«Future studies should examine which people or patients may need to limit their intake of saturated fat,» assistant professor Simon Nitter Dankel points out, who
led the study together with the director of the laboratory clinics, professor Gunnar Mellgren, at Haukeland university hospital in Bergen, Norway.
The study also suggests that the reduction in volume drives the reduction in brain activity,» says doctoral student Kristoffer NT Månsson, who
led the study together with Linköping colleague Gerhard Andersson and researchers from the Karolinska Institutet, Uppsala University, Umeå University and Stockholm University.
«The fact that glutamine addiction has mainly been investigated in cell culture systems may have overestimated the lethality of glutamine deprivation,» said Martin Eilers, University of Würzburg, who
led the study together with Kempa.
The results indicate that beta cell function does not decline with age, and instead suggest that islet function is threatened by an age - dependent impairment of vessels that support them with oxygen and nutrients,» says Per - Olof Berggren at the Rolf Luft Research Center for Diabetes and Endocrinology at Karolinska Institutet, who
led the study together with Alejandro Caicedo at University of Miami Miller School of Medicine and Hong Gil Nam at DGIST in Republic of Korea.
«We were able to show that the stem cells divide differently in these patients,» explains associate professor Dr. Philipp Koch, who
led the study together with Dr. Julia Ladewig.
«Our study shows that genotyping of CYP2C19 could be of considerable clinical value in individualising doses of escitalopram so that a better all - round antidepressive effect could be achieved for the patients,» says Professor Magnus Ingelman - Sundberg at Karolinska Institutet's Department of Physiology and Pharmacology who
led the study together with Professor Espen Molden.
Not exact matches
The Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada, the Canada - ASEAN Business Council, the Business Council of Canada, and the University of British Columbia have worked
together on this report in anticipation of the government -
led feasibility
study.
James Nuechterlein's medley of reviews of the three new Lincoln
studies is particularly artful in weaving
together so much that we have come to know about the mature Lincoln who
led the Union through the war years, as well as pointing out those areas in which Lincoln will perhaps always be clothed in mystery or contradiction.
What makes these objects of inquiry theologically significant is that
together they constitute the Christian thing whose
study is believed to
lead to truer understandings of God.
In the theological
study group known as Evangelicals and Catholics
Together, we have been
led to affirm our unity as brothers and sisters in Christ.
I was
leading Bible
studies and loving people, and at an ivy league school and people thought I had it all
together.
You can
lead a small group at your church, or gather some dudes at Starbucks every Thursday morning and
study the book of Daniel
together.
A small group of sincere believers
studying and discussing scripture
together does not
lead to heresy.
«Taken
together with previously established benefits of egg intake on HDL profiles, these findings further support the notion that eggs serve as a functional food to reduce cardiovascular disease risk in individuals with metabolic syndrome,» says Catherine Andersen,
lead study author and PhD candidate at the University of Connecticut.
This blog was published by CLOSER (Cohort & Longitudinal
Studies Enhancement Resources), which is located at the UCL Institute of Education and brings together eight leading studies, the British Library and the UK Data S
Studies Enhancement Resources), which is located at the UCL Institute of Education and brings
together eight
leading studies, the British Library and the UK Data S
studies, the British Library and the UK Data Service.
Studies have proven that eating family meals
together during adolescence
led to adults who ate more fruit, dark eco-friendly and orange vegetables and key nutrients, and drank less sodas.
Some barriers include the negative attitudes of women and their partners and family members, as well as health care professionals, toward breastfeeding, whereas the main reasons that women do not start or give up breastfeeding are reported to be poor family and social support, perceived milk insufficiency, breast problems, maternal or infant illness, and return to outside employment.2 Several strategies have been used to promote breastfeeding, such as setting standards for maternity services3, 4 (eg, the joint World Health Organization — United Nations Children's Fund [WHO - UNICEF] Baby Friendly Initiative), public education through media campaigns, and health professionals and peer -
led initiatives to support individual mothers.5 — 9 Support from the infant's father through active participation in the breastfeeding decision,
together with a positive attitude and knowledge about the benefits of breastfeeding, has been shown to have a strong influence on the initiation and duration of breastfeeding in observational
studies, 2,10 but scientific evidence is not available as to whether training fathers to manage the most common lactation difficulties can enhance breastfeeding rates.
