether we're talking about Middle Eastern terrorist organizations or domestic terrorists in the United States,» says Sarah Desmarais, an associate professor of psychology at North Carolina State University and
lead author of a
paper on the work.
Western Pygmies I love population genetics for its ability to peer back into human history through the medium of DNA's ATCGs.One of the stars of this discipline is Sarah Tishkoff, a standout in African genetics, someone who will readily haul a centrifuge into the bush in Cameroon.Tishkoff of the University of Pennsylvania is
lead author on a
paper published online July 26 in Cell that details whole - genome sequencing of five individuals each
from three extant hunter - gatherer groups — the Pygmies of Cameroon as well as the Hadza and the Sandawe of Tanzania.
The
paper, with principal research physicist Weixing Wang as
lead author, identifies two important new sources of turbulence based
on data
from experiments
on the National Spherical Torus Experiment prior to its upgrade.
«We've seen shells around this kind of star before, but this is the first time we've ever seen a spiral of material coming out
from a star, together with a surrounding shell,» says the
lead author on the
paper presenting the results, Matthias Maercker (ESO and Argelander Institute for Astronomy, University of Bonn, Germany).
«These are very promising findings and, as the first study to demonstrate protection
from Zika in the pregnancy setting, are an important development in our efforts to combat Zika virus,» said Michael Diamond, M.D., Ph.D., Professor, Departments of Medicine, Molecular Microbiology, Pathology & Immunology, and Associate Director, Center for Human Immunology and Immunotherapy Program at Washington University School of Medicine, and a
lead author on the Cell
paper.
«These oldest tools
from Lomekwi shed light
on an unexpected and previously unknown period of hominin behavior and can tell us a lot about cognitive development in our ancestors that we can't understand
from fossils alone» said Dr. Harmand, the
lead author of the
paper published in the journal Nature announcing the discovery.
«A cool star spins very fast when it's young, but just like a top
on a table it gets slower and slower as the star grows older,» Soren Meibom
from the Harvard - Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Massachusetts, and the
lead author of the
paper, told BBC.
«Even though the Large Magellanic Cloud is one of our nearest galactic companions, we expect it should share some uncanny chemical similarity with distant, young galaxies
from the early universe,» said Marta Sewiło, an astronomer with NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and
lead author on a
paper appearing in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
A 2007 academic
paper lead -
authored by Duckworth has been cited 1,157 times, according to Google Scholar, and Duckworth's six - minute TED Talk
from 2013
on the subject has been watched more than 8.4 million times.
After my post
on a much - discussed
paper trying to clarify the extent of greenhouse - driven heating to expect in coming decades, I sought input
from the
lead author, Andreas Schmittner of Oregon State University.
There's more
on the
paper below
from the
lead author, Svend Funder of the University of Copenhagen, and some independent ice scientists I queried about the work.
UQ: UQ investigates events
leading to retraction Statement
from The University of Queensland President and Vice-Chancellor Professor Peter Hoj A former UQ staff member
from the Centre for Neurogenic Communication Disorders Research was corresponding
author on the
paper.
We asked all the coordinating
lead authors,
lead authors and review editors
on the last Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) report to nominate three
papers from any time in history.
Well; if a statement regarding atmospheric cooling is taking place, and we know
from past experience (climate history) that if this cooling continues and the build up of ice continues in Antartica like it is; then it is possible that the planet may very well be headed back into an ice age - and when this «atmospheric cooling» trend is mentioned
on the GISS [NASA] Webpage, and by one of the GISS scientists (Kate Marvel, a climatologist at GISS and the
paper's
lead author) then i would have to conclude that the are embracing the science revealing evidence that such mechanics are, taking place, and I view their statemnt as an endorsement and ot their recognition, of global cooling.
«There is a pattern with increasing frequency of flood events
from North Dakota south to Iowa and Missouri and east into Illinois, Indiana and Ohio,» says Iman Mallakpour, UI graduate student in civil and environmental engineering and
lead author on the
paper.
It is of no little significance that the IPCC's value for the coefficient in the CO2 forcing equation depends
on only one
paper in the literature; that its values for the feedbacks that it believes account for two - thirds of humankind's effect
on global temperatures are likewise taken
from only one
paper; and that its implicit value of the crucial parameter κ depends upon only two
papers, one of which had been written by a
lead author of the chapter in question, and neither of which provides any theoretical or empirical justification for a value as high as that which the IPCC adopted.
«Animals and plants both
on land and in the sea were dying at the same time, and apparently
from the same causes - too much heat and too little oxygen,» said University of Washington paleontologist Peter Ward,
lead author of the latest
paper.
dhogaza: Tamino outed himself as Grant Foster at RC when as «guest poster (sic)»
on 16 September 2007 he proceeded to plagiarise (if he was not one of the
authors) the
paper by GF, Annan, Schmidt and Mann which had been submitted to JGR
on the 10th; the
paper attacked Stephen Schwartz»
paper in JGR before that had even appeared; Tamino's graphs required direct access to the data in GF et al, and it would certainly be very odd for Gavin Schmidt to commission the guest posting if not
from his co-
author, who at one point uses the term «we» confirming that «Tamino» was the
lead author.