Apparently something radical happens to the bacteria ingested during passage through their digestive system,» says Lars Hestbjerg Hansen, a professor at Aarhus University who
together with PhD - student Michael Roggenbuck
lead the
study while he was at the University of Copenhagen.
Now a new
study led by researcher Eduardo Maeda from the University of Helsinki has put
together a unique combination of satellite data and hydrological measurements to
study the problem.
An international
study led by scientists from Inserm and Paris Diderot University (France), the University of Chicago (USA), the National Heart and Lung Institute (UK) and the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus (USA)
together with researchers of the Trans - National Asthma Genetics Consortium (TAGC) has discovered five new regions of the genome that increase the risk of asthma.
Joakim Stenhammar at Lund University in Sweden
led the
study where he,
together with colleagues from universities in Düsseldorf, Edinburgh and Cambridge, developed a model in which patterns of light control the movement of active particles.
«We hope these findings help government, industry and scientists to work
together to address this issue,» says Sonter, who
led the
study as a UVM postdoctoral researcher, before joining the University of Queensland (Australia).
Previous
studies have shown that a part of the brain called the hippocampus is important to relational memory — the «ability to bind
together various items of an event,» said Jim Monti, a University of Illinois postdoctoral research associate who
led the work with psychology professor Neal Cohen, who is affiliated with the Beckman Institute at Illinois.
Leading wildlife ecologists applaud the
study for putting forward a surprising hypothesis and bringing
together so much evidence from around the world.
«Our
study shows how EB proteins can either facilitate microtubule assembly by binding to sub-units of the microtubule, essentially holding them
together, or else cause a microtubule to disassemble by promoting GTP hydrolysis that destabilizes the microtubule lattice,» says Eva Nogales, a biophysicist with Berkeley Lab's Life Sciences Division who
led this research.
With previous
studies showing that higher temperatures, caused by global warming, have
led to more unstable mountain rocks — the scientists, who took part in the new
study, believe that using the two monitoring techniques
together could prove vital for thousands of skiers and mountain climbers who undertake trips every year.
The
study was
led by Dr. Liran Hiersch, of TAU's Sackler School of Medicine and Tel Aviv Medical Center,
together with Dr. Eran Ashwal, also of Sackler and Tel Aviv Medical Center.
The
study,
led by the University of Southampton,
together with the Universities of Oxford, Manchester, Newcastle (all part of the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research) and the University of Reading analysed the weather through lyrics, musical genre, keys and links to specific weather events.
Together, the findings indicate that the virus by itself can wreak havoc, says Michael Diamond, a viral immunologist at Washington University in St. Louis in Missouri who
led the Cell
study.
Lead investigator Dr. Nicole Anderson,
together with scientists from Canadian and American academic centres, examined 73
studies published over the last 45 years involving adults aged 50 - plus who were in formal volunteering roles.
«Patients, family members, and healthcare providers should work
together to find solutions to the barriers preventing a patient from participating in a structured exercise programs, because exercise programs can help patients manage their condition,» said Lauren B. Cooper, M.D.,
lead author of the
study and a fellow in cardiovascular diseases at the Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, North Carolina.
«This isn't like toothpaste coming out of a tube,» said Juan Carlos del Alamo, professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at the Jacobs School of Engineering at UC San Diego, who
led a multidisciplinary team for this
study,
together with postdoctoral researcher Pablo Martinez - Legazpi and Dr. Javier Bermejo's group of cardiologists at Gregorio Marañon Hospital.
Together with colleagues Maren Rebke from Avitec Research and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany and Peter H. Becker from the Institute of Avian Research «Vogelwarte Helgoland» in Wilhelmshaven, Germany, they have developed a statistical model to analyze the long - term
study on common terns in Lake Bant in Wilhelmshaven
led by Prof. Becker.
These same
studies have also begun to explain how and why the brain allocates each memory to a particular group of cells and how it links them
together and organizes them — the physical means by which the scent of a madeleine, the legendary confection that sparked Marcel Proust's memory stream,
leads to remembrance of things past.
There are currently no specific treatments, and it is therefore essential to «understand the underlying mechanisms,» explains Borja Ibáñez M.D., Ph.D., CNIC researcher, Cardiologist at the University Hospital Fundación Jiménez Díaz, and joint
lead author on the
study together with Thomas Langer of the Max Planck Institute.
In this
study, the team was able to piece
together the biological process that
leads to the production of new bone by
studying the offspring of mice lacking the Gastric Intrinsic Factor gene, which is active in the stomach and allows the gut to absorb vitamin B12.
By
studying the chemistry of growth rings in the shells of the quahog clam, an international team
led by experts from Cardiff University and Bangor University have pieced
together the history of the North Atlantic Ocean over the past 1000 years and discovered how its role in driving the atmospheric climate has drastically changed.
Stranded sperm and beaked whales have been well
studied in recent years — in particular, several have become stranded while still alive, allowing biologists to obtain blood samples and piece
together what
led to the strandings.
Together the four loci predict the risk of an individual developing Fuchs dystrophy with an accuracy of about 78 percent, said one of the
study's
lead authors, Sudha K Iyengar, Ph.D., Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland.
Together with Kathrin Plath from UCLA, Vincent Pasque from KU Leuven
led an international
study into how adult cells reprogram to iPS cells.
«What we have found is that Asian Americans are an incredibly diverse group that can not be indiscriminately combined
together,» said Trinh, associate surgeon for the Division of Urology at BWH, faculty at the Center for Surgery and Public Health (CSPH) and
lead author of the
study.
In a novel
study, «Personality Development through Natural Language,» published in the international journal, Nature: Human Behaviour, Kevin Lanning, Ph.D.,
lead author of the
study and a professor of psychology in Florida Atlantic University's Harriet L. Wilkes Honors College,
together with FAU Wilkes Honors College alumna Rachel (Evans) Pauletti, and collaborators Laura A. King, Ph.D., University of Missouri, and Dan P. McAdams, Ph.D., Northwestern University, examined how personality maturation or development was reflected in natural language.
First up: In conjunction with the National Science Foundation, Caltech, and the Thirty Meter Telescope, DISCOVER brought
together four
leading astronomers to describe their
studies of wayward comets, alien worlds, black holes, and the expanding universe.
Tukey
led the
study,
together with Bruce D. Hammock, PhD, professor at University of California, Davis.
Using a combination of human or specially engineered mouse cells in vitro and in vivo animal models,
study senior investigator Judy Lieberman, MD, PhD;
study lead investigator Farokh Dotiwala, PhD, with a team
lead by the Brazilian parasitologist Ricardo Gazzinelli, DSc, DVM, found that when an immune killer cell, such as a T - cell or natural killer (NK) cell, encounters a cell infected with any of three intracellular parasites (Trypanosoma cruzi, Toxoplasma gondii or Leishmania major), it releases three proteins that
together kill both the parasite and the infected cell:
«It is like bringing two magnets close
together,» says physicist Sunil Gupta of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research in Mumbai, India, and
lead author of the new
study.
Lead author of the
study and an expert in sea level science, Professor Chris Hughes, said: «What we found was a pair of eddies spinning in opposite directions and linked to each other so that they travel
together all the way across the Tasman Sea, taking six months to do it.
«These two lines of evidence
together make a very convincing case that we have detected a stratosphere on an exoplanet,» said Korey Haynes,
lead author of the
study.
The problem is that this stress is chronic and
leads to impairment of cognitive functioning,» explains research student Yifat Segev, who undertook the
study together with Dr. Iliana Barrera and additional colleagues from Prof. Rosenblum's laboratory and researchers from the medical school in Bergen, Norway.
Past examples of magnetic organic materials were either unstable in air or were mostly made of metal, making them unsuitable for linking
together into a plastic, says chemist Robin Hicks of the University of Victoria, British Columbia,
lead author of the
study reporting the find in this week's Nature.